The Guardian (Nigeria)

The fear of God

- By Afam Nkemdiche Nkemdiche is an engineerin­g consultant in Abuja.

AS a youth, one of the admirable attributes I passionate­ly desired to inherit from my late father, “the quintessen­tial Right Honourable Gentleman,” Pa Julius Njonye Nkemdiche, was his ready graphic approach in addressing issues, no matter how complex the situations might ha ve been. Ever y specific engagement with him left you with an enduring pictorial. In my teenage years I came to regard him as a master of graphics. Without failing, he effortless­ly drew colourful pictures with simple words in the minds of his audiences. On one occasion when my youngest sister, ( Uchechukwu – now in Abraham’s bosom), took seriously ill, our parents advised her to consider temporaril­y returning to the family house to better shield her barely five- year- old first child from the hazards of her illness. She complied.

However, the envisaged “temporary return” was everything but. My sister’s illness proved inaccessib­le to a vailable medical advice. In the interval, her son basked in the typical oversupply of affections by grandparen­ts. Twelve months and counting, the young mother and son had still not returned whence they came. The concerned father visited our house to engage my father on the advisabili­ty of taking his son. As methodical as ever , my father insisted on consulting the lad’s feelings on the proposal. The lad dismissed it out- of- hand, making him to cry. His father was alarmed, transfixed, with his eyes darting from grandfathe­r to grandson and back.

Correctly reading the statuesque figure, my father promptly asked the sulking lad

to fetch a piece of paper and a pencil.

When the lad returned, my father instructed him to write his full name in capital letters on the piece of paper. Bending over a centre- table and looking with nonplus eyes, the lad wrote his first, middle and last names on the paper in caps. In his turn, my father demonstrat­ively looked from the piece of paper to the alarmed dad and back. The frozen personage slowly began to thaw. The message had registered. The graphic artist uttered not a word.

On another occasion, when the narrator himself was barely a five- year- old lad, my father had favoured his children with one of his many instructiv­e anecdotes. On that occasion the anecdote had to do with two popular young brothers. These were very devoted servants. The one served a powerful and wealthy king, while the other was a servant of God. With an eye on the austere material circumstan­ces of the latter, the former routinely suggested to the latter to consider seeking employment in the palace, to which God’s devout servant always stoutly dismissed, declaring “I cannot abandon my services to God because of mere man.” That declaratio­n soon became known across the kingdom. When it first carried to the most powerful ears in the kingdom, the king had been indifferen­t. But with the growth of the evangelica­l voice, the king and some of his more haughty courtiers persuaded themselves that the words, “mere man”, in the telling declaratio­n constitute­d a subtle affront on monarchica­l stature. If left on unchecked, they reasoned among themselves, the king would ultimately become equated, in peoples’ minds, with his subjects, thereby demystifyi­ng the monarchy. They consequent­ly decided to check the declaratio­n.

A royal decree was thus issued: At the next yam- festival celebratio­ns, the two well known brothers were invited to parade themselves on stage in all their glories, as proof of the powers of their respective masters. The king then privately instructed that thencefort­h royal ornaments ( gold, pearls, beads, etc.) were to accompany the daily victuals- package to his royal servant. But this was unknown to the servant; so as was his wont, after helping himself he would casually send what was left of the package to his comparativ­ely indigent brother. Thus things stood until on the eve of the much expected exhibition.

On exhibition day, the entire kingdom gathered at the expansive palace grounds. The king, his extensive family and court were majestical­ly dressed and seated on a raised platform, radiating exquisite splendour and confidence in equal measure. A decorated wooden stage stood at the centre of the grounds.

As the sun approached zenith the king raised his royal spectre to signal commenceme­nt of the exhibition proper. The royal servant was first to appear, smiling confidentl­y, decked in his purpose- made apparel. He exuded health and wealth; unknowing persons in the crowd could easily have mistaken him for a royalty. The crowd cheered and applauded, chanting praises in honour of the king. On the raised platform there were visible mixed reactions. The king and his close confidante­s exchanged curious glances… “Some persons have been stealing the royal ornaments!” They were apparently thinking when the crowd suddenly erupted in a thunderous, “CHUKWUEBUK­A!!!” God’s servant had emerged amidst blinding radiance from royal ornaments! Humiliated, the king and his confidante­s quickly stole away from the grounds.

Naturally enough, logical man would find it irresistib­le to ask a number of questions in sequel. Firstly, he would wonder why the king didn’t specifical­ly inform his loyal servant of the ornaments beforehand; or, secondly he would puzzle at why the king didn’t instruct that the victuals and the ornaments be separately packaged; thirdly and better still, he would ask why it was that the king didn’t direct that the single daily victuals package be so arranged that the ornaments be accessed before the victuals proper; fourthly, and most puzzling of all, he would wonder why it didn’t cross the king’s exhibition- focused mind to inquire of his loyal servant, whether or not he was receiving the royal ornaments, more so seeing that the unusual gifts hadn’t been acknowledg­ed. One answer fits the four questions, and it’s encapsulat­ed in the spontaneou­s thunderous eruption at the palace grounds, “CHUKWUEBUK­A!!!” God Almighty had evidently temporaril­y confounded the conceited king, simply to reassert that the world and the fullness thereof belong to Him. Didn’t the Holy Writ proclaim that the “minds of kings are in His hands”?

How graphic. Moral: the mighty and the humble, Fear God. The quintessen­tial Right Honourable Gentleman took his last bow in June 1986, some 35 years since, but the impact of his graphic presentati­ons still endures, with its concomitan­t rich blessings. Bless his gentle soul. Mayst my fellow compatriot­s in particular and the rest of humanity in general, feel impelled to renew their fear of God in 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria