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Thought for the Day - 11/03/03
As Victoria Beckham’s £55,000
settlement with an autograph shop shows, a signature can sometimes
be quite valuable. Of course, for most of us the only time our
signature has value is when it’s written on a cheque, but for
those who acquire fame, a signature soon acquires an essential value
of its own.
But the worth of such an item is not
related to its utility. It provides no food, clothing or shelter.
Even a signature on a cheque has no real value, merely acting as a
signifier, linking the money transfer associated with the cheque to
the holder of the bank account on which the cheque is drawn. Like
graffiti, it proves that its author was there. It is, quite
literally, a sign that directs us to a recognition of the presence
of its author.
The value of an autograph stems from
its link to the hand of the one who signed it. We give great value
to objects that connect us to those who have significance in our
lives, but there’s something special about a signature. Perhaps
it’s because it’s not just some artefact that’s been touched
by the one we wish to get close to, but a personal expression of
their self-awareness in a form that despite its simplicity can
display so much character, like strength or delicacy, flamboyancy or
reserve. We can learn a great deal about someone from the way they
make their sign.
And such signs are one of the most
persistent themes of the Qur’an, signs by which we can recognise
the presence of the Divine. And of God’s signs set out for us to
read are the heavenly display of the sun, moon and stars,
atmospheric signs like the turning of the winds, human signs like
the variety of our tongues and colours, and the signs of earthly
renewal as when the rain brings life to a dead dry land.
Through such signs we see God’s
awesome power, beauty, strength and subtlety. Whether we look to the
East or to the West, to the horizon or within ourselves, in the
Creation we find the signature of the Creator.
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