WE need to figure out how the exclusivity of truth can blend with the
inclusivity of charity. Truth and charity should go together, not one without
the other. St. Paul says it to us very clearly: “Do the truth in charity.” (Eph
4,15)
He
says that it is by this guideline that we will become like Christ. He
reiterates this point when in another letter, he says: “Let all your things be
done in charity.” (1 Cor 16,14)
And
that’s simply because charity is the mother of all virtues, the summary of all
goodness, and, in fact, the very essence of God in whose image and likeness we
are. Nothing is genuinely good and proper to us unless it is infused or
motivated by charity.
Truth,
of course, is about what is objective, real, right, fair. It is more about how
things ought to be which may not coincide with how things are at present. In
the end, truth is Christ himself, his whole self, his entire teaching and
example. He himself said, “I am the way, the truth and the life.” (Jn 14,6)
Our
difficulty starts when we understand truth simply as an intellectual affair,
divorced from its moral requirements. That attitude restricts the essence of
truth, making it abstract, projected only in the ideal world of the mind and
desires, detached from the concrete and real world where many other
considerations ought to be made.
Truth
understood and lived in this way is actually not truth, since it would miss the
entire picture of reality. And so we must disabuse ourselves from the
indiscriminate reference of this term when what we are referring are actually
principles, doctrine, dogmas, opinions, and even popular consensus only.
If
ever we have to use that term, we need to qualify it accordingly as principles,
doctrine, dogmas, ideologies, opinions or some consensus. It still has to pass
the test of charity, which means that it has contend with the concrete data on
the ground, the facts and conditions, that would determine whether such truth
as principles, doctrine, etc. would be applicable or not, and also the way such
truth ought to be presented.
We
have to be most wary to impose the truth on others. That’s not the way Christ
did it. He was willing to be misunderstood, to suffer for the truth and
eventually to die for it. Even in the strongest terms in which he presented the
truth, he never imposed it on anyone by force.
This
is something that we have to learn to do, since very often our tendency is that
even in matters of opinion where any view can have more or less the same weight
as any other, we like thrust ours to others. We feel hurt when we encounter
disagreement.
Yes,
we need to foster the truth, especially the gospel truth, in season and out of
season, as St. Paul says. But it should be done with charity always. We have to
try to avoid humiliating others, especially those who are clearly in error.
As
much as possible, the transmission of truth should be such that the audience or
recipients would feel that they get to know the truth by their own accord,
instead of being told, or made to arrive at a certain conclusion because of how
the truth is framed.
Priests
who by office preach should try their best that their words drip with charity,
compassion, understanding and mercy. As much as possible, they (we) have to
avoid sounding domineering and lording it over. This will require nothing less
than a vital union with God
No
matter how sure we are of our doctrine or how relevant the point we want to
make is, there is no basis for us to sound scolding and controlling. The tone
should always be kind and warm, positive and encouraging, hopeful and
optimistic even if we have to issue some suggestions, warnings or corrections.
We
should remove any trace of bitterness, sarcasm, irony. These only leave a bad
taste in the mouth, and can be more destructive than constructive. Rather,
there has to be a more dialogical character of any communication. This is how
we can more effectively blend the exclusivity of truth with the inclusivity of
charity.
To
reach and to adapt to us, God had to become man, and the man-God, Jesus Christ,
did everything humanly possible to make himself understood. He used parables
and his teachings were accompanied by appropriate actions. He was willing to go
all the way to die on the cross to make his point.
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