There is apparently a Chinese
curse which says ‘May you live in interesting times.’ Although the background
of this saying is not clear, Albert Camus and Robert Kennedy certainly believed
in it. The inference is, according to another Chinese Proverb, that it is
better to be a dog in peace than a man in anarchy! Certainly the times that we
are living through are ‘interesting.’ What ultimately will BREXIT mean, will
the Scots get another chance at independence, and will they take it, and of
course how will other world players such as Trump or Putin eventually be
remembered?
The reality is that society is constantly
changing. But what type of society do we want to see? With the NHS, social care
and education squeezed of funds do we want a society where all are expected to
fend for themselves or where we all have a societal responsibility to one
another? Are we comfortable in a free for all market of opportunities and
pitfalls, or do we envisage society as a family where over time each plays their
part? Even after Brexit or possible Scottish independence, the reality of
Global Trade means the massive question of who is in, or who left out of any
society we imagine will remain. Climate change and the reality of mass economic
migration from areas of either deprivation or instability are other undeniable
realities. Have we indeed been cursed to live in ‘interesting times?’
Gandhi said we must become the
change we wish to see for society to be transformed. For me that means becoming
a person who treats each ‘other’ that I encounter as someone of divine worth. My
rationale for this comes from understanding a God who ‘shows no favouritism.’ I
live in Frampton, England, however God is not tribal pro one group and against
another. Many misunderstand this. We may hear that God calls and chooses particular
individuals and we mistakenly understand this as an elitist calling out, a separation
FROM others. People even speak of their country as ‘God’s own country.’ I
believe this is a fundamental error. God’s calling is FOR others. God chooses and
calls with a purpose to release our potential to bring blessing to others. To
be called is not to be special but it is to have a purpose. A mother is called
to love and nurture, an engineer to imagine and build safely things that help
others to flourish. A friend is called to stand alongside in times of need. Our
truest calling and purpose is always discovered through serving others.
So we live in ‘interesting
times!’ I do not believe this to be a curse, we do not need to be in fear of
those who are different. Rather their difference is an opportunity for us to
rediscover our purpose. We have been chosen for this time and we can
demonstrate this calling by treating others as we would love to be treated.
With Easter approaching this
concept of calling is reinforced. However else Jesus’ mission might be
understood it was not so that he could show how separate and great he was. You
would find Jesus with the outcasts of his time. His calling always for others:
good news for the poor, freedom for the oppressed and sight for those who were
blind. If your times were ‘interesting’ he was exactly the sort of person you
wanted beside you. Christians believe even his sacrificial death is somehow for
OTHERS. Even in interesting times he was a man of the people and for the
people.
Stephen Newell
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