THE HOLY SPIRIT; PARACLETE OF CHRIST AND OF HUMANITY
HOMILY FOR THE 6TH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR C
There was a poor man who was convicted of a crime in a customary court. He was unable to afford the assistance of a lawyer. On reaching the court, the plaintiff with his lawyer presented their cases against the defendant who had no lawyer. No one was there to defend him; no one was there to speak for him. Suddenly, an observer in the court who was actually a Supreme Judge rose to the defendant’s rescue. Due to the higher authority that was involved, the case had another face. He became his lawyer, his counselor, and indeed his paraclete. Yes, in the legal context, we can regard that Supreme Judge as a Paraclete. This is how God acts and surprises us in difficult moments. This is the Spirit's work as the Paraclete. However, this is not the only meaning of Paraclete. The word has much more deeper meanings and implications.
The word Paraclete comes from the two Greek words παρα (preposition which can mean by, beside, in) and κλήτος (called, invited, summoned). The conjunction of both words as παρακλήτος renders the meaning as ‘one called (invited, summoned) in’, most probably for support. This support can be in the form of advice and advocacy, in the form of counselling and defence, in the form of consoling, and in the form of teaching. Hence, in everyday usage, we can become paracletes to one another. We can comfort, admonish, defend, guide and counsel others. Little wonder various Bible versions favour varied terms as translations of this Greek word. Some favoured Paraclete (a direct transliteration); some others comforter and some others Counselor. Indeed, all these terms portray same idea but having slight differences.
In the gospel of today (John 14: 23-29), precisely in the 26th verse, Jesus the Christ identifies the Holy Spirit as the Paraclete (But the Paraclete, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all I have taught you). All of us can be paracletes, but we have the only one who has the name in definitivity. The Holy Spirit is the Paraclete. Surely, this term suggests some form of identity and activity of the Holy Spirit. Hence, what is the work of the Paraclete? From the passage, the work of the Paraclete is two-fold:
Towards us, human beings (he will teach you all things)
Towards Jesus (and bring to your remembrance all that I have taught you)
We begin from the work of the Paraclete concerning Jesus.
THE HOLY SPIRIT AS JESUS’ PARACLETE
The Holy Spirit is ‘called in’ by God the Father in the name of Jesus to bring to their remembrance (the followers of Jesus) all that Jesus said to them. To Jesus, the Spirit would accomplish in the disciples all the more the work Jesus started in them. The Paraclete is in the continuing life of the apostolic faith (and the Church) what Jesus is in its foundation. Hence, the Paraclete shares his functions with Jesus, not outside of Him. The Paraclete’s teaching involves understanding what Jesus had taught and done. The Paraclete does not bring in any teaching independent of the revelation in Jesus. Therefore, there is a strongly christological concentration of the work of the Spirit. The Spirit becomes the power of growth of the Church (cf. Eph. 3:16). He is the vital principle of the body of the Church (cf. Eph. 4:4). He is the agent of holiness, of peace, of love, and of inspiration. Indeed, it was the Holy Spirit that inspired the biblical writers to write about Christ; for all scripture is inspired/God-breathed (2 Tim. 3:16).
THE HOLY SPIRIT AS OUR PARACLETE
The Holy Spirit is ‘called in’ by Jesus to teach us (leading us to the fullness of the truth), to counsel us (advocating and defending us against every danger) and to comfort us (consoling us in all our sufferings). The Holy Spirit as the Paraclete involves these tripartite role.
1. TEACHING
The Holy Spirit is ‘called in’ by Jesus to teach us about the Truth (Christ) and to the full. Jesus tells us that he will teach us all things. The Paraclete teaches us to the full, not half knowledge. He is not a Spirit of mediocrity, but a Spirit of plenitude. He supports us in our mission which consists in proclaiming Christ. He gives us all the necessary knowledge we need about Christ and His kingdom. He teaches all things, not some things. He is not like the teachers of the world who teach what they want and may not even be to the full. Remember, Christ had told us that the Holy Spirit has the function to teach us what we shall say (cf. Luke 12:12). The Holy Spirit ignites in us a special kind of knowledge and proclamation incomprehensible to any man (cf. Elizabeth in Luke 1:41 and Zechariah in Luke 1:67). He is the spirit of wisdom (cf. Acts 6:3 in the choice of the deacons). It was this same Spirit that taught Peter to see all peoples as clean and worthy of the gospel (Acts 10ff). The Spirit searches and reveals to us the deep things of God (1 Cor 2:10). It is this same Spirit in the Second Reading that led the author of the book of Revelation to the heavenly throne and revealed to him the hidden knowledge about God (cf. Rev. 21:10-14. 22-23). The Spirit teaches us to teach. He teaches us to prophesy(cf. Ezek. 2:2, 3:12). The prophet/teacher is a man of the spirit (Hosea 9:7).
2. COUNSELLING/ADVOCACY
The Holy Spirit is ‘called in’ by Jesusto counsel us. The Holy Spirit is there to support by speaking on our behalf, speaking in our favour. A Counselor does two functions: He advices/guides, and he defends. In the legal context, the lawyer counsels and advices the accused on what to do and say, and thereupon defends him/her in front of all. The first function is one of guidance. In the first reading, we meet how the Holy Spirit led/directs the apostles to take appropriate decisions concerning the admission of Gentiles into the Church of Jesus Christ. They said:it has pleased the Holy Spirit and us to lay upon you no greater burden than these necessary things...(Acts 15:28). This means that the Holy Spirit has the first place in their decision. To guide also implies being charismatic. Someone who guides must have the strength and knowledge to guide. In the whole of the Acts of the Apostles, the Spirit empowers the apostles to feats of courage and eloquence. He is a Spirit of encouragement (Acts 9:31). He led the Church to making important decisions (Acts 13:2; 20:28). The Counselor does not only guide and admonishes; He defends too. Advocacy implies guidance and defence. He defends us against every evil. He liberated Peter from prison (Acts 12ff), and Paul and Silas too (Acts 16ff). He supports us and leads us to avoid evil so as not to be accused by sin.
3. COMFORTING/CONSOLING
The Holy Spirit is ‘called in’ by Jesus to comfort us in our tribulations. He consoles us when we are suffering for the sake of Christ and His Church. He strengthensus (Acts 9:31) in our weakness. He is the Spirit of faith (cf. 2 Col. 4:13). The Spirit consoles us and tells us the manner to conquer all afflictions which is love. Actually, it is He who awakens love in the Christian (Col. 1:8). He is the principle of the mutual love of Christians (cf. Gal 5:13-36, Rom 15:30). The Comforter enables us to pray (Rom 8:15, Gal 4:6). The Spirit makes us to cry Abba father and he rests on all who suffer for Christ (1Pet 4:14).
THE CONTEMPORARY PARACLETES OF JESUS AND HUMANITY
As Christians, we are called to perform the function of the Paraclete, on the one side towards Jesus and on the other side, towards humanity. The Holy Spirit did, does and continues to do his function as the Paraclete to Jesus and His establishment of God’s kingdom on earth. How do we help ans support the work of Jesus? The Spirit never broke away from the work of Jesus but continues as the vivifier of the mission. Some Christians today tend to break away from the mission of Christ for our own self agrandisement and gain. We tend to preach ourselves, our businesses, our progress rather than Christ. Some ecclesiastical communities now place the pictures of their pastors on the bill board rather than the picture of Christ. In sum, some tend to start their own mission apart from the one of Christ. Remember that cut off from Christ, we can do nothing (John 15:5). The various divisions in Christianity was/is as a result of this tendency. We should focus on Christ and must preach Christ; nothing else. We must support to see that the work of God in Christ is continued daily, fastly and judiciously.
We are calle too to become paracletes to our fellow humans. We must console them in times of troubles; we must give to people the reason to hope further and to live. We must act ascounselors, advicing and defending people ( welcoming sinners and treating their wounds of sin). We must advice our fellow Christians on the right manner of Christian living, on the right manner of praying to God, on the right manner of worship and on the best way of relating with nature, humanity and our neighbours (avoiding evil and detaching from it, and doing good and attaching to goodness). Most importantly, we must teach others Christ by word and deed. He should be the focus of our advocacy. Others must see and experience Christ in us. May we never loose hope that Christ is no longer with his Church. Christ is constantly with his. Yes, Christ will ascend to his Father and our Father, but he remains with us in the person and work of the Paraclete, the Holy Spirit. God bless you. Rev. Ezekoka Peter.
Friday, 29 April 2016
Friday, 4 December 2015
THE REWARD OF SELFLESS SERVICE: A REFLECTION ON MATT 25:40
EZEKOKA
PETER ONYEKACHI
THE
REWARD OF SELFLESS SERVICE: A REFLECTION ON MATT 25:40
In a world berated by selfishness and pea-cock
lifestyle, where people exult themselves as gods, and lord it over those they
think are of lower grades, a society troubled by fear to help one another due
to certain abuses (witchcraft bewitchment, theft avenue, implicit inquiry of
the wealthy) that have been witnessed by people, an era where individualism
seems to be taking the upper hand over collective interest, an age where
service appears to be relegated and those who serve are under-rated, there
comes the necessity of a discourse on selflessness and service, and the rewards
there-from; a greater emphasis on the virtue of selflessness, and when combined
with service, selfless service. I call Selflessness a capital virtue (just as
capital sins are so called because of the numerous sins that flow from them)
because it gives way for many other virtues: humility, sobriety, temperance,
prudence, etc. It also drives away many vices: envy/jealousy, slander/calumny,
pride, etc. Our services make meaning only when they are selfless. The virtue
of selfless service is indeed a remedy to the selfish inclination of man; it is
an antidote to the current humanity that strives after self-enrichment,
individualism, and an inordinate tussle for kingliness.
Matthew 25:40 states: And the king will reply, I tell you the
truth, whatever you did for one of these brothers of mine, you did for me
(translation by the New International Version of the Holy Bible, 1973). This verse surely has a context under
which it can be holistically understood. It falls under the eschatological
sermon (cf. Matt 24:1-25:46) of Jesus the Christ as recorded by Matthew. This
eschatological sermon has its highpoint in the enthronement of the son of man
as the master of judgement, judging the sheep and the goats (cf. Matt 25:31-46).
Hence, the passage presents the son of man in the apocalyptic context of the
judgment of the world. Christ is the universal judge; and in verses 40 and 45 we
see the place of service to the needy in the divine judgment and our eternal
livelihood with God. It is in this sense that one can grab the intent of our
topic on the reward of selfless service. The coming of the son of man would
bring about a separation of the sheep from the goats, whereby the sheep
represent those on the right (the righteous) who obey the commands of God and
are to inherit the kingdom, and the goat are those on the left who disobey the
commands of God and are to be sent to eternal punishment. There is in this
separation a form of dialogue with both parties concerning their placements
either on the right or on the left. In it, the king enumerates the conditions
of his judgments, and the people express their bewilderments over the moments
they did all of those. It is at these moments that the king utters those words
which express that charity done to our fellow humans is charity done to God: I tell you the truth, whatever you did for
one of these brothers of mine, you did for me (v. 40), and in v. 45: I tell you the truth, whatever you did not
do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me. So, the king by
virtue of the selfless lives and services the people rendered had to reward or
punish them according to their deeds.
We notice that in v. 45, the word
brother is dropped. It is on this ground that scholars debate on whether the word
‘brother’ refers only to Christians or to any one in need. We must comment that
in this sense, adelphos (brother)
refers to any human being as the object of ethical duty, not just as a member
of the Christian community. It is in this broader sense of adelphos that we see the limitlessness of the selfless service that
we are called to render. It is not only to one’s religious
inclination/belongedness, or to one’s friends, or to one’s ethnicity or nation,
but to all peoples. There should be no discrimination in this; otherwise, the
service turns into a selfish one, rooted in self aggrandizement. In selfishness
is no reward, but punishment. So, we may be thinking that we are serving the
people, while we are incurring punishment on ourselves because we are not
serving with the proper intention, model and goal. It is in selflessness and
universality of our selfless service that we can locate the proper intention,
model and goal of Christian service. The king’s reply in v. 40 which is the
knot upon which the pendulum of our write-up oscillates is a great answer which
identifies service to the needy with love of Christ; for whatever good or bad
you do to your fellow, you do to Christ. If you say you love me, keep my
commands (John 14:15). And the implicit command he gives through this passage
is to attend to (serve) the needy in a selfless manner. This is the practical
manifestation of our love of God and neighbour, which assures us of eternal
life. It is in this line that Fulton Sheen in the address delivered on February
4, 1945 defines heaven as “a place where charity is externalized. In heaven,
there will be no faith, for then we will see God, in heaven there will be no
hope, for then we will posses God; but in heaven there will be charity, for
love endures forever.” (Sheen F., You,
St. Paul’s Press, India, 1998, p.71).
Love, expressed in our selfless service
is the criteria here for heaven. It is
Christ’s command that we love one another; and no one has greater love than to
lay down his life for his friends (cf. John 15:12-13). The pericope exposes the
ways through which we can bit by bit lay down our lives for our friends: for I was hungry and you gave me something
to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and
you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you
looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me (cf. Matt
25:35-36). These are the corporal works of mercy. It is in these corporal works
that the spiritual works (admonish sinners, instruct the uninformed, counsel
the doubtful, comfort the sorrowful, be patient with those in error, forgive
offenses, pray for the living and the dead) find their enrichment and proper
meaning; for how can one practice the spiritual works without an in-depth exercise
of the corporal works. Both go hand in hand, and must be employed in the rendering
of our selfless service. Barclay William helps us further to grasp some lessons
from the passage with reference to the help we render. It must be help in
simple things and one must not be so rich; a case of giving help to people we
meet every day. It must be a service which is incalculable, and must flow from
ourselves just as those who helped never knew that they did all those for
Christ. When we render assistance to people, it is Jesus himself we do them
for. If you want to delight God’s heart, then help his children (cf. Barclay
W., The Daily Study Bible on the Gospel of Matthew, pp. 325-326).
The eternal livelihood with God as
evidenced in the verses 34 and 46b give us a clear eschatological reward of
selfless service, as juxtaposed with Verses 41 and 46a. The implication is that
selfless service is decisive in our eternity with God. But there is also the
reward for selfless service here on earth. Selfless service can turn enmity
into friendship; can soften the heart of one’s oppressor; can help to destroy
the plans of one’s assailants; can be a practical manner of teaching. But,
remember, all this must flow from the love of Christ and tend towards the
conversion of persons to embrace the life of selflessness in service. How do
you think Christ would have instructed the disciples that the greatest among
them must be their servant if there is not really any reward that await for the
selfless servant (cf. Matt 20:26)? More so, the son of man did not come to be
served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many (Matt 20:28). So,
we must be like our master and not inflate or puff up ourselves, but to deflate
so that the air becomes a source of life for others we meet. St. Paul further
enjoins us to serve one another through love (cf. Gal. 5:14).
As
a Christian, how many times have you given food to that hungry person that
lives near you; given a cup of water to the thirsty person passing you; rejected
or acted mechanically to someone just because he is a stranger to you; given
out your clothes to those who cannot afford them; visited the sick and the
dying in the hospitals; gone to the prison to see those whose freedom has been
limited for either what they have done or the corrupt system of our governance?
These are ways we practice our Christian ideals. Never believe that your
selfless services can bring you insults and degradation. Never subscribe to the
rumour that your selfless arms to the poor will reduce or dry your purse. Never
accept the insinuation that your donation for the good of the Church or state
can create problems for you. Go with the conviction that ihe ọma gi agaghi egbu gi. Charity opens doors of favours, makes us
light and happy, and creates the spirit of togetherness. Start today to be
selfless for in it is many benefits. You can even render help to the government
through the formation of non-governmental unions that care for the oppressed
and the needy. You can visit the motherless babies’ home. We must believe that
in selfless service is our pride. It is in the selfless assistance that we
render to persons that we become truly Christians, who will be worthy to hear
those words of the king: come, you are blessed by my Father; inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from time immemorial (Matt. 25:34). They are blessed
because they have aligned themselves to the commands of God and have
co-operated with the operative grace of God.
Tuesday, 15 September 2015
THE ROLE OF THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY
Having decided to dwell on this
topic, it is my strong wish to borrow leaves from Hans Kung for a holistic
grasp of my intent. In discussing the Church as the Kingdom of God on earth,
this German theologian enumerated a five-finger significance of the Kingdom of
God on earth (the Church). These are:
1.
The
kingdom of God is eschatological; that is, the fully realised, final and
absolute reign of God at the end of time which as an event is now at hand (MK
1:15).
2.
The
kingdom of God is a powerful sovereign act of God himself, not something that
can be realised by the faithful adherence to the law. It is the Father that
exclusively invites. God alone can dispose.
3.
The
kingdom of God is a purely religious kingdom, not an earthly, natural and
religio-political theocracy. It is not situated in a place and time, but simply
God’s rule the reign of the king.
4.
The
kingdom of God is a saving event for sinners, not a judgement of vengeance on
sinners and godless men. God’s mercy and forgiveness are preached to all and
are made visible in Jesus’ actions: the
revelation of God’s love for sinners is a sign of the coming reign of God (Kung H., The Church (creative Print
and Design Wales, Ebbw Vale, GreatBritain 1968), p. 47-54).
The kingdom of God demands a radical
decision for God, not a demand for men to follow a new improved moral code. It
must be either God and his reign or the world and its reign, no two ways about
it. Repentance (metanoia) is involved which is made possible by faith. It is
the necessary and fundamental condition of entry into the reign of God – Repent
and believe in the Gospel (MK 1:15). The Church by virtue of her proclamation
of the message of Jesus as the Lord also preaches the messages of the kingdom
of God in a concentrated form. Hence, she must become the voice of Jesus
himself. The Church must take over the radical demands of Jesus, must preach
them and must practice them. The same divine demands which Jesus had preached
under the heading “the kingdom of God”, the Church now preaches under the
heading ‘Jesus the Lord,’ because this same Jesus fulfilled all the demands of
the kingdom of God and is the kingdom Himself (autobasileia). The Church
preaches the same as Jesus preached. The reign of the kingdom is the reign of
Christ. The kingdom of God fulfilled, realized and personified in Christ
remains the horizon of the Church and the focal point of its own life and which
she strives to bring to the world. For the Church to become a credible herald,
witness, demonstrator and messenger in the service of the kingdom of God, then
she must carefully and constantly repeat the message of Jesus not only to the
world or others, but also to her members. The Church’s credibility depends
totally on its remaining faithful to the message of Jesus. In other words, the
different perspectives of the preaching of the kingdom of God through Jesus
become ecclesiological imperatives.
In the first place, Jesus’ preaching of
the kingdom of God as a decisive, future, final event at the end of time has
some inevitable consequences. The Church should not make herself the focal
point of its preaching of the last days; its task is to point from the
fulfilled reign of God in Christ to the coming reign of God towards which she
looks as the crucial consummation of her mission. In doing this, she should not
pretend to be an end in itself or appear to claim the glory which rightly
belongs to God. It must not give the impression that man’s decision is for the
Church, rather than for God, or that man exists for the Church, rather than the
Church for mankind, and hence for the reign of God. If she fails to do this,
then she will grow tired and weak and will have no future. But if she does this
conscientiously, she can survive for it has not demanded too much from itself,
and will not be surprised when shaken by obstacles and doubts in her temporary
state.
In the second place, Jesus’ preaching of
the kingdom of God as an all-powerful act of God himself has again unavoidable
implications. The Church must not try to create the kingdom of God by herself;
for only God creates it for the Church. And the Church must put its whole trust
in God’s act, not her own. If she fails to do this, she is bound to failure and
destruction because of the lack of unselfish and trusting faith in God’s
decisive action. But if she adheres to this mission, she will be able to gather
together and build up, for strength will be given to its humility and
confidence. If the Church allows herself to receive the final victory which can
only come from above independent of human actions, then she can be confident
and faithful, and by so doing change the world.
In the third place, Jesus preaching of
the kingdom of God as a purely religious reign has some pertinent
repercussions. The Church should never, whatever the circumstance may be
present herself as a religio-political theocracy. Her role must be a spiritual diakonia. She must perform her ministry
in the guise of a servant, the service of God as a service to men, the service
of men as a service of God. She must know that she is called to the selfless
service of humanity, of its enemies and of the world. If she fails to do this, then she loses her
dignity and rank and the very justification of its existence. But if she does
this and is without pump and majesty, she will find in her significance her
true greatness, which is in the cross of Christ, for only in losing her life
can she gain it.
In the fourth place, Jesus’ preaching of
the kingdom as a saving event for sinners has some significant outcome. The
Church should never behave as if she is a menacing, intimidating institution
devoted to preaching doom and inculcating fear nor the declaration of war, but
should preach the message of salvation, the joyful good news, and the message of
peace. The Church exists for the sinners and the godless men, not for the
righteous, and hence must forgive, heal and save. Is she fails to recognise
that she is composed of sinful men and exists for sinful men, then she must
grow hardhearted, self-righteous and without compassion, deserving neither the
mercy of God nor the confidence of men. But if she recognizes and does this
duty, she will have the grace of holiness ad righteousness which she cannot
create for herself. The Church must then not look down self-righteously on
publicans and sinners, for he who humbles himself shall be exalted.
In the fifth place, Jesus’ preaching of
the kingdom of God as a radical decision for God has some undeniable effect.
The Church must never be distracted by anything from her radical decision for
God. She must turn away from worldly message and desires in metanoia and accept the coming reign of
God, so that it can turn next in love to the world and to men. She must not
shut herself off from the world in a spirit of asceticism, but must live in the
everyday world, inspired by the radical obedience of love towards God’s will.
If she tends to forget to whom her obedience is due, trying to play the master,
then she must end up enslaving and enchaining herself. But if she does all
expected of her in total obedience to God, she will totally become free; free
in imitating the service of Christ, the service of God by which she can truly serve men, and by the service of men by which she serves
God.
Ezekoka Peter
Onyekachi
Tuesday, 17 March 2015
NIGERIA AND THE CHALLENGES OF LEADERSHIP
NIGERIA AND THE CHALLENGES OF POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
As I was
travelling in a tricycle in the company of two passengers along the Wetheral
road in the city of Owerri, Nigeria on the 21st day of January,
2013, I met a vista. Prior to the Port Harcourt road junction, peering leftward,
I saw an inscription boldly written on a bill board: Politicians think of the next election, but Leaders think of the next
generation. Suddenly, the lady nearest to me pulled out deep smiles for me.
I was immediately shouldered about the circumstance, and as the man I should be
I returned the smile. I had to ask her the reason for which she gave to me such
a smile. She immediately retorted: but you smiled first? I then realized that while
trying to revolve my neck for more views, my face had radiated an involuntary
smile as a result of the inscription, for at first sight, I felt pleased with
the inscription. A discussion abruptly broke out among the three of us
concerning the Nigerian politics and the leadership challenges and mentality,
when I had explained to them the context of the involuntary smile. Wonderful
the statement might appear, and although pleased at first sight with the
inscription, I extracted some distorted ideas hovering around the practice of
Politics in this country.
I believe and
hence, insist that one of the major reasons for any patriotic person enrolling
in any political party is to make the society better, for posterity sake.
Politicians are meant to think of the common good and of the next generation,
not the next election. It is in the midst of these right thinking politicians
that leaders are selected. In this sense, for whatever motif the bill board was
put there, the inscription becomes a product of a corrupt political mentality,
and hence no applause is accruable to it. More so, this write-up acknowledges
the richness of this passionate field analysis of our Nigerian Politics and
leadership by the three of us. Nevertheless, we have employed more
answer-seeking questions to help us grasp the major coverage of our topic: What is Political Leadership? What are the
challenges in the Nigerian Political Leadership? What are the people’s
expectancies in their choice of leaders? In what ways can the challenges be
overcome? This is the background and scope around which I write.
‘Political
leadership’ is a combination of two words, one acting as the noun and another
as an adjective. Even though the noun makes full meaning on its own, the
addition of the adjective affects its meaning; it is this affection that we are
to explain. Leadership in our context is the capacity of someone to direct,
conduct, guide, counsel, and instruct another in a particular course. This
capacity must be merged with authority. The added adjective political offers it the fuller meaning.
This exercise is an art of governing persons in a defined polis (city state); for politics etymologically is traced to the
root word politike which is the
science of the city state or the polis and its members (cf. Onyeocha I. M.,
1994: 9). Hence, Political leadership embraces the totality of the governing
personnel who lead the people according to a particular system towards a shared
goal; indeed, it embraces the science or art of how society is organized or
run.
It is glaring
that political leadership in Nigeria is dismal. Going along history line, this
society has always been plagued by rogue leadership dominated by treasury
(financial and asset) looting and electoral mismanagements, political god-fatherism
and brigandage, partisanism and endemism, ageism and masculinism; indeed,
simply put political corruption. These are so stretched that Nigerian political
leadership has been made synonymous with corruption. In the words of Izu Marcel
Onyeocha, “Nigerian politics is one of acrimony, dissension, division,
sectionalism, and political sleight of hand”; what one sees is mostly cheap,
largely uncoordinated, free-for-all jungle politics of hassle and intrigue, and
which does not hold any promise neither in intent nor in its unfolding, and as
a result, there seems to be little attention paid to the implications of
politics for the progress and growth of the country (1994: 14) In such
situation, descent and public-spirited individuals are disparaged and
discouraged from participating in the resultant dirty politics. Even the few
with altruistic motifs who venture are seen being compromised; thereby joining
the bandwagon.
Our lives in
Nigeria have in recent times been berated by a worsening security situation,
manifested in sporadic bomb blasting, armed robbery, arson, politically
motivated assassinations, massive youth unemployment and acrimonious poverty.
Many are under-nourished; economic, education, health and social
infrastructures are collapsing and fizzling. Our leaders rather than feed and
tend the flock in their charge, choose instead to feed themselves on the sheep
and the milk, to dress themselves in their wool, and abandon the sheep, putting
their lives in danger (cf. Ezek 34:1ff). As far back as 1988, the African
Leadership Forum had outlined challenges that confront African nations; viz.,
capacity building, food security, external debt burden, international trade and
payment relations, efficiency of trade investments, regional and sub-regional
economic integration, consideration of expenditures on arms and armaments, and
concern for the very poor and the vulnerable groups in the process of
structural adjustments (The African Leadership Forum, Report of the Discussion
Group on Economic and Social Issues confronting African Development Ota:
Nigeria, 24th Oct – 1st Nov., 1988). It is then
disheartening that these problems (and even more) still today stare us in the
face. All these are serious challenges and happenings that confront political
leadership in this nation. Who is that leader that will lead us away from all
these? Who will lead us to conquer these fortresses? Leadership intent is now
located in the ambience of self aggrandisement. Politicians must base their
enrolment in their political parties on the proper intention and end of
leadership.
Nigerians are in
dare need of leaders who are sincere with their promises; who can listen to the
masses; who can suffer with the masses and so give in their best. Yes, “we long
for the most elusive quality in our leaders –the quality of authenticity, of
being who you say you are, of possessing a truthfulness that goes beyond words”
(thanks to Obama B., 2006: 66). How can citizens live in their country without
the benefits of just wage, justice, security of life and property? How can
citizens live in their country without the benefits of standard education, stable power supply, good roads, and of good housing scheme? Where efforts were
made to provide these amenities, they were mostly poorly executed with no
reasonable outcome or not done at all or left half-way for next administrations
to inherit and overlook. We need leaders
who can encourage and motivate the citizens to
actively participate in manufacturing or agricultural processing by the building
of industries and appropriate incentives. We need
initiatives that could ignite this country’s industrial structures,
infrastructures and superstructures as
happened in China and other countries. We need leaders who can transcend ethnicity and religion, and employ more those ideals that will make for national
unity. We need
serious policies that can assist in converting our abundant human and natural
resources to beneficial purposes.
To
overcome these challenges, there must be a general mental reorientation. In the
Trouble with Nigeria, C. Achebe had
stated that Nigerians are corrupt because the system they live under today
makes corruption easy and profitable; and after 28years, still repeating these
same words in the There was a Country,
he reiterated that corruption in Nigeria has grown because it is highly
encouraged. “The problem of corruption and indiscipline is probably worse today
it’s ever been, because of the massive way the Nigerian leadership is using the
nation’s wealth to corrupt, really to destroy the country” (Achebe C., 2012:
249). He therefore presented a solution: if you commit a crime, you should be
brought to book. Hold people responsible for misconduct and punish them if they
are guilty; examine the issue of accountability which is a strong argument in
the fight against corruption (Achebe C., 2012: 251). Those who pilot the affairs of the country must sit up and sincerely tackle the corruption monster attacking our collective national destiny and aspirations, so as to block this
stagnation and deterioration of our
economic progress and political revolution. Our election must be free and fair.
The youths ought to be incorporated adequately into governance, and there
should be no gender/age/ethnic discrimination. Let him/her who has the best
workable motif lead.
Every citizen of this nation must show patriotism in his/her relation
with the nation, especially during election, by participating actively and
voting the candidate of his/her choice according to his/her moral judgment. We
must not leave this nation to be successful; thus a check ought to be made in
our manner of emigration, so as to discover those disincentives that repel
citizens away and the incentives that draw them towards other nations. In this
discovery, a head way can be made. We need to sit tight in this country and
make it better. We must help the government and leaders to serve us well, by
not involving ourselves in those crimes and practices (such as armed-robbery,
sanitation and environmental rules, disobedience to the laws, etc.) that will
raise tension in their governance. There should be an all-embracing
co-operative nation-building that can develop higher education on a large
scale, raise the standard of living, increase social interaction, maintain
postal services and communications, coordinate economic activities, recognize
the right of the people and the authority (apologies to Izu Marcel Onyeocha,
1994:12). Indeed, we must go back and live out the words of the second sentence
in the third stanza of our National Anthem where we pray that God assists us to
build a nation where no person will be oppressed. Surely, this is the country
that we can truly call ours.
Ezekoka Peter Onyekachi
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Welcome!!! We are here for your joy and wellbeing. Fr. Ezekoka prays for you.
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