A POPULAR consideration that many people nowadays make
when they try to understand someone who has a different
view from
theirs is to try to figure out “where that person is
coming from.” I
hear that expression very often these days. It’s a
laudable gesture
that is meant to keep a meaningful dialogue with others.
reminder of the basic principle that a person sees,
understands and
reacts to things according to the way he is. An old Latin
adage
already expresses this phenomenon. “Operare sequitur
esse.” Action
follows being. One behaves the way he is.
If that person
is male or female, rich or poor, a
socialite or a farm worker, a liberal or a conservative,
a racist or a
feminist, etc., these conditions are somehow reflected in
his views
and his over-all actuations. In other words, we all have
our biases
and preferences. Some can be valid and legitimate. But
others may not.
It is the latter that we have to be most careful about.
To see where
one is coming from is, of course, a very
logical consideration to make. But then again, we do not
work by logic
alone, since we can also be very logical in our error.
Logic does not
go the distance. We need to go
metaphysical, considering things way beyond the many
conditionings
that describe person. We have to go to the original and
the ultimate
objective truth about ourselves and about where we come
from before
the conditionings add their trappings on it.
And this
original and ultimate truth about where we come
from is that we all come from God. All creatures, of
course, come from
God, but in our case, we come from him in a very intimate
way since we
are created in his image and likeness, meant to share the
very life of
God.
biological creatures. We are not simply products of our
social and
historico-cultural environment. We also are spiritual
creatures who
are very intimately linked to our Creator God. We are not
merely the
image and likeness of our parents. We, first of all, are
the image and
likeness of God.
While it’s true
and correct to consider the personal,
social, cultural background, etc. of a person to know
where he is
coming from when he expresses his views, we should not
neglect the
most basic consideration of the truth that we all come
from God.
in ourselves as much as possible God’s goodness, love,
mercy, wisdom,
etc. In our dealings with others, in our discussions and
exchanges, we
should not forget that we all are children of God, we all
are brothers
and sisters, meant to love one another as Christ has
loved us. (cfr.
Jn 13,34)
As a
consequence, we have to learn how to see the image
and likeness of God in everyone, no matter how unlovable
a person is
to us. And also, we have to remind ourselves, that in
spite of our
personal idiosyncracies and peculiarities, we are also
the image and
likeness of God who are meant to see, understand and
react to things
the way God sees, understands and reacts to them.
For this, we
have to look closely at the teaching and
example of Christ who is the fullness of the revelation
of God. He is
“the way, the truth and the life” for us. We are
patterned after him
and we have to follow him to be what we ought to be.
And Christ
makes himself alive in us through his word and
the sacraments. Thus we cannot overemphasize the need to
study the
gospel, the catechism, etc., and to have recourse to the
sacraments,
especially the Holy Eucharist, to figure out where
everyone is coming
from.
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