Hello ,
The Japanese composer Mamoru Samuragochi has been hailed as the "Japanese Beethoven" for
creating hit symphonies despite his deafness. He claimed to rely on his perfect pitch to compose after losing his hearing. In an interview with TIME magazine he said, "If you trust your inner sense of sound, you create something that is truer. It is like communicating from the heart. Losing my hearing was a gift from God." But not too long ago the national hero was exposed as a fraud after confessing that another musician wrote his most acclaimed works. And in a surprise twist, the man who
says he was the ghost-writer of the works, Takashi Niigaki, claimed that the popular composer isn't even deaf.
Niigaki told reporters in Tokyo that over the past 18 years he had been paid about 7 million yen (or $69,000) to write more than 20 pieces to order for Samuragochi. Niigaki said, "At first he acted ... as if he had suffered hearing loss, but he stopped doing so eventually." After awhile the two men started carrying
on normal conversations. And even more bizarre, Samuragochi can't even write musical scores.
Eventually Niigaki tired of the deception and told Samuragochi he wanted out. Samuragochi threatened to commit suicide, but Niigaki said he was duping the public and wanted to come clean. "I am an accomplice," Niigaki said, "because I continued composing just as he demanded, although I knew he was deceiving people. I can't fool the
people anymore."*
Claiming to be one thing, while being something else in life can be exhausting. Participating in this kind of activity in the spiritual realm can be a daunting task as well. If we claim to be Christians, by God's grace, it should show in the way that we live our lives.
Have a great day and God
bless!
Pastor Mike / The Open Word