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A
sense of perspective is what we all need. We should try to
develop one, cultivating and enriching it as we go along.
Especially
at these times when life's pace is getting much faster and
is exposing us to more and more things, we need not only to
be properly grounded but also to be adequately guided.
The
sense of perspective starts with a worldview of things, enabling
us to relate events, experiences, insights, observations,
to an over-all picture of our life and its purpose.
It
enables us to relate parts among themselves to form a certain
whole. It provides us with a sense of confidence and serenity,
a sense of dominion and responsibility, and therefore of freedom,
over our life.
It's
what build's a person's character, since it springs from a
body of core beliefs and convictions, from where we put our
faith on, generating a corresponding hierarchy of values to
guide our thoughts and actions.
It
gives us a sense of right and wrong, of good and evil in all
aspects of our life. It endows us with a moral and ethical
vision of our life.
Thus,
there is such a thing as a Christian perspective, based, of
course, on the Christian faith. There are also ideological
perspectives, whether leftist, rightist or centrist.
There's
the liberal perspective where freedom dominates over responsibility.
There's also the secularist perspective where things are assessed
without any consideration for anything spiritual and supernatural.
Whatever
it is, what is important is that we have a clear idea of the
perspective we are assuming. We have to continually assess
and develop it, because it is a living thing that has contend
with the vital flow of new elements and factors.
Much
of our problem these days stems from the fact that many people
do not realize this. Though there is a natural albeit hidden
yearning for this sense of perspective, the reality is that
many people are not aware of it and do not know how to develop
it properly.
As
a result, there is a lot of shallowness and narrowness in
the grasping of reality, leading one to simply be reactive
rather than pro-active, if not to behave in on-the-spot improvisations,
prone to knee-jerk responses.
There's
hardly any long-term vision and sense of direction. The sense
of priority is shifty and at best not clear, very vulnerable
to passing fads and fancies, to prevailing pressures and to
one's moods and other subjective elements.
When
this sense of perspective is not properly developed, we tend
not to have a clear idea of what should be held of absolute
value that should be upheld no matter what, and what can be
considered with relative value only.
We
have to be wary of a certain thinking, quite prevalent these
days, that says that there's really no need to develop this
sense of perspective. One just judges and reasons as one sees
fit in a given moment.
For
those occupying positions of leadership and influence in society,
developing a good sense of perspective is most necessary.
Without this sense of perspective, they can become a source
of danger and can cause much harm.
This
is especially true to the media who daily feed us with information,
views and opinions. The quality of their work and their contribution
to society are determined to a large extent by the kind of
perspective they have.
It's
what gives depth and scope to their work, and what can truly
lead and influence people in a specific way, whether Christian,
ideological, secularist, atheistic or agnostic, materialistic
or naturalistic.
The
Christian perspective, for one, can be described in these
words of St. Paul in his first letter to the Corinthians,
that show the balance between flexibility and stability:
"We have received not the spirit of this world, but the
Spirit that is of God, that we may know the things that are
given us from God.
"These
things also we speak, not in the learned words of human wisdom,
but in the doctrine of the Spirit, comparing spiritual things
with spiritual.
"But
the sensual man perceives not these things that are of the
Spirit of God, for it is foolishness to him, and he cannot
understand, because it is spiritually examined." (2,12-14)
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Fr.
Roy Cimagala is the Chaplain of Center for Industrial
Technology and Enterprise (CITE) in Talamban, Cebu City. You
can email him at:Email: roycimagala@boholchronicle.com
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