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Sizing
up the challenge

IS politics a devil's game? Must be. It certainly shows many
signs that it is. For one, there's large-scale and systematic
lying, there's massive deception and empty promises galore.
These clearly are tricks of the devil, the prince of lies!
Intrigues and discord fly thick and fast between camps that
have the curse of multiplying themselves like rabbits. There's
such confusion you would not know anymore who stands for what.
Actually most politicians have very similar or not too different
views and positions on issues. You wonder why they have the
nerve -- the bravado -- to claim they are the best while their
foes are supposed to be the worst.
Mudslinging and muckraking seem to be a favorite pastime
of many politicians. The air truly gets fouled up, darkened,
even poisoned by their stupid and childish antics. Many think,
sad to say, that these are inevitable in politics, or worse,
that these antics are signs of true leadership. Leadership,
my foot!
The endless forms of political madness continue to show themselves.
The most charitable description that can be given seems to
be that politics is dirty. Politics looks like it cannot help
but attract and produce dirt, all kinds of dirt!
There is corruption, and not only of the monetary kind. What
is worse is the corruption of the mind, of one's capacity
to reason out properly.
Why, even men of known intelligence and accomplishments suddenly
degenerate into some kind of unbelievable lunatics once they
step into politics. It's a mystery why these men contribute
in making society one big mental asylum.
It really stops the heart to hear an otherwise brilliant
man give out the most convoluted reasoning to justify, for
example, the fielding of an inexperienced but highly popular
individual to run for no less than the highest office of the
land.
You wonder: Has politics made him nuts? Has politics affected
his thinking? What is it in politics that makes people stupid,
that transforms them from meek lambs at "peace time"
into horrible monsters during election season?
Could it be lust for power? Could it be the insatiable craving
for fame and money? Could it be pride that has been hurt?
There's also the shameless playing around with the weaknesses
of people -- the "masa" [masses], for example. This
is really deplorable, a clear case of a wanton abuse of democracy,
as it is converted solely into a numbers game, a matter of
popularity.
Democracy is caricaturized and degraded that way. While numbers,
popularity and consensus are important in a democracy, these
are not supposed to replace or substitute right reason and
much less the indications of our faith.
Democracy is not just a complacent and passive determination
of what position has the highest number of adherents. That's
inhuman. Imagine a family with two parents and three children.
The parents could be outvoted by the children anytime, even
if the parents are clearly right.
There is always the need to exert the effort to find the
truth and the real good for man. We just cannot make a consensus
to determine what is true and good. We need to think properly,
and go to the ultimate sources of truth and goodness.
Democracy would be incomplete, would be a dangerous traitor
to a country when it fails to blend its mechanism of popular
vote with its need to be rooted in some absolute ground of
what is right and wrong, what is good and bad.
Democracy would be incomplete and dangerous when it cannot
distinguish equality from uniformity. That's when it becomes
blind to the legitimate differences of people, and to the
reality that there is such thing as hierarchy of values and
priorities that should be respected.
This way of understanding democracy opens the possibility
for politicians to easily develop a lust for power, wealth
and fame. And this is what we are witnessing these days. Politics
becomes a game of thugs, a devil's game.
This is the challenge we have today -- how to bring to the
minds of everyone the true essence of democracy and the ideal
picture of a politician. The challenge, indeed, is daunting
but it simply has to be faced.
Yes, we need to pray a lot and offer loads and loads of sacrifices
to make our politics more Christian, but we also need to do
a lot of concrete things to make it so.
I hope that the Christian laity from all walks of life do
something to make our politics a politics of true men and
women, of the children of God, and not of animals, nor of
minions of the devil!
Church of errors and heresies?
***
SOMETIME ago, Pope John Paul II made on behalf of the Catholic
Church a public apology for the mistakes and crimes committed
by some churchmen in the course of the history of the church.
It was a bold and dramatic move. Some were dismayed at the
thought the papal gesture meant the church after all had been
committing mistakes through the years. It taxed their faith,
it brought them to the brink of scandal.
It somehow made them vulnerable to the wild accusations hurled
by some rabidly anti-church people who say that the church
is nothing more than a producer of myths, superstitions and
other scientific heresies.
Worse, the church is pictured as incapable of teaching anything
right about any matter anymore. That's why its condemnation
about family planning just can't be right.
Still, the reasoning goes, the church, like a tyrant, has
to impose its teachings on its faithful under pain of cruel
penalties.
In reality, what the Pope did corresponded to a reality often
missed by many people. That is that the church, while it is
holy and immaculate in view of its head, our Lord Jesus Christ,
is also very fallible in view of the men and women who make
up its body.
As the Catechism expresses it well: "The church is therefore
holy, though having sinners in her midst, because she herself
has no other life but the life of grace.
"If they live her life, her members are sanctified;
if they move away from her life, they fall into sins and disorders
that prevent the radiation of her sanctity.
"This is why she suffers and does penance for those
offenses, of which she has the power to free her children
through the blood of Christ and the gift of the Holy Spirit."
(827)
It is the human element of the church that is responsible
for the errors and offenses in it. As a human institution,
the church is subject also to the vagaries of the times and
other historical and cultural conditionings. But just like
any human institution also, it can learn from these mistakes.
Lately, the Catholic Church has been suffering because of
the sex scandals committed by some clerics. Some have expressed
the view that these sex scandals erupted, if not are endemic
in the church, because of the intoxicating power wielded by
its leaders.
There definitely are some traces of truth in these observations,
but they are not what the church teaches or how our Lord lived.
The offenses are subjective, that is, of the persons involved.
In the Catholic Church, power and authority always have to
be exercised in humility and meekness, and meant to serve
others rather than to lord over them. Certainly, given the
human weakness, some appropriate norms of prudence have to
be installed, so these crimes could be minimized, if not eliminated.
In the past, the church also got entangled in some controversies
like the Galileo affair that reflected more on the cultural
and social conditionings of the times than that the church
committed an error of doctrine.
The position then that the sun revolved around the earth
was held by some churchmen who interpreted some biblical passages
literally. Later, these churchmen would learn to be more cautious
about interpreting biblical passages.
The fact is that while truth is only one, it has many layers
and levels, each with its own methodologies, standards and
purposes, and therefore should be respected as such. Otherwise,
there will be distortions and troubles.
So the truths of religion and those of the sciences should
not contradict each other, as long as their peculiar ways
and characters are respected.
Still, that geocentric view was not an official Catholic
Church teaching, although it was also held by most of the
people then, given the limitations of their scientific means
to verify the scientific truth.
Galileo's findings at that time were also not yet that conclusive.
But while he was silenced, he also opened the eyes of the
churchmen to the possibility that indeed what he claimed,
that the earth revolves around the sun, could be true.
Only later was the truth about this scientific fact known
and verified, and the church had to make a correction on what
appeared to be an official teaching because it was held and
taught by some churchmen.
Yes, it was a painful part of the history of the Catholic
Church, which only reflects the fragility of the human condition
in which the church is set. This is something that we should
try to understand, rather than use to dirty the name of the
church.
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