Well, it’s been a while since I’ve
blogged. My trip out west to give a retreat to some of our MH people in Regina
went well, but as always, it’s good to be home.
Our Wednesday trip through the works of
mercy has taken us to an interesting one of the spiritual works, namely, to bear wrongs patiently. What’s that
about? What does that have to do with mercy? And is that really a good thing?
Why should we put up with other people’s failings and bad behavior anyhow?
Isn’t that just being a doormat, a patsy, a victim?
It is worth noting, first, that the next
work of mercy will be ‘to forgive offenses willingly’. The Church is making a
distinction here between things actually done to us as deliberate wrongs
(offenses) and simply things that are out of order, not what they should be
(wrongs).
This is a distinction that we don’t
always quite succeed in making—that between things that simply annoy us, irk
us, bug us, and then those things that actually are injuries done to us on
purpose. And we can work up quite a little martyr complex for ourselves, based
on the fact that people just are not conforming to our (perfectly reasonable,
OF COURSE) expectations and standards.
Well, phooey. Of course people don’t live
up to your expectations and standards. That’s because they don’t have to.
That’s because you’re not God. Take a pill. Settle down. Unclench. This
business of bearing wrongs patiently is a fundamental matter of human maturity
and a necessary part of living a peaceful life in this world with your fellow
man.
People are… well, what they are. Some
people talk too much. Others are untidy. Some people have less than ideal
hygiene. Others are moody and withdrawn. Some people are indecisive and
anxious. Others take charge of every situation, whether that is exactly called
for or not. Some people are immature and emotionally volatile; others are
grumpy and dour (especially first thing in the morning – yikes!). And… some
people are hyper-critical and take careful notice of exactly what everyone else
is doing wrong, eh?
In other words, when you’re trying (or
not) to bear other people’s wrongs patiently, be aware that they are also
having to bear your wrongs patiently, too. A little perspective and perhaps
even a sense of humor goes a long way here. We all get on each other’s nerves—this
is one of the things you find out, living in religious community as I do.
Everyone gets on everyone’s nerves… at least sometimes. ‘There are no
compatible people,’ one of our wise elders once said.
The thing with bearing wrongs patiently is that
it saves us a lot of time and energy, that we can then devote to feeding the
hungry, clothing the naked, instructing the ignorant, comforting the afflicted,
and so forth. In other words, in itself it is a work of mercy, but it is a work
of mercy that chiefly is a matter of not doing
something, namely trying to fix everyone and especially to make him stop doing that thing that is SO ANNOYING!!! And in that
refraining from action, we free up our cluttered calendar so we can actually do
things that do some good in this world.
Now, I’m writing lightly about this
matter, because as I say, a little bit of good humor really does go a long way
in terms of how to actually be patient with the foibles and shortcomings of
those we live. I do know that sometimes the wrongs can be quite difficult to
bear and that it can be actually heroic in some cases to live in certain
situations. Making light of it is often a good strategy, but of course
sometimes we have to go a bit deeper than that.
On the other hand, there can be a
tendency to make mountains out of molehills here, to just harp about every
little thing that is wrong. And the thing of it is, when we fall into that,
then the legitimate works of instructing the ignorant and admonishing the
sinner are spoiled—the signal-to-noise ratio gets out of whack. Someone who is
constantly complaining and never satisfied with anyone’s efforts is not going
to have much luck addressing things that are actual problems that do need
addressing. Choose your battles, in other words.
On a deeper level, we have to realize
that it is the actual people God has put us with, and specifically those
aspects of these people that we might find hard to bear, that are the purifying
and sanctifying agents in all of our lives. ‘We are the hairshirts of God for
one another’, Catherine Doherty famously observed. The question, she went on to
say, is ‘do you love your hairshirt?’
It does help the more we can realize that
all the ‘wrongs’ we poor martyred people have to put up with (snort) are in
fact there to help us become the saints of God we are meant to be. So we can
stop complaining a bit about them, simply accept that we are, in fact, not God,
and that other people are not put on this earth to be pleasing to us. And… get
on with the real work of the day, which is to love and serve, serve and love,
and attend to what God is asking of you and of me, not of them. So, let’s try
to do that, today.
It is worth noting, first, that the next work of mercy will be ‘to forgive offenses willingly’. The Church is making a distinction here between things actually done to us as deliberate wrongs (offenses) and simply things that are out of order, not what they should be (wrongs).
ReplyDeleteI understand the value, please God, of bearing wrongs patiently. I understand that we sometimes need to love people , perhaps more than we are able for our own good as well as the other.
What I really struggle with is telling the difference....between admonishing the sinner and bearing wrongs patiently.
There are some things that are just so out of order, so wrong....so harmful to life and personhood that it seems like one must call it out. And sometimes it is the same thing over and over again.
I have thought and prayed over this long and long. Perhaps the two: admonishing the sinner and bearing wrongs patiently ...perhaps they are practiced together ...first one and then the other and vice Versace.....until all is grace and mercy....
Bless you.
Welcome back
I've missed you
Yes, these are some of the most difficult, complicated and downright messy things we have to figure out in life, eh? Wish there was some nice tidy formula for when to speak, when to be silent, but if there is, I haven't found it yet... and I begin to doubt such a thing exists. Lots of prayer, listening, and questioning our own motivations, I think - am I loving the person, or simply striking back at them for their 'wrong' to me? That kind of thing.
ReplyDeleteGod bless you - good to be back (although, just between you and me and whoever is reading these comments, I'm actually going to suspend blogging mostly for Lent, for my own personal Lent-type reasons...).