It has been one of those mornings, where you step into the shower, still
half-asleep, without realizing there’s an “inzy winzy spider” hanging from the
wall. Only that the rain pouring down came from the shower head in the form of
a hot water monsoon. Spidey had no chance and was accidentally washed down the
drain. Actually…No…I lie…It was me who killed the poor creature. Well, let’s
say I just stood by idly, watching it drown. My decision was to not help
the spider. And, even though it might be odd, I did feel slightly upset…because
it didn’t take much for me to help the smallest of creatures.
Our struggle is not in identifying these traits in ourselves, but rather working against their slow and steady manifestation inside us. A reminder of their existence helps, but cannot remove it for good. We must constantly strive to keep the upper hand against evil, even when we do not know the outcome. Life is about that struggle on a daily basis.
But then, instead of standing still and thinking as the leopard had expected, the tortoise began to dig and scatter sand all over the road, throwing sand in all directions with his hands and feet.
The question pertaining to the goodness of man has been spinning around
my head for the past weeks. It began with the night before Good Friday, when Pope Francis decided to alter the Roman Catholic tradition of washing the feet of 12
men from the Vatican – representing the Apostles. His predecessor, Benedict XVI,
made a slight change by washing the feet of lay men instead of priests. Francis
took this ritual back to its origins: the lost and forgotten, the outcasts of
society. He visited to wash the feet of
both young male and female prisoners.
For those who have read scriptures this shouldn’t come as a surprise.
But for the world of media and sensationalist hype (and Catholic conservatives)
this came as a massive shock. How can the Pope wash the feet of a Muslim woman?
All kinds of controversial questions were raised thereafter. And this is
something that really tugged at my heart…the way humanity has developed to
disregard goodness and rather focus on the problem(s) surrounding an act. Or
rather, the way people have been made to think that goodness is a surprising
act.
This moral corruption I am talking about was backed up by a short
paragraph of Paulo Coelho’s new book:
***
In the monastery of Sceta, Abbot Lucas gathered the brothers together
for a sermon.
‘May you all be forgotten,’ he
said.
‘But why?’ one of the brothers
asked. ‘Does that mean that our example
can never serve to help someone in need?’
‘In the days when everyone was
just, no one paid any attention to people who behaved in an exemplary manner,’ replied
the abbot.
”Everyone did their
best, never thinking that by behaving thus they were doing their duty by their
brother. They loved their neighbour because they understood that this was part
of life and they were merely obeying a law of nature. They shared their
possessions in order not to accumulate more than they could carry, for journeys
lasted a whole lifetime. They lived together in freedom, giving and receiving,
making no demands on others and blaming no one.’
“That
is why their deeds were never spoken of and that is why they left no stories.
If only we could achieve the same thing now: to make goodness such an ordinary thing that there would be no need to
praise those who practise it.”
***
Good Friday is not called Good Friday because of the
goodness of man. It was Jesus who decided to obey his father and sacrifice
himself for humanity’s salvation. This narrative is unique and should serve us
as example for what true goodness really entails. However, one might question
the motives that accompany somebody’s act of goodness.
In a recent episode of the Colbert Report, Bill
Clinton spoke about his many initiatives to help people around the world. Stephen
Colbert asked him whether or not he was doing it for his own good. And Clinton
replied: "I think the reason we should do things for other people at
bottom is selfish, and there's no real difference between selfish and selfless
if you understand how the world works. We're all tied together."
When dealing with the issue of helping somebody else we
tend to focus on the bad ‘side-effects’. I suppose therein lies the struggle of
goodness…to wrestle with the question: “What’s in it for me?” Because that is
what we are conditioned to think first…at least in a secular world ruled by self-interest.
A few weeks ago, I found myself standing in the
Waldsassen monastery library, which is famous for its wooden carvings,
completed in in 1725 by the local sculptor Karl Stilp. He created 10
sculptures depicting the vices and temptations of the world in order to remind
the monks who enter the library of the evil they faced each day. These are:
Defiance, stupidity, arrogance, vanity, boasting, ignorance, pride, deviousness,
curiosity and hypocrisy.
Our struggle is not in identifying these traits in ourselves, but rather working against their slow and steady manifestation inside us. A reminder of their existence helps, but cannot remove it for good. We must constantly strive to keep the upper hand against evil, even when we do not know the outcome. Life is about that struggle on a daily basis.
It does not matter whether our selflessness is
inspired by a selfish motive. What matters is that we DO stand up for goodness
as if it was the most natural thing on earth – which, in truth, it is!
That is not to say that one has to save every little
creature in an obsessive, Buddhistic manner. But humanity must make a conscious
decision to be good, do good and stand for goodness. It is a simple decision,
but a very, very difficult process to embark on.
Last month, Chinua Achebe, one of Africa’s greatest
writers, passed away. He wrote on the domination of one group over the other
and, in many ways, evil often seems to dominate the world today. There is this
beautiful parable he tells that makes you realize that the victory lies within
the struggle, which I leave with you for more thought.
***
“The leopard meets the tortoise on a lonely stretch of
road. The leopard has been trying to catch the tortoise for a long time. The
tortoise is a trickster and so obviously has been escaping and then, on this
day, the leopard finally catches up with him and says, ‘Aha! Now I’ve got you.
Prepare to die.’
And the tortoise says to [the] leopard, ‘Can I ask you
one last favor?’ And the leopard says, ‘Yes, why not?’ And the tortoise says,
‘Give me a short time to prepare myself for death.’ And the leopard looked
around and said, ‘I don’t see why not. Yes, go ahead.’
But then, instead of standing still and thinking as the leopard had expected, the tortoise began to dig and scatter sand all over the road, throwing sand in all directions with his hands and feet.
And the leopard says, ‘What’s going on, why are you
doing that?’
And the tortoise says, ‘I’m doing this because after I
am dead I want anyone passing by this spot and seeing all this sign of struggle
on the road to say, ‘A man and his match struggled here.’”
***
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