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| Africa |
Does
God Live In Africa?
It
is a fixed human trait to be overly optimistic.
I
have heard it said that God lives in Africa, and occasionally visits Europe and
America. Is this comical rendition something we Africans believe, or we
serenade such lines in flattering jest? Perhaps the reverse may be true.
However, at present, Africa seriously needs a visitation from the Lord.
As
I have argued in the past, and you may agree, there are many paths we may
choose to tread as a means of fixing the issues of our continent. While we may
follow a forceful blast of models and policies as our preferred route of escape
from our enlarging misery; I will never rule out divine portals as a fragrant
course worth considering. It may not be everyone's belief, but it is one that I
firmly and unflinchingly believe is a puissant route out of our current
predicament. Yes, call me mad, but Africa needs a divine visitation. Are you
laughing?
In
truth, we may differ on the method, but we are likely to converge on the
grounds that we definitely need a practical change in our failing and flagging
fortunes.
Joining
Voluntary Slave Ships
In
one biblical account, the story is quite poignant, and the correlation to our
story as a continent is undeniable. It must perforce pique our pallid interest.
"Now
it came to pass in the days when the judges ruled, that there was a famine in
the land. And a certain man of Bethlehemjudah went to sojourn in the country of
Moab, he, and his wife, and his two sons" (Ruth1:1).
Why
do the best minds leave the shores of Africa in search of supposed greener
pastures? The answer is clear from above. Why do weak people risk their fragile
lives trying to cross the rude desert? It's the same reason, as shown above.
Sadly, the continent has been drained, and it's now bereft of truly Homeric
figures who can scintillate our crepuscular prospects with enthralling sparkle
and progress. Ironically, these same gems are shinning incessantly in adorning
the galaxies of already developed economies.
This
is not an apology for people to leave the shores, but we are creatures of
comfort, and we go where we can be comfortable (or believe we will be comfortable).
There is ample corroboration for this transparent view: Why are certain
embassies in our countries always packed before the crack of dawn? Why do
people wait all night only to be refused a visa just before the day's twilight;
not to talk about the significant investments made to even secure an interview?
And why is visa racketeering, aided by equally corrupt people in diplomatic
offices, such a lucrative path to amass filthy lucre?
The
answers to the questions above and several others, stem from the truth that
conditions on our shores are simply unbearable for many, who continue to summon
and tax all their wily powers for an imminent escape. We may not even mention
how many of our people went on a visit (or to represent our countries in
games), and never returned. Perhaps we should also highlight how foreign
governments rake in millions from our sons and daughters who have to keep
renewing visas to remain overseas.
A
piercing question demands your best answer: Why, for example, will a bank
manager in Africa be willing to go, and do cleaning or security in developed
countries? Does it make much sense, thinking in terms of dignity, and not
economics? Perhaps not to you, but these are not stupid people. In fact, the
irresistible lure of a better life teases them beyond belief and restraint.
How
much revenue is amassed by diplomatic offices from all the fees we cough out,
so we can travel (and slave) in distant lands, and not to mention the cut of
middle men? Nonetheless, anybody who thinks they can rail on those who want to
leave the shores, will perhaps please some, but will persuade very few, if any.
For, alas and alack, the Elimelechs and the Naomis, together with their
children will continue to file out in droves, as long as the "famine"
continues.
People
Will Return Home When God Visits Africa
A
brain drain is not a fluke of nature; it is a human response to economic
inefficiencies and inequalities. Thus, we need a solid solution. Yes, something
must happen to stop the spiral decline. Talking and shouting will do very
little. In my view, we need a divine visitation like it occurred in the
referenced text. We learn, "Then [Naomi] arose with her daughters in law,
that she might return from the country of Moab: for she had heard in the
country of Moab how that the LORD had visited his people in giving them
bread" (Ruth 1:6).
On
the day that God visits Africa like He did in the preceding text, many of her
scattered children struggling in the diaspora like Noami struggled in Moab,
will return to the shores of this wonderful continent. Yes, they will not need
to be deported, they will come by themselves. After all, in that biblical
account, Naomi and her husband left Bethlehem to seek greener pastures abroad.
And today, like has been mentioned earlier, many continue to queue in their
haste to flee the withering scorn of poverty within our borders.
A
belief in divine visitation is sound, as the variables and indices do not look
too propitious. Thus, while other developed continents will perhaps laugh at
such a suggestion, divine intervention may very well embody Africa's practical
hope.
Reflecting
on the text above, we are not told what contributed to the famine, but if past
precedent is anything to go by, then for our application, it is the sins of our
leaders, as well as we the people on the continent—our greed, our corruption
etc—that has resulted in this situation; and it is the same that continues to
ensure our laggard status; just as for the people of Israel, it was always
their sins that impoverished them (Judges 6:1-6; 2:11; 3:7; 3:12; 4:1; 10:6-7;
13:1).
Yet,
for Hannah (a barren woman), also from the Scriptures, we discover something
pleasant: "And the LORD visited Hannah, so that she conceived, and bare
three sons and two daughters" (1 Samuel 2:21).
Let
those who are religious seize the charge and continue to believe and pray that
God will soon visit Africa. For "Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it:
thou greatly enrichest it with the river of God, which is full of water: thou
preparest them corn, when thou hast so provided for it" (Psalm 65:9).
For
all our failing efforts at transformation, being lent a divine hand should
bestead our progress. We could very well do with God visiting this vast
continent. The psalmist writes from Psalm 59:5: "Thou therefore, O LORD
God of hosts, the God of Israel, awake to visit all the heathen: be not
merciful to any wicked transgressors. Selah." Yes, may the Lord remove
those that "turn aside the needy from judgment, and to take away the right
from the poor of my people, that widows may be their prey, and that they may
rob the fatherless!" (Isaiah 10:2).
Such
divine visitation will fall upon our land like delayed rain to a parched field.
For, despite the abundant resources that God has blessed Africa with, to a proven
extent, we are "a people robbed and spoiled; [we] are all of [us] snared
in holes, and [we] are hid in prison houses: [we] are for a prey, and none
delivereth; for a spoil, and none saith, Restore" (Isaiah 42:22). Sadly,
our leaders "have used oppression, and exercised robbery, and have vexed
the poor and needy: yea, they have oppressed the stranger wrongfully"
(Ezekiel 22:29).
It
is imperative that we continue to do what is within our human power and
ability, but we must never rule out the need for divine visitation in the
affairs of the continent. In truth, it might just prove the pivot on which we
impressively swing from lasting predicament to our long overdue promised land.
I
shall return with my talking drums!
Angelina K. Morrison is interested in national development, true religion, and self-improvement. She enjoys thinking, and writes stories only when the muse grips her. Her first short story, Gravellatina is a breathtaking five-part series available now at Amazon. You can email her at angelinakm75@gmail.com, or find her at www.angelinakmorrison.blogspot.com or Facebook page.
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