Frank Olize, the
veteran Sunday night news magazine anchor of the Nigerian Television Authority,
would always begin his show with the words: “My name is Frank Olize, do you
know where your children are?” No judgement. No explanations. No further
questions. Simply, “Do you know where your children are?” This question often
brought deep concern in the minds of our parents many of whom did not know
where their children were. For us, the “suspects,” that question was like
asking our poke-nosing parents to do a quick roll call to know who was around
and who wasn’t.
Why were parents
uneasy with the first few minutes of every Newsline
edition? For most, it was not for themselves but for their kids. Whenever
Frank Olize asks “…do you know where your
children are?” he was demanding responsibility. In effect his expectation
was that at the very least every parent or guardian should be aware of the
physical location of their wards. His question expects that parents keep watch
over their children.
As it was with Frank
Olize and his Newsline super-opener, so
it is with God. Cain, the first child of the first family, murdered his kid
brother because of a grievance he could not let go of. And just like Frank, God
asked “Where is Abel your brother?” In less direct words, God could have asked,
“Do you know where your brother is?” This was not God poke nosing into Cain’s
business. No, God asked because (I think) of 3 reasons. But, before we go to
the three reasons, it is good I say that “Where” in God’s legendary question to
Cain might have referred to physical location but could easily have referred to
attitude, beliefs, choices, actions, and many more. So, what are the 3 reasons?
First, he expected
Cain to actually know where Abel was.
Apparently, in God’s books, it is the responsibility of “brothers”: neighbours,
friends, relatives, church members, team players, and many more “brothers” to
know where one another are. Does this concern Cain? Sure does. Why? The next
paragraph answers this.
God expected Cain to not
just have knowledge of Abel’s physical location but to keep watch. He expected Cain’s eyes to hover over Abel so as to
know where he was headed, what he was doing and about to do. He expected him to
watch his back and ensure harm does not befall him. He expected that Abel’s
life choices and actions would be Cain’s concern.
Lastly, God asked
because he knew where Abel was. Abel was never missing to God. Frank Olize
couldn’t have made God uneasy with his question. God knew all along. He knew
when Cain’s anger snapped. He knew when the club hit Abel. He knew when Abel
bled on the ground. He knew when Cain dug the earth and covered his brother in
it. He knew all along because he kept watch. God was never ignorant of where
Abel was. It was just that he expected Cain to be a “co-knower”
Do we?
Do we know where our
“brothers” are? We – you, me – have “brothers” all around us. Daily they are
bombarded with problems and difficult times. They are tempted, attacked,
seduced, cajoled and pushed to the wall. They will make choices, follow
friends, and walk on paths that may get them lost. Are we watching to know
where they are?

Great thought Sir. More grace!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteI like it. Nice piece, legendary questions. But I still need that recharge card.
ReplyDeletelol...
DeleteGreat INSIGHT. Thank you sir.
ReplyDeleteThank You Vik!!!
Delete