Testimony 10 - Chris P
Adapted from: Reinicke, Melinda, "Parables for Personal
Growth"
© San Diego, CA: Recovery Publications, Inc., 1993), pp
5-9
As quoted in Pure Desire, by Ted Roberts.
"The Prince and the Dragon - A Parable"
There was once a great and noble King whose land was
terrorized by a wicked and crafty dragon. Like a massive
bird of prey, the scaly beast delighted in ravaging villages
with his fiery breath. Hapless victims ran from their
burning homes, only to be snatched into the dragon's jaws or
talons. Those devoured instantly were deemed more fortunate
than those carried back to the dragon's lair to be devoured
at his leisure.
The king led his sons and knights in many valiant battles
against the serpent. Riding alone in the forest, one of the
King's sons heard his name purred soft and low. Lost in
thoughts of restlessness and loneliness in his father's
house, the young prince thought for a moment that he was
hearing things. He felt a strange hesitation in his heart.
Again, his name was called. In the shadows of the ferns and
trees, curled among the boulders, lay the dragon.
The heavy-lidded eyes of the creature fastened ablaze on
the prince, and the reptilian mouth stretched into a
seductive smile. "Don't be alarmed," said the dragon, as
gray wisps of smoke rose lazily from his nostrils. "I am not
what your father thinks of me." "What are you, then?"
demanded the prince, instinctively drawing his sword as he
pulled in the reigns to keep his frightened horse from
bolting. "I am more than what you've been told, my prince,"
said the dragon unashamedly. "I am delight; I am pleasure."
The prince answered nothing.
He was at once fascinated and somehow afraid of this
beautiful creature. Noticing his hesitation, the serpent
cried, "Ride on my back and you will experience what few can
only imagine. What no King has yet experienced! Come
now...believe me, I have no harmful intentions. Truly, I
seek only a friend - someone to share my flights with me. I
am lonely. You understand loneliness. Have you never dreamed
of flying, my prince? Never longed to soar in the clouds?
Never longed to take what isn't yours?"
The prince felt intoxicated. Was it the smoke that seemed
to curl its way toward him with every word? Or was it the
words themselves? Visions of soaring high above the forested
hills of his father's kingdom drew the prince hesitantly
from his horse. And the dragon was stunning - captivatingly
beautiful. The prince had never seen emerald so green as the
dragon's coat. As he marveled at its strange beauty, his
curiosity brought him closer. Knowingly, the dragon unfurled
one great webbed wing brilliantly adorned in gemstones
stolen from some kingdom past.
The dragon delighted in stolen treasure. "Come, my
prince. Come ride with me." In one fateful decision, the
prince sheathed his sword and placed his hands and feet on
the brilliant stones, climbing atop the emerald staircase to
the serpent's back. The dragon rose immediately to its feet.
The prince had been deceived of its size, for now it seemed
far more powerful and immense than many horses.
The creature snapped its great wings twice launching them
both into the sky. The prince's apprehension melted into
exhilaration as he felt the awesome rule of the wind beneath
him and the fragrant breeze on his face.... From then on, he
met the dragon often, but secretly, for how could he tell
his father or brothers or the knights that he had befriended
the kingdom's greatest enemy? The serpent taught the Prince
many wicked things.
At first, he was revolted and ashamed by them. But more
and more he found himself obsessed, even captivated by his
newfound secret. Quickly, the prince began to feel separate
- from everyone. The kingdom's concerns were no longer his.
Even when he wasn't stealing away secretly to be with the
dragon, he spent less time with those he loved.
More and more, he spent his time alone or with the
creature. The skin on the prince's legs began to callous
from gripping the dragon's ridged back. His hands grew rough
and hardened. He began wearing gloves to hide the malady.
After many nights of riding he discovered scales growing on
the backs of his hands as well. With dread he realized his
fate were he to continue, and so he resolved to return no
more to the dragon.
But, after a fortnight, he again sought out the dragon,
having been tortured with desire. And so, in this way, it
transpired many times over. No matter what the
determination, the prince eventually found himself pulled
back, as if by the cords of an invisible web. The dragon's
charms, so gentle in the beginning, now held the prince more
tightly than he had the will to resist. Silently, patiently,
the serpent waited...always waited. One cold, moonless night
their excursion became a foray against a sleeping village.
Torching the thatched roofs with fiery blasts from his
nostrils, the dragon roared with delight when the terrified
victims fled from their burning homes. Swooping in, the
serpent belched again, and flames engulfed a cluster of
screaming villagers. The prince closed his eyes tightly in
an attempt to shut out the horror and the carnage, but he
could not.
Sometimes, he even allowed himself to feel the old
thrill. Then, in bitter remorse, his heart sinking in shame,
he tried to hide himself. But the flames of the burning
village lighted on his face. In the predawn hours, when the
prince crept back from his dragon trysts, the road outside
his father's castle usually remained empty. But not tonight.
Terrified refugees streamed into the protective walls of the
castle.
The prince attempted to slip through the crowd to close
himself in his chambers, but some of the survivors stared
and pointed toward him. "He was there," one woman cried out,
"I saw him on the dragon's back!" Others nodded their heads
in riotous agreement. Some only stared in disbelief and
growing recognition.
Horrified, the prince saw that his father, the King, was
in the courtyard holding a bloodstained and seemingly dead
child in his arms; his face mirrored the agony of the
child's mother. He looked up at the angry cries, and his
eyes found the prince's. The son fled, hoping to escape into
the night, but the guards apprehended him as if he were a
common thief. They brought him to the great hall where his
father sat solemnly on his throne. People on every side
railed against the prince.
"Banish him!" he heard one of his own brothers cry out
violently. "Burn him alive!" other voices shouted. "Let him
burn the way he burned our children and our homes!" As the
King arose from his throne, bloodstains shone darkly on his
royal robes, and the crowd fell silent in expectation of his
decree. The prince, who could not bear to look into his
father's face, stared down at the flagstone floor. "Take off
your gloves and your tunic," the King commanded.
Was his shame not already enough? The prince had hoped
for a quick death without further humiliation. Now, he
resigned himself to his fate. He obeyed slowly, agonizingly,
dreading to have his metamorphosis uncovered before the
kingdom. Sounds of revulsion rippled through the crowd, and
parents covered their children's eyes at the sight of the
prince's thick, scaled skin and the ridge now growing upward
along his spine. Horrible! He was...could it be? The thought
was so ghastly many turned away in disgust.
But the King strode toward his son. The prince steeled
himself. He fully expected a back-handed blow even though he
had never been struck so by his father. Instead, his father
pulled him to himself, embraced him, holding him
tightly...and wept.
In shocked disbelief, the prince buried his face against
his father's shoulder in a way he hadn't done for too long.
Tears began to burn down his scorched cheeks. "Do you wish
to be freed from the dragon, my son?" The prince answered in
despair, "Father, I've wished it so many times! But there
remains no hope for me." "Not alone," said the King. "You
cannot win against the serpent alone."
"I am no longer your son! I am half beast," sobbed the
prince bitterly. He began to convulse in such cruel remorse
that even the villagers pitied him. But his father replied,
"My blood still runs in your veins.
My nobility has always been stamped deep within your
soul." With his face still hidden tearfully in his father's
embrace, the prince heard the King instruct the crowd, "The
dragon is crafty. Some fall victim to his wiles, for he is a
great deceiver. Some fall to his violence for he has only
wickedness in his heart. There will be mercy for all who
wish to be freed! Who else among you has ridden the dragon?"
The prince lifted his head to see someone emerge from the
crowd. To his amazement, he recognized an older brother, one
who had been lauded throughout the kingdom for his
onslaughts against the dragon in battle and for his many
good deeds.
Others came. Some came still smelling of the smoke and
sweat from the carnage in the village. Some came weeping.
Others hung their heads in shame.
The King embraced them all. "This is our most powerful
weapon against the dragon," he announced.
"Truth. No more hidden flights. Alone we cannot resist
him."
Proverbs 20:17
17 Food gained by fraud tastes sweet to a
man,
but he ends up with
a mouth full of gravel.
Proverbs 9:13-18
13 The woman Folly is loud;
she is undisciplined and without knowledge.
14 She sits at the door of her house,
on a seat at the highest point of the city,
15 calling out to those who pass by,
who go straight on their way.
16 "Let all who are simple come in here!"
she says to those who lack judgment.
17 "Stolen water is sweet;
food eaten in secret is delicious!"
18 But little do they know that the dead are
there,
that her guests are in the depths of the grave.
Proverbs 6:25-26
25 Do not lust in your heart after her
beauty
or let her captivate you with her eyes,
26 for the prostitute reduces you to a loaf of
bread,
and the adulteress preys upon your very life.
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