FRONT
I wonder why the ruling party chooses to retain the word
‘Front’ in its title? It was part of the title chosen by their predecessors in
government when, in the early 1960s, they chose a military title for theirs.
Then it was a ‘front’ against any black advancement and the Zambezi was often
invoked as a frontier with chaos ‘to the north of us’, a chaos against which
they were determined to build a solid defence.
Knowingly or unknowingly, our present government retains –
not only the word, with its militaristic connotation - but the attitude of ‘we’
and ‘them’ which was the coinage of the Rhodesians. Every decision, every
policy, was then, and is now, underwritten by an outlook that kept, and keeps,
the front in place. You may advance so far but no further. We, on this side of
the front, intend to keep things as they are.
A front can be a barrier. And a barrier is a sign of fear.
But it can also be an invitation. And then it becomes a sign of growth. ‘Look
to him and be radiant; so your faces will never be ashamed’, cries the psalmist
(34:5) and when Peter was in the depths of his humiliation, ‘Jesus turned and
looked straight at him’ (Luke 22:61). It was a look of love and compassion but it
was also a con-front-ation. Peter was a new man from that moment. To
face someone or something can be a moment of healing. To engage with people who
are different from us, opens us up.
‘Engage’ was the catchword of the French youth in 1968, and
when it comes to revolutions, as usual, the French like to be out in front -
that word again! After all, the phrase avant-garde is theirs. In
Matthew’s sermon on the mountain, Jesus is explicitly avant-garde; he moves
beyond the front the Jews had built. ‘You have learnt how it was said to our
ancestors …’ about killing, adultery, and the rest. ‘But I say this to you …’
and he goes far beyond the frontier the Jews had built and probes the deeper
meaning of relationships between people. He knows it will be tough to break
down the barriers but he puts the choice all the same: ‘fire and water is
placed before you, choose what you prefer,’ (Ben Sira 15:15).
To face someone or something can be a liberation. People
choose to visit the sick – not just their relatives, the handicapped and those
in prison. Often, they will say, ‘I receive far more than I give.’
12 February
2023 Sunday
6A Sir
15:15-20 1 Cor 2:6-10 Matt 5:17-37
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