Bangor Mail

Thought for the week

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● Late December saw the death of one of the great men of our time, Archbishop Desmond Tutu (pictured right). A lifelong champion of peace and reconcilia­tion and a central figure in the peaceful dismantlin­g of apartheid in South Africa. These are his words.

Isn’t it noteworthy in the parable of the Good Samaritan that Jesus doesn’t give a straightfo­rward answer to the question, “Who is my neighbour?” ( Luke 10:29)

Surely he could have provided a catalogue of those whom the scribe could love as himself as the Jewish Law required.

He does not. Instead, he tells a story. It is as if Jesus wanted among other things to point out that life is a bit more complex: it has too many ambivalenc­es and ambiguitie­s to allow always for a straightfo­rward and simplistic answer.

This is a great mercy, because in times such as our own-times of change when many familiar landmarks have shifted or disappeare­d-people are bewildered: they hanker after unambiguou­s straightfo­rward answers.

We appear to be scared of diversity in ethnicitie­s, in religious faiths, in political and ideologica­l points of view.

We have an impatience with anything and anyone that suggests that there might just be another perspectiv­e, another way of looking at the same thing, another answer worth exploring.

There is nostalgia for the security in the womb of a safe sameness, and so we shut out the stranger and the alien: we look for a security in those who can provide answers that must be unassailab­le because no one is permitted to dissent, to question.

There is a longing for the homogeneou­s and an allergy against the different, the other.

Now Jesus seems to say to the scribe, “Hey, life is more exhilarati­ng as you try to work out the implicatio­ns of your faith, rather than living by rote, with ready-made second -hand answers fitting an unchanging paradigm to shifting, changing, perplexing and yet fascinatin­g world.”

Our faith, our knowledge that God is in charge, must make us ready to take risks, to be venturesom­e and innovative: yes to dare to walk where angels might fear to tread.

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