The Lord is
kind and full of compassion,
slow to
anger, abounding in love.
How good is
the Lord to all,
compassionate
to all his creatures.
From Psalm
144:8 - 9
I used to call one of my gym classes ‘Mortal
Combat’. That wasn't its correct name, of course, but we punched and kicked and
gave our fictional opponents no mercy! Needless to say it caused me more
injuries than it’s worth recalling from being somewhat over-exuberant. I have
since taken to dog walking. It's much safer.
Mercy is active compassion towards
another, an essential form of Christian charity. It is well beyond sympathy for
others in unfortunate circumstances, it includes the intention to ease their
suffering. Christian mercy is either corporal (physical) or spiritual. The
bestowal of mercy is called clemency.
To teach us about mercy, in particular
about God’s mercy, Luke (19:1 – 10) relates the story of Zacchaeus. Zacchaeus
is not only very short, he is also a senior
collector of taxes for the Roman overlords (and you have understand from
this that he was detested by his fellow Jews for his treasonous occupation).
When Jesus arrived in Jericho, there was a great crowd and Zacchaeus couldn’t
see Jesus, so he climbed a sycamore tree. When Jesus passed by he called to
Zacchaeus to come down and invited himself to his house. Whereupon some of the
crowd grumbled that Jesus was going to a (public) sinner’s home. Zacchaeus then
told the crowd that he would give half his wealth to the poor, and if had
cheated anyone he would repay them four time that amount. Jesus then cried out,
Today salvation has come to this house.
Just what has happened in this story?
Luke is at pains to tell us that when we
respond to and accept God’s mercy we undergo a conversion or transformation and
that this experience is not just a change of attitude, it is a change that
overwhelms all aspects of our lives, our internal, spiritual lives and our
external, public lives. This explains why Zacchaeus’ response spills out into a
radical letting go of his ill-gotten gains and Jesus’ affirmation that this is
a sign of God’s salvation.
For most of us, this conversion is usually
a life-long experience, as we grow from selfishness to selflessness, from
me-centred to other-centred. It is measured growth, revealed as our understanding of our
relationship with the divine is deepened and nourished. As our tax-collector of
last week’s Gospel (Luke 18:9 – 14) uttered in the Temple, God, be merciful to me a sinner, it is about acknowledging our
limitations and accepting God’s compassion as a journey of a lifetime.
Unlike my entanglements at the gym, there
is no injury when we seek God’s mercy, for it is freely given.
Peter Douglas
HEAD OF SCHOOL SERVICES, NORTH
Catholic Universities and #BlackLivesMatter
ROBERT K. VISCHER
from America 24 October 2016
When I was a young
attorney in Chicago, I volunteered to teach anti- discrimination law to public
housing residents facing relocation as part of the city’s plan to reduce concentrations
of poverty. As high-rise projects were torn down, residents were to receive
Section 8 housing vouchers that would allow them to move to the suburbs. At the
outset, I was wildly ineffective in the role because I had assumed that the
residents would be enthusiastic about the prospect of escaping from the
projects and moving to the suburbs, where I had grown up. Instead, I was met by
fear and anxiety, for those high-rise projects, though far from ideal, had
served as the only community many of the residents had known, and the suburbs
of my childhood had not always provided a welcoming environment for blacks.
Only by meeting and talking face to face with these residents did I gain a
powerful reminder that my story is not the story.
The
#BlackLivesMatter protests that have rocked cities and campuses across the
country are rooted in marginalization and estrangement that fall too frequently
along racial lines. These dynamics are not new, of course, but they may be
growing more entrenched as we slowly lose our capacity for empathy.
Opportunities to understand and experience the feelings and worldviews of those
who are different from us are becoming more elusive. The shooting deaths of
Alton B. Sterling and Philando Castile in July have provided yet another set of
painful reminders of how different our stories of America can be.
It is
surprisingly easy in modern American society to avoid opportunities for
empathy. While technology can increase our sense of connection, it also
empowers us to construct our worlds in ways that support our pre-existing
worldviews and minimize opportunities for cognitive dissonance. Geographic
segregation by race and socioeconomic status limits encounters with the “other”
in our day-to-day existence. And thanks in part to increasingly precise gerrymandering,
the political realm exacerbates our capacity for self-absorption.
Catholic higher
education, when functioning according
to its intended
purpose, is an antidote to self-absorption. For several reasons, Catholic
colleges and universities are well-positioned to play a leadership role in
today’s debates.
First,
formation matters. Today’s university jeopardizes its
ability to speak to today’s protestors when it departs from its mission of
forming the person. Rising student debt and questionable employment outcomes
have caused many families to approach college through a strictly economic lens.
In addition there is increasing concern that the identification and cultivation
of particular virtues represents a kind of moral paternalism. As a result more
aspirational education- al goals are pushed to the margins. The hollowing out
of the university mission makes it difficult to engage meaningfully with
today’s campus protesters. After all, they are not demanding better job
training; they are demanding a more inclusive community. This is a deeply moral
demand.
The Catholic vision
of education has always been about formation - a relational endeavor that is
best undertaken in communities marked by dialogue, interpersonal modeling and
opportunities for reflection and growth. Knowledge has more than instrumental
value, and the student experience aims at moral growth, not just professional
preparation. This foundational orientation does not make answers to deep and
difficult questions about diversity and inclusion easy, but it means that the
deep and difficult questions are not distractions from the educational mission;
they are why the church operates universities in the first place.
Second, history
matters. As Americans, our short memories can be a strength,
as we perpetually reinvent ourselves and shake off the past in pursuit of a
brighter future. Among the many downsides, of course, is that we can be
reluctant to connect present struggles to historical oppression. President
Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation more than 150 years ago, but that
did not end racial oppression in our country. Jim Crow laws provided the
framework for a society that was hard-wired for the subjugation and exclusion
of blacks. Our criminal justice system has too often contributed to racial
disparities through targeted policing, selective prosecution and inequitable
sentencing. A post-white-flight lack of economic opportunity in our inner
cities has created crushing cycles of poverty. Blacks were largely cut out of
the legitimate
home mortgage market until the late 1960s. The list goes on. The progress we
have made cannot obscure the fact that today’s protesters speak from a
centuries-long stream of marginalization. In its 2,000-year-old role as steward
of God’s revelation to the world, the church is intensely aware of history and
how it matters. Students at Catholic universities should be equipped to situate
current debates within a broader, coherent context.
Third, theology
matters. It is more difficult to speak meaningfully about
racial justice absent resources that have been mined over centuries within the
Catholic intellectual tradition. A belief in the reality of sin—at both the
personal and societal levels—can check our tendency to affirm our own goodness
as a shield from accountability for injustice. Solidarity prevents us from
relegating any human being to the category of “other.” The preferential option
for the poor and marginalized demands that we listen proactively and
authentically to the cries of protesters, not from a defensive posture but with
an openness of heart and mind. A commitment to the common good—as amorphous as
that term can be in today’s debates—requires, at a minimum, that our definition
of success encompasses communities outside our immediate purview.
None of this is
to suggest that the students, faculty, staff and alumni of Catholic
universities should be hard-wired to agree with every demand made or position
taken by individuals or groups associated with the #BlackLivesMatter movement.
Rather, my point is that Catholic universities are positioned to engage this
latest chapter in the history of American social movements like few other
institutions can. This engagement will reject the increasingly common tendency
to choose sides and then treat that choice as the end of moral reflection on
the matter. Those who have been formed by Catholic higher education should
stand ready to walk in the shoes of those on both sides who are too easily
demonized, to help translate justifiable anger into social change, and to help
build bridges across the racial divide—not through arm’s-length pronouncements
but through the messiness of real relationships. It requires long, difficult
work to permit your story to shape my story, but it is work that has never been
more important.
Why do
universities exist? If our answers extend no further than workforce readiness
or socially beneficial research, we have settled for an incomplete vision of
higher education’s potential. In his 1990 apostolic constitution “Ex Corde
Ecclesiae,” Pope John Paul II described a Catholic university as an “authentic
community animated by the spirit of Christ” with a “common dedication to the
truth [and] a common vision of the dignity of the human person.” Now is the
time, in the midst of seemingly intractable racial strife, when Catholic
universities can demonstrate what this means in the real world, and why it
matters.
ROBERT K.
VISCHER is dean of the University of St. Thomas School of
Law in Minneapolis, Minn.
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