That woman provoked some critical thoughts on the part of
the host against Christ. “If this man were a prophet, he would know
who and what sort of woman this is who is touching him, that she is a
sinner.”
Christ, of course, who could read people’s mind responded by
teaching him—and us—that precious lesson that we have to care and love
everyone, irrespective of who and how they are, without blurring the
distinction between good and evil, moral and immoral.
In fact, like Christ we should have some kind of
preferential concern for those who are in error or are lost
spiritually and morally. This Christian attitude can be adduced from
the parables of the lost coin and the lost sheep. Christ fraternized
more with the sinners, precisely because he came not to condemn the
world but to save.
Fraternizing with sinners is what we all have to cultivate
in ourselves also. We have to replicate Christ’s attitude towards
sinners, who actually are all of us—of course, in varying degrees. We
have to give special attention to the lost sheep and to the lost coin.
We have to open all possible avenues to be in touch with all sinners.
This capacity to fraternize with sinners is first of all a
gift from God which we have to take care of and develop. It’s meant to
mature us and to involve us in the continuing work of redemption of
Christ. It’s not meant, of course, to dilute the teachings of Christ
and the very essence of goodness and true holiness.
We need to train ourselves in this department because we
obviously have to contend with tremendous difficulties that we have to
learn to surmount. We will always have our biases and preferences and
other natural and human conditionings that, if not handled well, can
be divisive elements in our life.
But if we closely follow Christ, if we pray and let
ourselves be led by our faith more than by our feelings, we can manage
to consider everyone worthy of our attention, concern and love. Even
those who, from under different criteria and standards, we consider as
sinners, enemies, unlovable, etc., can command our care.
So, we just have to learn how to be sport and game with
everyone without compromising the rules of the game, so to speak. Foul
is foul, cheating is cheating, and the appropriate penalties should be
given, but the game has to go on.
To be realistic about the concrete conditions of our life
here on earth, we need to know how to be tolerant of certain
unavoidable evils without condoning them. The distinction may be
difficult to make, but we simply have to learn it if we want to
survive the drama of our earthly life. I believe this is a basic skill
we all have to acquire, given the way we and the world are.
We have to learn to be tough and be ready to get dirty
somehow without surrendering the essential. And we should not lose the
hope of overcoming evil, fighting it out till the end of our life, if
needed.
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