THE
immediate answer is to humanize and
Christianize it. Politics all over the world has been at the mercy of man’s
baser passions for so long that it now screams to high heavens for its humanization
and Christianization.
And this can only mean that
it is in dire need of charity. It has to be guided by the requirements of
charity, which should not be considered as some kind of drag or hindrance but
rather as the perfection and fulfillment of politics. It just cannot be left
alone, fully under the power of our passions, brute force and worldly forces.
In fact, it can and should be a massive way of sanctification of the people.
Politics ought to be pursued
always in charity. It cannot be any other way, since charity is the mother of
all virtues and good values. If we want justice, truth and fairness, charity
has them all. If we want competence, order, discipline, etc., again charity has
them. If we want objectivity, charity has it. And that’s because charity covers
all our needs.
Politics, as a human
necessity and as a free act of man, is definitely subject to the moral law, and
as such, should also have a proper spirituality to animate it. This is a truth
of our faith that should never be lost in our mind, and much less, in our
culture. The autonomy we enjoy in our politics is never to be taken to mean
that God has nothing to do with it.
Politics just cannot be left
to the raw forces of our human nature, which has the capability of detaching
itself from its creator and his law. It just cannot be subject to the law of
the jungle. Without God, politics would be left to our own ideologies,
historico-cultural conditions, our own personal hunches of how things ought to
be, etc.
The way politics is practiced
today, we need nothing less than a revolution, a drastic, radical conversion of
heart among our political leaders and the citizenry in general.
We need to redeem politics
from being a devil’s game and to recover its true lofty nature and character based
on our innate dignity as human persons created in the image and likeness of
God, and made children of his.
In many Church teachings, we
are reminded that while the technical formation of politicians does not enter
into the mission of the Church, the Church has the mission of giving “moral
judgment also on things that pertain to the political order, when this is
required by the fundament rights of the person and the salvation of souls…using
only those means that conform to the Gospel and the good of all, according to
the diversity of the times and situations” (Gaudium et Spes 76)
Commenting on this part of
the above-cited Church document, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI once said:
“The Church concentrates
particularly on educating the disciples of Christ, so that, increasingly they
will be witnesses of his presence everywhere. It is up to the laity to show
concretely in personal and family life, in social, cultural and political life,
that the faith enables one to read reality in a new and profound way and to
transform it”
He batted for a unity of
life, a consistency in peoples’ behavior based on faith that would go together
with hope and charity. In fact, he added that “Christian hope extends the
limited horizon of man and points him to the true of loftiness of his being, to
God, and that charity in truth is the most effective force to change the
world.”
He also said that the “Gospel
is the guarantee of liberty and message of liberation; that the fundamental
principles of the Social Doctrine of the Church, such as the dignity of the
human person, subsidiarity and solidarity, are very timely and of value for the
promotion of new ways of development at the service of every man and of all
men.”
To translate all this
wonderful doctrine about politics into reality, we should realize that all of
us who are in different ways involved in politics should not avoid the cross, but
rather look for it and embrace it. We need to realize that the cross would
comprise the fullness of any political work, and indicate the authenticity of
one’s motives in politics.
Just as the cross is the
summit of Christ’s redemptive work, and also the life of every Christian
believer, the cross has to be the crown of this human affair we call politics.
It cannot be any other way.
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