WE need to see
to it that our fidelity to a particular
charism, a particular vocation and spirituality does not
lead us to
fall into some exclusivistic outlook in life, or into
some
narrow-minded elitism. We have to learn how to develop
and live our
fidelity in solidarity with all the other charisms,
vocations,
spiritualities in the world and in the Church.
A kind of
fidelity that does not know how to live in
solidarity with the others would not be an authentic
fidelity. And
vice-versa, a spirit of solidarity that does not respect
the different
charisms and spiritualities to which people should be
most faithful,
would not be true solidarity either.
We have to be
most careful when we start to be assume
exclusivistic and restrictive ways that can come into our
lifestyle in
a very subtle way. This can happen when we mingle only
with our own
kind, either in terms of temperament, interests, social
and economic
status, etc. We somehow feel indifferent if not
antagonistic to the
others who do not share what we have, what we like or
prefer.
This would go
against that Christian tenet as articulated
once by St. Paul that we have to be “all things to all
men to save
all.” (1 Cor 9,22) We have to learn to be
open-minded and versatile,
able to flow with the times and to connect with all kinds
of people.
Of course, we
should also be equally guarded when we start
falling into some kind of indiscriminate sense of
solidarity and
universalism, blind and insensitive to the variety of
temperaments,
personalities, charisms, spiritualities around.
This can happen
when we impose our own ideas and ways on
others, thinking that our ideas and ways are the only
ones that work,
etc. Or that we can just dish them out at random,
believing that
everyone can understand and appreciate them.
Another way we
can fall into a questionable solidarity and
universalism is what is called in theological circles as
false
irenicism. It is the ism that says that all beliefs are
the same and
have equal value.
We should figure
out how we can blend together these two
requirements of fidelity and solidarity in our life. And
the basis of
this ideal is what St. Paul describes in his first Letter
to the
Corinthians. I think it would be good to go through it
again.
“For just as
the body is one and has many members, and all
the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it
is with
Christ…For the body does not consist of one member but of
many. If the
foot should say, ‘Because I am not a hand, I do not
belong to the
body,’ that would not make it any less a part of the
body…” (12,12-16)
We need to
examine ourselves frequently to see if we are
satisfying the seemingly contrasting requirements of both
fidelity and
solidarity. Are we faithful to our vocation, to our
charism? Do we
know how to make our particular vocation work for the
good of all?
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