As we enter the New Year 2020, there are
signs of natural joy and happiness on our faces, at least for scaling through
the socioeconomic hardships and political uncertainties of last year.
“Compliments
of the season” greetings are unavoidably still sounding from our lips, as we
hopefully look forward to a more rewarding year 2020.
It will be good, if we should remember vividly certain
things in our minds this year, so as to sustain the good wishes of the New Year
from fading away so soon as it does every year, especially after the first month
of the year.
We desperately need love and tolerance in our society to
keep us in harmony. Usually, most
of our actions are for our own interest. This shows that we love ourselves. We
also being perforce to love those who are our blood relations, while this is
not the natural love I am talking about. Biblically, we have being advised in
the book of St. Luke Chapter Six Verses Thirty-two and Thirty-three, that we
should extends our love beyond those who do good to us. The Bible said: “for if
ye love them which love you, what thank have yea? For sinners also love those
that love them. And if ye do good to them which do good to you only, what thank
have yea? For sinners also do even the same”. For instance, it is a fact that
the armed-robber, who kills his fellow man and carries his goods, will still
have someone he loves.
Apart from the love which we show to other individuals
there is also the love we ought to show to the society in which we live. To
show that we love our society, our actions must be directed toward the
well-being of our fellow countrymen. We must obey the accepted laws in our
society and ensure that there is justice and fair play. We must be honestly
committed to our society in whatever we do. These are all signs of the love we
have for our country. In fact, if this culture was imbibed by all and sundry, our
society will be Heaven on earth, a place to live with no fear.
It is time one should look into these two words which love gave birth to,
Patience and Tolerance. Let’s take patience first. Most ugly traces of
indiscipline facing us in our society today are caused by lack of patience. For
example, the impatient attitude that are being shamelessly displayed when
people queue-up to buy commodities, like fuel in filling station or to share
things or better still when we meet hold-up on our high ways; some people will not wait for
their turn; they “jump the queue” or try to push ahead of those who are waiting
quietly for their turn. Such people usually think that they are more
intelligent or influential, but this is not true. The simple reason is that
they do not have patience. They cause commotion and disarray everywhere. Even
the law enforcement agents are the law breakers in the society today. They do evil
as duty in triumph, not knowing it is a seed of iniquity that will grow up in
the future for them and children’s children.
Secondly, tolerance is a word we often used sometimes instead of
patience. Tolerance has to do with our attitude to people who misbehave or offend
us, either deliberately, mistake or simply out of ignorance. In such situation,
we should endeavor to always tolerate and forgive our offenders. By so doing,
we create happiness for ourselves and others.
In fact, Dele Carnegie, my pen-friend, a profound thinker, must have
reasoned this way when he wrote a book titled “How to Stop Worrying and
Start Living”. In it, he advised: “Let’s forget our own unhappiness by trying to create a little happiness for others. When you are good to others, you are best to yourself”. This is difficult to achieve, but we must start today to build a better society.
Start Living”. In it, he advised: “Let’s forget our own unhappiness by trying to create a little happiness for others. When you are good to others, you are best to yourself”. This is difficult to achieve, but we must start today to build a better society.
To conclude, one would advise that, as this new year 2020 has come to us not by our
own making but by God’s infinite mercy; let us take into cognizance our dream
for a better Nigeria, let’s ask ourselves these few questions: Am I cherished?
Am I loved? Or am I the impatient in our society that causes indiscipline? What
could I offer to keep our society in harmony”. Above all, let’s remember that
man is not earthly bound soul. Life is ephemeral, a fleeting and transitory.
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