WE should try
our best to be friendly always with
everyone. Irrespective of how they are—and this can
include those who
in our human standards we consider to be unlikable, or
who have done
us wrong, or who are even hostile to us—we should just
try our best to
be friendly with them.
And the reason
is because that is what Christ commanded to
do. “Love your neighbor as I have loved you,” he said,
and we know
that his love covered everyone, including the enemies.
His love has a
universal scope. Even in his passion and death, he
managed to offer
forgiveness to those who crucified him.
Of course, the
ultimate basis for this Christian duty is
that regardless of our differences and even our
conflicts, we are all
brothers and sisters. We form one family, we all come
from the same
source and are meant to have a common end. We therefore
are meant to
care for one another, to be responsible for one another.
We have to
develop the appropriate skills to carry out
this duty. We have to start with the most elementary
requirement of
always being nice to everyone. In this regard, we have to
overcome the
usual differences we have in our human condition. We have
to be
pro-active in this regard, not waiting for the others to
merit our
friendship. We should try to live out what St. Paul once
said: “To be
all things to all men…”
That is why we
need to strengthen our will to carry out
this duty. We should not just depend on some favorable
conditions
before we start to be friendly. We should not be friendly
only to
those who are nice to us or to those who please us in
some way. We
have to train ourselves to be indiscriminate in our friendliness
even
as we also train ourselves to be discriminating in our
dealings with
everyone.
Gestures of
affections, no matter how small and
insignificant, always count. Our friendship should be not
only
intentional and theoretical. It should be tangible, seen
and felt.
Smiling, greeting, engaging in some small talk go a long
way to start
and keep our friendships going. We have to learn the many
social
skills of always being warm and welcoming of everyone.
Of course, this
is easier said than done. Thus, we really
need to train ourselves, using both the supernatural and
human means,
the spiritual and the material means. This may strike as
something
awkward to do at the beginning, but then if we try again
to consider
the necessity of such training, such awkwardness will
disappear.
Everyday we
have to train ourselves to develop a keen
interest in the others, especially in those cases where
due to some
natural and human reasons no big interest can be felt at
the
beginning. This is the challenge we have to face
everyday. But once we
manage to do this, we would be on the way to becoming
friendly to
everyone irrespective of how they are.
We may have to
force ourselves to be interested in knowing
more and more about the others, even ‘wasting’ time with
them since
friendship will also require a lot of time. We should see
to it that
we just don’t give some cursory attention to them. Our
attention to
them should be full. We have to make every effort to be
directly in
touch with them, and not simply relying on technological
communication.
Obviously, for
friendship to blossom we really have to
pray and to offer sacrifices for the others. We should be
willing to
be patient with them, especially if for one reason or
another we are
made to suffer in some way in the process.
Yes, we need
the grace of God to learn how to be friendly
always with everyone.
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