Like Christ, we should have the same love for everybody,
irrespective of how they are with us. They can even be our enemies.
Thus, Christ himself told us very clearly that we should love our
enemies. (cfr. 5,44) This is the kind of love that is the very essence
of God and that is also meant for us. It has a universal scope even if
it never compromises the truth. It can prefer to suffer and die for
the truth.
On our part, we just have to learn to adapt our mind and
heart to this kind of love that God through Christ in the Holy Spirit
is actually sharing with us. We have to develop a certain compassion
for the lost sheep and know how, like Christ, we can fraternize with
those in error spiritually and morally, or at least with those wrapped
up with all sorts of weaknesses.
If we are truly Christian, we should have a true and abiding
compassion toward everyone, especially the poor and the needy. But we
have to understand that compassion should have a universal coverage.
It should not be limited to the sentimental aspects of things, nor to
relieving the economic and material needs of people alone. It lets us
enter and get involved in the life drama of the others.
It should cover the whole range of human needs in their
proper order of importance, foremost of which is our need for God. We
have to learn to distinguish between the pressing and precious needs
of man, and to cope with the tension that sometimes arises in our
effort to put these two kinds of needs together.
The material needs of man may be pressing and urgent, but
these should not detract us from giving priority attention to the
precious spiritual needs of man to relate himself with God and others
in true love, irrespective of whether he is rich or poor, a prince or
a pauper.
It’s true that looking after the pressing material needs of
people can already be an overwhelming task. This should not be
attended to on an ad hoc basis only, giving dole-outs and temporary
relief. This has to be given stable and effective solutions, like
creating jobs, enabling poor people to find work through education and
continuing training, especially considering that the world economy is
rapidly evolving, etc.
But over and above this concern is the care of the more
important necessity of man—his spiritual life, his relation with God
that should be developed according to God’s love and concern for
everyone, and thus, his relation with everybody else. Christ himself
gave more importance to forgiving sins than to curing the paralytic.
(cfr Mk 2,1-12)
We have to learn how to fraternize with everyone, especially
replicating 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.
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