Plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose!
Do you commonly use French phrases in everyday conversation? Perhaps the Paris Olympics will remind us there are some such phrases embedded in the English language.

As we come to the Olympic Games in Paris, there will be many who will be looking forward in excitement and expectation, but there will be others who are not so excited by 2 weeks of sporting activity dominating the TV, and may very well be
thinking it’s all ‘deja vu’ and accept it stoically as ‘c’est la vie!’
But the Paris Olympics will not be ‘deja vu’, certainly not when compared to the first time Paris was the venue for the Olympic Games in 1900. That was only the 2nd Games of the modern era, this is the 33 rd. Then there were only 720 competitors,
nearly three-quarters from France, this year there will be 10,000, and a Para-Olympics to follow. Then the competitions included cricket and croquet, tug-of-war and a 200metre obstacle swimming race. This time, there will be a break-dancing competition for the first time and the surfing event will take place in Tahiti, 15,700km from Paris in French Polynesia.
However, although there are many changes, the organisers will hope that, essentially, everything will be the same, that the events will run smoothly, those taking part will engage with one another in the true Olympic spirit, and everyone, not only the competitors but the spectators and the viewers around the world, will have an enjoyable experience.
In the world today, ‘plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose’ is an inevitable comment. There is constant change, with the suggestion, and expectation, that life will get better, but nothing seems to improve. Standards of life at every level, from local society to international relations, seem to be deteriorating.
In the Old Testament, the Bible describes such a situation as happening when ‘every man did that which was right in his own eyes’ (Judges 17.6[AV]), or ‘did just as he pleased’ [GNB]. That is true today for Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu and
the Hamas leadership through to those who peddle drugs and the youngsters who carry and use knives to settle arguments.
There are standards which have been set by the Almighty God who has declared, ‘I am the Lord, I change not’, standards which, if followed, can only change lives for the better for everyone. Found in Exodus 20.3-17, they were summarised by Jesus in 2 statements : ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind’ and ‘Love your neighbour as you love yourself’ (Matt.22.37, 39 [GNB]).
It should not be a case of ‘plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose’ but a case of following the eternal unchanging standards so that everything will change for the better.








