RESILIENCE
It may well be that resilience
is the most powerful lesson we can glean from the life of that statesman
extraordinaire, the late President Nelson Mandela of the Republic of South
Africa. Born amidst the most challenging
and agonizing of societal situations, apartheid, he purposefully
persevered. Mandela was unjustly
imprisoned on Robben Island for 27 years, but he never allowed his
incarceration to enter his soul or to sour his spirit. Rather, he chose the path of forgiveness and
reconciliation, thereby healing a nation and its people.
Arguably, President Mandela
traded his youth, his family life, his marriage and a myriad of things we may
never know about to invest sacrificially in the liberation of South Africans
and humankind. When the poet laureate,
Maya Angelou, penned her epic prose, “Still I Rise,” she might well have been
personally inspired by the life and legacy of “Tata Madiba,” as he is
affectionately known to his brothers, sisters, daughters and sons in his
beloved South Africa.
You may write me down in
history
With your bitter, twisted
lies,
You may trod me in the very
dirt
But still, like dust, I’ll
rise.
Does my sassiness upset
you?
Why are you beset with
gloom?
‘Cause I walk like I’ve got
oil wells
Pumping in my living room.
Just like moons and like
suns,
With the certainty of
tides,
Just like hopes springing
high,
Still I’ll rise.
Did you want to see me
broken?
Bowed head and lowered
eyes?
Shoulders falling down like
teardrops,
Weakened by my soulful
cries?
Does my haughtiness offend
you?
Don’t you take it awful
hard
‘Cause I laugh like I’ve
got gold mines
Diggin’ in my own backyard.
You may shoot me with your
words,
You may cut me with your
eyes,
You may kill me with your
hatefulness,
But still, like air, I’ll
rise.
Out of the huts of history’s
shame
I
rise.
Up from a past that’s
rooted in pain
I
rise.
I’m a black ocean, leaping
and wide,
Leaving behind nights of
terror and fear
I
rise.
Into a daybreak that’s
wondrously clear
I
rise.
I am the dream and the hope
of the slave.
I
rise,
I
rise,
I
rise.
How grateful Belinda and I
are to have resided in South Africa as long-term missionaries, and to have
personally visited Mandela’s incarceration sites, both in Johannesburg’s
Section Four Prison and Cape Town’s Robben Island Prison. Most importantly, we observed first-hand the
awesome and ongoing transition of a phenomenal nation that is destined to be a
major conduit of spiritual, political and social change on the continent of
Africa.
Today, it is our signal
honor to salute this world-shaker, this dreamer, this visionary, this
revolutionary, this social prophet, who was duly deputized and dispatched by
Almighty God to love and liberate an oppressed people. Rest in peace, President Nelson Mandela, rest
in peace. From our hearts, we thank you,
as we solemnly honor and joyously celebrate your rare and magnanimous
contribution to human history. We
collectively resolve to emulate your courage, your compassion, your consistency
and your conviction. We will remain
ready, resilient, focused, hopeful and free, notwithstanding challenging socio-political
circumstances. No matter what, still we
rise!
Sisters and brothers, be
continually blessed, and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO
MEET OUR SOON COMING KING. Maranatha!
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