The Truly Spiritual

The Truly Spiritual – an evening muse

Sometimes people can twitch when you mention ‘God’ & ‘spiritual’ in the same conversation. In our day and age it would seem as if the two were diametrically opposed. But that is not the case! What did Jesus say? – ‘God is spirit and those who worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth’ [John chapter 4 verse 24 - John 4:24]. It would appear that those who are truly spiritual know their God, their creator. They are they who know The Eternal Spirit, He who is the source of all life and truth. (2 Corinthians 3:18)

P

I agree with David Starkey….joke!

“A wha de backside dis’ya fool fool man a chat ’bout pan me screen. Cha.”

Mr. Starkey – that is Jamaican patois!

I will write a proper mini-analysis on Mr Starkey’s inflammatory comments later!

P

UK Goes Mad

And so I jump on the proverbial ‘bandwagon’.

My ACS Presidential predecessor of years gone by (2006-7 I think Alfred? – check his blog post on it all) told me the other day I should blog about the riots/looting/hooliganry currently engulfing the streets of England’s grey and pleasant land. I thought I’d not. But after having just returned from attempting to clean up the streets of Manchester after the thuggery moved northward, I decided to whip out my pen….keyboard!

Firstly I do not apologise for using the words: hooliganry and thuggery, for the behaviour we have witnessed over the past 4 days has been just that.

While I maintain that our country is in a sorry state, while I maintain that some young people are harassed by police, while I maintain that vital services for youth are cut and decimated; I maintain the following:

A political revolution looks like the millions who marched on Washington in 1963 to defend the civil rights of 15 million African-Americans.

It looks like the million who marched on London when we went to Iraq in 2003.

It looks like the thousands who peacefully (mostly) marched on London against the rise in tuition fees in 2010.

It looks like the thousands gathered in Tahrir square in 2011 demanding the resignation of former Egyptian president.

A political uprising/revolution/demonstration/insert other favourite word does not look like hooded gangs setting fire to Miss Selfridge  in Manchester city centre with a few free clothes.

It does not look like the Bullring Shopping Centre in our 2nd city being mobbed

…and it certainly does not look like a 150 year old family business going up in flames in Croydon.

Manchester Riot – Miss. Selfridge
Police and the public stand outside the Bullring in Birmingham, England on August 8, 2011. Riots and looting have broken out all across Greater London and are now spreading across the country following the shooting of Mark Duggan by police in Tottenham, North London on Friday, August 8th London, England – 08.08.11 Mandatory Credit: Kate Woolridge/WENN.com


It doesn’t matter whether you are a middle class Tory with your “head in the clouds” (something similar to what I’ve heard said), a disenchanted youth who lives slightly above the bread line, or you’re an average student who is neither middle nor working class but in between. All ‘people of goodwill’, to use the phrase of Martin Luther King Jr. must see that this is pointless/mindless/ineffective foolishness!



What about the kids who want their EMA? What about the kids who hate the police?


Let’s get two things straight. This is not simply about young people (a few older folks are involved) and furthermore neither is it – irrespective of the rantings of the lunatics who assign themselves to the BNP/EDL or other senseless organisations – about race! To use the words of one Mancunian counsellor last night (9 August) ‘I’ve seen white youth, asian youth, black youth’.

At the end of the day it comes down to my personal opinion, based on the actions summed up when I analysed what I believe a true revolution/political statement to be; and it is that on the whole this is a case of people jumping on ‘hype’. Let’s be honest, most of what has occurred outside of London – outside of Tottenham for that matter – is simply a case of what one young yob said last night when he showed his face on Sky News and what some young girls in London said – an attack on the police, the so-called rich, a bit of fun and a chance to fill a vacuum of police presence!

I truly believe that most of this is ‘hype’. Equally we ought not to dismiss the concerns of many of the rioters and others r.e. cuts, but at the same time remembering that much of this is indeed mindless hooliganism, borne out of a nature that is so estranged from authority, government…and personal property!

We must look at ‘Why?’ We must do something about the deeper issue, the question is not, ‘Why don’t the government stop the cuts?’, the more prudent question is ‘Why do these people find pleasure in destroying homes and livelihoods?’

People are destroying their own communities. They are destroying homes - in any other time this would have a phrase attached to it - attempted murder.

The man with the grocery store, the man with the independent clothes shop, the lady who runs the off licences are not the rich!

It’s Mr. Smith, it’s Miss. Jones, the guy down the road who gives your mum a lift to work as he opens up his corner shop where he labours 7 days a week!


And so to conclude…

Yes the cuts are bad. Yes the removal of youth services removes access for young people. But let’s get used to it, the government are not going to do a U-turn and so it turns to us in society to engage, to start up what we can, help where we can, get engaged with young minds and be a society, a community – put the ‘Big Society’ into action!

And finally I speak to my fellow Christian brethren and to myself! What a witness we have been left with by Our Lord Jesus Christ until he returns. To love the poor, to feed the hungry, to love our neighbour as ourselves and to ‘do good to all men’ as the Apostle Paul said later on in the New Testament. Let us go forth with this mandate and share His love, His great good news and the great hope that there is in Him and him alone of knowing the one true God and serving Him in this life, in this country!

P

Jamaican Sayings

The Jamaican Flag - raised in all its glory on independence on this in 1962. Yellow/Gold - a symbol of sunshine and natural resources. Green - the land and hope for the future. Black - the burdens borne by the people

Today (August 6 2011) the island of Jamaica celebrates 49 years of independent self-rule free from British colonialism. Here are a few sayings of the Jamaican people! Enjoy…


Thanks to friends: Romy & John, my mother & grandmother and a couple of websites which are good for a laugh (see end).



“Cockroach nuh business inna fowl fight” = Stay out of things that don’t concern you or else!


One one cocoa full basket = scenario: you need £100 and you get £1 every so often, you are discouraged but somebody encourages you by saying “One one cocoa full basket” – think Tesco – “every little helps” my dad always uses this one, particularly when watching the West Indies cricket team slowly reach their target!

“What sweet yu goin sour yu” = (with certain things) if you like it, one of these days will hurt you


“You can’t butter you bread and eat it” = Think: “You can’t have your cake and eat it”


“What gone bad a morning cant come good a evening” = particularly used of wild children. If something is destroyed from its beginning it will remain the same e.g. a badly raised child.


“heng pon nail” = Basically meaning your clothes are not on properly and you look like you are “hanging on a nail”. I’ve had this a lot from my mother – clearly she doesn’t think much of my dress sense!


“Wha sweet nanny goat a go run him belly” = If you think you’re a know all and ignore the advice of others you will suffer!


“Play wid puppy, puppy lick yu mout” = If you spoil/be naive with someone they will take advantage


“Every dawg have him day an every puss him 4 o’clock” = What goes around comes around


“If the finger bad you can’t chop off the hand” = One bad element in something does not mean you should discard the whole thing


“Hang your basket where your hand can reach it” - Spend what you can


“If yu han’ in lion mout tek time tek it out” = If your hand is in the metaphorical lion’s mouth and you pull to rashly (against the situation) you will get bitten


“Good fowl a go a market sensei fowl pick up themself deh follow back a dem” = Mum loves this one, apparently my Grandad (her dad) employed the phrase a lot, took me years to figure it out. It basically means someone who knows what they are doing goes off to ‘do what they do’ then a pretender who doesn’t have a clue copies them! Or the more succinct definition I found on the internet – “Person with class being copied by ghetto individual.”


“Duppy know who fi frighten” = Bullies usually know who to prey on – another favourite of my mum

Here is one final one that I couldn’t find out the meaning of! Comment your explanation if you know it

‘yuh bread butter an’ yuh coco roast’?


Here is a great wikipedia page! Very good! Realised where some of the words Jamaicans say all the time come from:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_Patois


Websites consulted:

http://www.everytingjamaican.com/jamaicatalk/general-discussions/10740-jamaican-parables.html

http://www.inboxity.com/view.asp?id=454

P

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 403 other followers