It
was a rather dull Wednesday morning; I was alone and not feeling well so it was
a difficult one. I then had the sudden urge to read the Bible and sure enough a
scriptural passage not only pierced through my heart but it also had my brain
running at full speed. It challenged me, the church that I am a part of and
mostly the country and continent that I belong to. It was the kind of passage
that jumps out the Bible and demands your attention. Perhaps let me share this
scripture and how it challenged not only my thinking but my role within my
community at large.
The
scripture is found on the book of Isaiah 5:20-23 and it reads as thus: ‘Ah, you who call evil good and good evil,
who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and
sweet for bitter! Ah, you who are wise in your own eyes, and shrewd in your own
sight! Ah, you who are heroes in drinking wine and valiant at mixing drink, who
acquit the guilty for a bribe, and deprive the innocent of their rights!” NRSV
This
writer, supposedly Isaiah, sketched this passage within a certain context. The
people of Israel and Judah had become self-absorbed and had forgotten what it
means to live in community, especially since Yahweh is a communal God. Barnes
relates that biblically, the term darkness denotes “ignorance, error, false
doctrine, crime” whereas the term light denotes “truth, knowledge and piety”.
Bitterness signifies sin (see Acts 8:23; Romans 3:14 & Ephesians 4:31). The
implication of how this term is used in this passage implies that sin is
bitter, and has a bitter outcome and holiness is sweet, and has a pleasurable
outcome. The passage speaks of people who have become inflated with their own
knowledge, one that leads them to cease from being led by the one who gives
such knowledge. It also speaks of how the guilty were set free through bribes
and the innocent robbed of their rights. I reckon that Israel and Judah became
a society that was poverty stricken, disease stricken and violently tempered
not because God had turned his back on them, but because of all the injustice
that they allowed to creep into their society.
In
South Africa, we live in a context where the majority of its people are
Christian but often times one is tempted to think that God has relocated. This
country has just undergone two trails where two men had brutally killed the
women they claim to love. The first one, Oscar Pistorius was found not to have
committed murder and thus charged with manslaughter. In the second trial Dewani
was found not to be guilty of the murder of his wife. In December I had to bury
an aunt who was murdered then raped, yes in that order. Recently in uMbulumbulu
a 15 year old girl was found hanged on a tree wearing nothing on her lower body
with evidence of sexual assault. Through observation, we have a nation that has
come to accept such violence and is not angered by it. They are more angered by
how the national soccer team performs, and many are angrier at the fact that we
were knocked out of the AFCON. We are an angry nation, but sadly we are angry
at the wrong things.
The
poverty, crime, maladministration of funds, disease and unemployment remain the
biggest challenges that should anger South Africans. But the national soccer
team angers them even more. Haven’t we as a nation, defined good as evil,
darkness as light and bitterness as sweet? Has not our police force and
judiciary system failed the victims and the innocent but condoned and acquitted
the evil doers? The task of the Church remains huge, but first it has to
speak!!! Rev. Nyobole, the ex-General Secretary of Conference (MCSA) was
conducting a workshop. In speaking about the witness of the church, he stated that
the Church cannot relate to this government like they did to the apartheid
government. This was because the current government is democratic and therefore
belongs to the people. Due to this, he stated that when they have objections to
certain things, the heads of the church request meetings with that department
to express their concerns.
I
still feel that this does not capture what witnessing is, corruption is public
and the people feel its wrath. Crime, poverty and unemployment are also public.
How then does the witness of the Church remain private? How is it okay that
people who are affected by these challenges do not hear the Church denouncing
them? The people who get to hear about these concerns are the propagators. I
thus argue that it is the role of the church to audibly define good from evil,
light from darkness and bitter from sweet.
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