Lessons From Animals, Part 6:
Visiting Magpie


We laughed aloud. We have a visiting wild magpie who
comes to our door asking for handouts. We love to see him and he knows that if
he stands on a certain rock just on the edge of the verandah, we will toss
scraps of food to him.
So when we answer his presence at the door, he immediately goes to his rock and
waits for us to toss pieces of food for him to catch. It is a game we play with
him.
What made us laugh out loud was the idea that the magpie understands what we say
to him. One morning we were sitting at the outdoor table having breakfast and
the magpie walked close to us.
“No, Maggie,” I said gently because he had been well fed before we sat down to
breakfast. “You have just been fed, you can’t possibly be hungry.”
He walked closer, still with his head expectantly on the side, beady, brown eyes
fixed on us.
“Go and have a drink of water,” I told him. His back was to the water dish about
three metres away and he looked expectantly at us.
“I have just filled the water dish with lovely fresh water,’ I told him, ‘so go
and get a drink.”
And he did! He immediately turned his back to us, walked over to the water dish
and hopped up on to it. He took several beakfulls and then flew off down the
garden to join other members of his family.
We laughed out loud in amazement. It was as though he understood exactly what
had been said to him and we are left with a lingering thought. Did he
understand? Had he become so familiar with our words that he really understood?
It reminded us that Jesus had a lot of serious things to say about our words and
how we use them. He said ‘every thoughtless word you speak you will have to
account for on the day of judgement.’ Matthew 12:36.
So always speak kindly, even to magpies, because Jesus is listening.
Elizabeth Price