Editorial

Easter, Emulating Jesus’ Attributes 

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Christians in Nigeria and their peers in Christendom are emblazoning Easter in observance of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Easter is a big annual event for Christians worldwide, marking the end of 40 days of fasting, sacrifice, self-discipline, repentance, the forgiveness of sins, and salvation known as the Lenten Season.
Jesus died and rose again, three days later. He became the ultimate sacrifice of sin, paying the highest price of death, shedding his blood to reconcile man back to God. This forms the essence of Easter. It is a period to glint on Jesus Christ, the saviour of humankind, who came to die for the sins of the entire world, so that all men who believe in him, through his death, can live exultant life on earth, and gain full access to the holy God.
Indeed, this year’s observance offers Nigerian Christians yet another opportunity to reflect on the nitty-gritty of this far-famed event upon which the Christian religion and practice are hitched and how those episodes can renew their faith in Jesus Christ. Christians believe that his death is the supreme sacrifice that the sinful world needs for its redemption, and his resurrection is proof that everything Jesus stands for and says is true.
Amidst a season of anxiety and widespread misery and the decomposition of social morality, besides the exacerbating economic fortunes of the overwhelming majority of the people, Nigerian Christians are today affirming the miracle of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is a powerful testimony to the victory of good over evil.
Nigerians have been subjected to substantial socio-economic strain, because of the enormous corruption of the political elite. Regrettably, many of the players in the profligate system are professed Christians who cannot demonstrate Christian mores; rather, they promote the frantic looting of the national treasury.
The celebration of Easter this year once again provides another opportunity for men and women of our country and elsewhere to learn a much-needed lesson on the invincibility of truth, even as falsehood appears to dominate our national landscape. Falsehood may reign for a thousand years, but, its hollowness will be revealed by the light of truth, and it will give way. The resurrection of Jesus Christ shows that the triumph of falsehood is only a mirage.
Faced with the Easter celebrations, it is believed that Christians in Nigeria would reminisce about the agonising pains Jesus put up with on the Cross on Good Friday and abstain from avoidable evil inimical to the promotion of mutual co-existence, unity, peace, and stability of the country. Easter is the powerful declaration that there is life beyond Calvary.
This season, it is expedient that Christians imbibe the spirit of tolerance, forgiveness, good neighbourliness, love, mutual understanding, cooperation, and sacrifice for the helpless and hapless as showed by Jesus Christ during his brief stay on earth. At this moment of increasing criminality, including economic and financial crimes, Easter provides significant opportunities for Nigerians to reconcile themselves with God and man.
Easter festivals begin on Good Friday when Christ, according to the Scriptures, was crucified and ends on Sunday when He rose from the dead in fulfilment of biblical injunctions. As Christians observe this fiesta, church leadership, and followership are required to know and learn the lessons of Easter, which pivot on humility and service to humanity, among others.
Though the quintessence of Easter may wither and wilt in many climes, even within Christendom, the virtues of patience, endurance, tolerance, and sacrifice are still germane, especially in our national life. These values should always manifest in us if Nigeria must move to the next level and be held in awe in the comity of nations.
For instance, tribes, ethnic groups, religious organisations, communities, families, and the Nigerian project are wrecking and crashing because Nigerians have failed to ingest the lessons of Easter by treating their compatriots with honour, respect, love, and dignity which they deserve.
Easter should confer on the Nigerian believer the hope, the trust, and the confidence that all appearances to the contrary notwithstanding, the last vestiges of primitive feudalism, the prevailing lust for power without purpose, the evil manipulation of the legitimate ethnic and religious diversities in the population by greedy merchants of political power, the demon of kleptomania, along with their nightmarish consequences on Nigeria today, can only hold sway for a while.
Nigerian leaders and people can learn something from the life of the one whose resurrection we celebrate. Jesus taught many lessons through his parables and miracles, but the greatest lessons he taught are the lessons of his life. He taught his followers that there is no greater love than for a man to lay down his life for his friends. And that is what he did. He taught them that those who seek to be first must make themselves last and servants of all.
On this Easter occasion, The Tide challenges all Christians to go beyond the popular crusades, prayer vigils, dry fasts, and miracle explosions, and cultivate those higher values for which Jesus Christ died and rose from the dead. We wish all Nigerians, particularly Christians, who make merry this time, a very Happy Easter!

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