At this place, I shall come face to face with my fears, demons, spirits, netherworld, nadir, and triumph's zenith! Supposing you wanted to read about the woman who gave birth to river Nile, or the fact that the Greeks borrowed fables and story-telling from their interactions with Africa or the fact that Africa has so much she can contribute to the world all and is draped in diversity! Come, let me take you to that journey please! What? You don't talk to strangers? Well, well.....
Friday, 19 July 2013
How a black man should hold his stature so as not to make others draw their guns in fear?
As Charles Blow wrote in the Times, “So what do I tell my boys now? At what precise pace should a black man walk to avoid suspicion?” One needs to understand the prevailing legal winds in a given state:
Read this piece please: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/closeread/2013/07/what-should-trayvon-martin-have-done.html
Read this piece please: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/closeread/2013/07/what-should-trayvon-martin-have-done.html
Sisyphus
The feet
that tread into a newer world,
Urged on,
prodded and intuitive,
the very
prompts of necessity.
The paths
earlier beaten,
Mixed bearings
for retreat,
blasé and
satiety in curiosity’s belly.
As humans we
need to learn,
We may be held
back by systems,
but this is
no reason not to try.
Sunday, 14 July 2013
Thomas Rogers Muyunga Mukasa shares; Peacefulness from welcoming God in our midst; God comes first for peace to hold fast
Two words have led me to
contemplate the aspect of welcoming God in our lives. The words are peace and
Emmanuel. In welcoming another King, the
Magi were visited by the angel of the Lord who accorded them safe passage to
and fro their own homes. Herod on the other hand did not welcome the King born
among Jews and with his evil mind killed all children below two years! God is
both a host and guest in our hearts. We have to accord God appropriate welcome,
do what He commands us to do and that way live or lead a peaceful life. This
fact was the bulk of all the interactions between God and Humans from Genesis
to present day.
Moses, one of the greatest
prophets drew a chart on our relations and co-existence with God. In
Deuteronomy 29 and 30, one meets five crucial points we as humans will have to follow to have peace enduring in our midst: acknowledge God’s presence; belief in God by
divesting all manner of doubt about God; practicing God’s commandments
especially that of love; heeding to God’s word and; turning to God with whole
of our heart and soul.
Fast forward to the New Testament,
we meet Luke in 10: 5-16 showing to us what would make peace endure in our
midst when Jesus sent out the 72. We see that peace on inhabitants is possible
but we also see the repercussions awaiting non-admittance. God comes first if
we want peace to hold fast. Nothing will prevail before God is allowed to take
control.
In Joshua 6:5, Jericho one of the
most solidly fortified of cities fell, its walls crumbled when they denied
entrance to the Jews. A blast of the ram’s horns tore down the walls that were
so impregnable! In Joshua 8: 18 we see Joshua accepting to go by God’s advice
in warfare and this gets him victory at Ai.
In Genesis 18: 10-15 we see that
God comes to us always with good news. Sarah learns of her possibility for
child-birth but scorns the news. This did not please God. Sarah went on to give
birth indeed. In Genesis 18: 16-19 Abraham welcomed God in his life and we see
in subsequent passages God acknowledging Abraham and rewarded for his
steadfastness to God. In receiving God, we need to be appropriate and conduct
ourselves in good stead. In Genesis 19: 1-17 Sodom and Gomorrah were some of
the cities where God’s chosen prophets preached. Abraham learnt of their
destruction and put in effort to warn and plead for them. But the Sodomites and
Gommorahites were busy with bodily enjoyments including gangs that disturbed
the peace of neighborhoods. In this passage one reads about what happened to
Sodom and Gomorrah as a result of treating Lot’s guests unwelcomingly.
In the 21st Century,
we have everything that points to God’s existence. What we have not learnt so
well is ourselves. We are so busy getting adept at knowing so many things but
ourselves. In his small pocket book, Raymond F. Dlugos, PhD (Finding
God in Anger, fear, sadness and shame. 2008), shows us how we can Welcome
God in our life through understanding our own emotions and taming them to
listen to God. Anger, fear, sadness, shame, violence, despair, separateness by
standards of living, racially-biased prejudices and pride hold us as individuals
in the chains that in turn make us fail to welcome God. Acts of mercy, humility, trust, compassion,
gratitude and a profound awareness of humanity we share with the rest of the world hold us fast to values that in turn make for deeper peace. In
a situation Okaying a band-wagon hubris and peer pressure, we are called upon
to first and foremost hold individuals to account for their actions. Thus is peace among us and with us (Emmanuel).
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