I WAS happy to
read an article recently about why we are
increasingly unaware of our ignorance and why it is a big
problem. It
caught my attention because that is also my observation.
In fact, in
many of my columns, I have expressed that fear at least
implicitly.
The main
argument of the article is that we in our time
are becoming so sure of our opinions that they now become
our
convictions and our core beliefs, as if other opinions
are completely
regarded as wrong.
In other words,
opinions now are considered to be absolute
such that there cannot anymore be a variety of legitimate
and
differing and even conflicting opinions. A person’s
opinions are now
held as gospel truths.
The article
went on to say that opinions considered as
gospel truths can obviously attract like-minded people,
and when they
acquire a critical mass, that is when these opinions
become the
absolute truths for them. That is when ignorance of the
absolute truth
who is God becomes invincible and can easily fall into
arrogance.
We have to be
most careful about our opinions. We have to
learn to distinguish between what merely is an opinion
that can never
cover everything about a particular issue and much less
about the
whole reality, and what is a matter of absolute truth
that can come
only from God through our faith, as revealed in full by
Christ, and
that touches on what is truly essential in our life.
Especially
these days when we are bombarded with an
increasing number of issues to tackle, a profusion of
data and
information, and a growing number of means of
communication and
exchanges of ideas, we need to have a good hold of our
horses so as to
avoid mixing opinions with absolute and essential truths.
We have to
practice a certain detachment from our
opinions, no matter how strongly we feel about them, so
that we can
give due attention to other opinions, especially those
that are not
only different from ours but are also opposed to ours.
In our
exchanges and discussions, let us always try to be
civil and courteous. Opinions are no absolute truths.
They don’t
deserve to be promoted and defended at the expense of
charity.
The usual
problem we encounter is that we tend to make our
opinions the only position that is right. This is
outright wrong. We
would be falling into what St. Paul once said of those
who are “ever
learning but never able to come to a knowledge of the
truth.” (2 Tim
3,7) We can feel that we have the truth because of the
amount of data
and information we have, but we still would miss the
point.
We have to be
wary of what looks like a common world trend
now to assert our opinions to death. And this is not only
in the field
of politics, but more so in the area of faith and morals.
We need to
be protected from the subtle and silent osmotic effect
that this trend
can come to us.
We have to
know, for example, how not to be quickly taken
by the easy accessibility and speed of the Internet in
giving us data
and information and in sharing our views and opinions.
In this regard,
we have to strengthen our virtues of
prudence and tact. But, alas, how many are really
thinking about these
virtues today? In fact, in many talk shows especially in
the US,
bashing and mudslinging have become a standard practice.
Disagreements
are not anymore civil.
In homes and
schools, let us teach the young ones the true
art of opinion-making and of civil and charitable
discussions. We need
to teach the kids how to distinguish between mere opinion
and absolute
truth, and where we can have the former and where to find
the latter.
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