ROMANCE AND VIOLENCE
People can
be very patient. They sit by the road and wait for a bus for hours. Or they can
be very impatient, dodging across traffic lanes, overtaking on the left as well
as the right. Some of us are good at waiting. Others, with the prophet, say,
‘we cry for help and you do not listen.’
But the
message is: ‘Wait! Even if it come slowly, it is sure to come.’ I belong to two
countries; one by birth, one by adoption. The one gives me hope for the other.
One waited seven hundred years for freedom and does not have it fully even now.
The other waited seven decades for freedom and it too does not have it fully
even now. Both, in their frustration, resorted to violence but the violence
only yielded a partial solution. You cannot force solutions, unless you are a
mechanic. But people are not machines. They cannot be fixed.
Waiting
does not mean you sit on your hands and do nothing. But it does mean you trust
a solution is on the way and we do all we can to allow the solution to emerge –
even if it comes slowly. It is like the farmer. They are quite different from
the mechanic. They work with vigour to sow their crops but they cannot force
them to grow. They have to wait.
The poet WB
Yeats wrote, ‘Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone / It’s with O’Leary in the grave.’
Those leaders, who, like O’Leary, had a romantic optimistic view that goodness
and truth would triumph, are now being challenged by the men of violence who
want to force a solution. They did force a solution but it didn’t satisfy the
people.
So they had
to go back to waiting. And now, after a hundred years, a solution is finally in
sight. So it is with them. So it will also be with us. ‘We are only servants.’
We do what we can. We cannot force the river to flow faster.
All this is
common sense but it is hard for us to wait. We want solutions and we want them
now. We need the gospel to tell us: authentic permanently satisfying solutions
only come through patience. And patience is a word that comes from the Latin patio,
meaning suffering. A patient in a hospital suffers in the hope of healing. So
it is with us; we suffer but our suffering is not useless. It is the raw
material of a solution.
2 October 2022
Sunday 27 C Habakkuk
1:2-3, 2:2-4 2 Tim 1:6…14 Lk
17:5-10
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