God Does Not Give Up
Two things we've been seeing so far in our Genesis series. . . . 1.) How we see the world shapes how we live in it, and 2.) God tenaciously pursues a broken world, refusing to abandon it, refusing to destroy it, not willing to give up on it.
I stumbled on to two articles this morning. The first was this World Mag article while drinking my coffee this morning that illustrated both points. Its entitled "The Horror, the Hope: Africa needs the transforming power of the Holy Spirit."
I thought, too, the article highlighted the inherent brokenness of the world and ourselves, seen so clearly beneath the thin "veneer of civilization."
The second article, which the first references was this article from the London Times Online entitled "As an Athiest, I Truly Believe Africa Needs God". This is an amazing article.
I've posted both articles in-line this morning, because I think they are both worth your read and I didn't want to risk you not clicking to their original sources.
My kids need to be fed, changed and home schooled this Friday morning, so I gotta go, but I'd love your thoughts. . . .
FromDecember 27, 2008As an atheist, I truly believe Africa needs God
Missionaries, not aid money, are the solution to Africa's biggest problem - the crushing passivity of the people's mindset
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
THOUGHTS | "Schock factor" January 31, 2009
The horror, the hope
Africa needs the transforming power of the Holy Spirit | Janie B. Cheaney
Africa isn't called the Dark Continent for nothing. That title dates back hundreds of years, referring in part to a vast and unexplored geography. Known but unknown from ancient times, Africa remains sullen and seething while the rest of the world moves forward. What ails Africa? There's an abiding resistance that colonialism doesn't entirely account for (though colonial history plays a part). Nor does race. But looking at its history, all the way up to today, one could almost believe the continent is cursed.
Since her European overlords departed, Africa gains stability in one area only to collapse in another. Last year Kenya erupted; now the Congo. Slaughter continues in Darfur and the deterioration of Zimbabwe, which could get no worse, nonetheless gets worse. Africa fatigue infects the world, manifested in the mechanical forking-over of money, most of which slithers on well-greased tracks into the hands of dictators.
Two days after Christmas, a commentary appeared in the London Times Online by Matthew Parris (see WORLD, Jan. 17), a regular columnist and an urbane surveyor of the contemporary scene. Parris was raised in Africa and had just returned from a visit to his home state of Malawi. He came to the opinion page with an uncomfortable conclusion, stated in his title: "As an atheist, I am truly convinced that Africa needs God."
Moreover, Africa doesn't just need God—Africa needs Christ, and the transformation of the Holy Spirit. Parris has seen it too many times to doubt: Faith in Christ sets captives free. "Anxiety—fear of evil spirits, of ancestors, of nature and the wild, or a tribal hierarchy, or quite everyday things—strikes deep into the whole structure of rural African thought. Every man has his place and, call it fear or respect, a great weight grinds down the individual spirit, stunting curiosity." The African Christians he knows are much more open, friendly, courageous than the non-Christians. They try new options, they cross tribal lines. They recognize evil and resist it.
Reaction to the article in the Times comment section was voluminous, and about equally split between agreement and skepticism. Most readers with African roots or experience seconded Parris' conclusion. Objections were predictable: Africa doesn't need more "superstitious nonsense," having more than enough of the homegrown variety. Africa needs education, fair trade, contraception! Yes, "those who don't have education need religion to guide them," but Christianity is at best a "halfway house" for benighted natives to get up to speed before pressing on to modernity; funny how "Christianity carries with it, probably as a historical accident, the values of the European rennaisance [sic] and enlightenment," but if not curtailed, "religion is likely to increase passivity, leaving the corrupt free to take more." And oh yes, do we really need to revive the "white man's burden"?
In a key scene of Hotel Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina and his driver Gregory turn inadvertently, at night, onto a road that they gradually discover is strewn with corpses. "Why do these things happen?" Paul cries. Gregory answers, not too profoundly, that hatred has somehow broken loose. The unspoken question is, Why hatred?
The real question is, Why love?
We know by now where human nature often ends up: A wrong turn down a dark road, and suddenly we're bumping over bodies in a late-model van. Africa is where chaos consistently chooses to rule these days, and the reason for that is too complicated for me. But Africa is the world, in that the veneer of civilization is thin everywhere, and what is not vigorously upheld will inevitably slide. Even hatred doesn't last because it takes energy; once vented, it lapses into less muscular vices like resentment, covetousness, sloth, indifference—all of which are scarcely unknown in "the West."
"Africa does need God," wrote one respondent. "Unfortunately, I think God has given up on Africa." God does not give up. And we, who know that transforming power Matthew Parris can only talk about, must not give up. Why love? Because He first loved us.
If you have a question or comment for Janie Cheaney, send it to jcheaney@worldmag.com.
Copyright © 2009 WORLD Magazine
January 31, 2009, Vol. 24, No. 2
3 comments:
Matthew Parris' article was really interesting. I thought it was great.
Honestly though I thought the World Mag article was disturbing. To lump all of Africa together--as if it were one homogenous country--and declare that it's "sullen and seething", seems at best culturally insensitive. Africa is not just witch doctors and primitive, promiscuous people living in the bush. That is ridiculous. I wonder if the author has ever actually been to Africa.
I only wish MORE people were "mechanically forking-over money" to NGOs working in Africa. It seems like an easy way to assuage our guilt by using the tired line "giving money doesn't do any good because corrupt people take it." (Just for the record money you give to an ethical nonprofit--of which there are many-- will NOT be going to a dictator.) Clean water, malaria nets, and orphan care cost money.
Culturally, much of Africa is God-fearing, joy-filled, and extremely resilient in the face of horrible conditions. The author was trying to make the point that Africa needs the Holy Spirit to show up, but I think most likely WE need the Holy Spirit to convict and humble US so we can show up and start meeting some needs.
Yes, unbelievers in Africa (like anywhere else, including our own country) need Jesus Christ. There's a youtube I keep seeing on blogs called "I need Africa more than Africa needs me." There's a lot of truth to that. If it seems like "the rest of the world is moving forward" while Africa is not, then please let's do everything we can to help.
Sorry for the long comment! Apparently the article struck a nerve, even all the way in Denver. :)
Wow, Brianna, so sorry that rubbed you the wrong way. From everything I can tell, Ms. Cheaney is quite well travelled, serving as one of World's primary international correspondants. I don't want feel the need to defend the author, but I don't think she was suggesting we don't go or give and wait for the H.S. to show up. I think it was a general (perhaps too general) commentary on a diverse, but historically troubled continent of the world.
And I was reading the article from a completely differnt angle from your own. . . as my few sentence article tried to make clear. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Miss you guys. . . T.
Thanks for your thoughtful response Tim. Just to clarify, I certainly wasn't offended that you posted the article, I was just bothered by the tone of what the author wrote.
Having two children from Ethiopia has given me a window into peoples' general attitudes towards Africa, poverty and AIDS. (People feel quite free to let you know what they think.) Had I written this article, I would have done it much differently.
Because people already tend towards apathy, skepticism, and blame when it comes to Africa. The article only seemed like it could fuel the fire of, "Why can't Africa just get it together?"
We miss you guys too! So glad we can keep on things on the ol' Life Together blog!
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