Sunday, January 12, 2020

The strong and the weak


IT’S good to be reminded by what St. Paul said about the
proper relationship between the strong and the weak among us. It’s in
his Letter to the Romans where he said: “We who are strong ought to
bear with the failings of the weak and not to please ourselves.”
(15,1)

             That’s commonsensical enough. It’s a natural thing to
happen. We see it first in the family where the parents take care of
their children, especially the little ones, and would not mind if they
get dirty because of the mess children often do. They will always
clean whatever mess the little ones make and in the process, with a
lot of patience and tenderness, teach the children how to be more
careful.
  
            We cannot deny that in the world in general, we see
ourselves in different conditions of being strong and of being weak.
It can be in the physical aspect, or the moral and spiritual ones. It
can be in terms of talents and other natural endowments. Yes, some are
more gifted than others, more fortunate than others.

              We should just learn how to deal with others properly.
Those who have more of the good things should be more caring, more
understanding and compassionate, and eager to help those who have
less. The strong among us can bear the weak ones, not the other way
around.
  
            This is especially so in the moral and spiritual aspects
of our life. Those who are more upright in their behavior, more
knowledgeable in the mastery of the doctrine of the faith, and in
better position in their Christian life should be more understanding
and more eager to help those who are weak in their moral and spiritual
lives.
  
            They should avoid being judgmental, judging others
according to their own terms and criteria, feeling superior always to
the others and having the tendency to distance themselves from the
others.
   
            On the contrary, like Christ, those of us who are more
gifted in some way should always understand and help the others,
trying to enter into their condition through empathy, sympathy and
compassion. We should not be indifferent to their condition. Rather,
we should be willing to assume their condition without compromising
the essential, and with the forcefulness of charity, pull them up.
  
            This is how the heart of Christ, who is our “way, truth
and life” for us, worked and continues to work. Like Christ, we should
be willing to empty ourselves to be with the others and to be of help
to them. (cfr. Phil 2,6-8)
  
            The intriguing part of all this is that it would seem that
those who are weak according to some human standards end up helping
those who are supposed to be strong. This is because the humility of
the weak attracts God more than the advantages of the strong. And with
God, the weak can do all things. (cfr. Phil 4,13)
   
            St. Paul explained this phenomenon this way: “Not many of
you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many
were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to
shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the
strong. God chose the lowly things of this world and the despised
things, and the things that are not, to nullify the things that are,
so that no one may boast before him.” (1 Cor 1,26-29)
  
            We have to be most careful about all this, because what
may be considered as strong and weak according to human standards may
play the reverse roles according to God’s standards.
  
            What may be strong in human eyes are actually weak in
God’s eyes. And the reverse is also true. What may be weak in human
eyes are actually strong in God’s eyes, echoing St. Paul’s words:
“When I am weak, then I am strong.” (2 Cor 12,11)

No comments: