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That's
a beautiful way of saying an ugly reality. More and more people,
even our educated ones, do not know anymore the nature, meaning
and purpose of their actions. Or at least their knowledge
is saddled with grave distortions.
Look
at the recent Vicente Sotto Hospital scandal. As more data
emerge, the more absurd the whole affair appears. It's kind
of funny, but in a bizarre way, since it is betraying a deeper,
more serious crisis in us as a people.
The
predicament we are in is that we seem to have lost touch with
the proper sense of ethics and morality. Each one acts solely
on his own. Now there's really nothing wrong with that. That's
unless we highlight the modifier, "solely."
While
it's true that as persons we are free to do anything, we seem
to have forgotten also that as persons we are meant to be
responsible for our actions. Freedom and responsibility are
essentially inseparable.
Freedom
and responsibility are precious human values that need to
have their proper grounding and orientation. Without this
condition, they can become very dangerous forces wreaking
havoc in their wake.
Ultimately,
we have to bring in the question of God, of where our faith
finally rests in, of whether we have a proper understanding
between the roles of faith and reason.
Ultimately,
we have to know who and what we are to also know how we ought
to act. These questions lead us to the answer of where we
ground and orient our freedom and responsibility, and thus,
our ethics and morality.
At
the moment, there seems to be a good reason to doubt whether
many of us know the significance of our actions, that is,
of our human acts, those for which we are responsible, since
we do them knowingly and willingly.
Our
human acts are supposed to reflect our person and build it
up. They can define us, make and unmake us. They are integral
to our person. But now, signs are aplenty that indicate that
these acts are detached from our person.
They
have become purely mercenary, highly corruptible and often
done at the behest of questionable motives. Without due reference
to our person, and much less to God and to an absolute law,
our actions are at the mercy of any motive and intention.
The
only prevailing law that seems to rule our sense of ethics
and morality is that we can do absolutely anything as long
we don't get caught, we don't create a public mess, we avoid
directly and physically hurting people, and things like those.
That's
at the initial stage, since if this mentality is made stable
it surely will descend in a slippery slope toward more bizarre
and grotesque forms of ethics and morality.
It's
a highly subjective mindset that makes each one of us our
own law and lawgiver.
The
only consolation is that so far, at least in our country,
we are not yet in the stage of formally and systematically
rationalizing this attitude.
In
the West and in most developed countries, this kind of cankerous
thinking is getting dominant. And thus, what in a normal peaceful
world are considered taboos and perversions are now regarded
as garden-variety.
Infidelity
is ok. Sex outside marriage is ok. Notice the number of celebrities
who openly talk about coupling and uncoupling with sophisticated
insouciance and nonchalance as if nothing's wrong. In fact,
it can sound elegant and cool.
In
some avant-garde sectors, they have so discarded any restraint
to the total loss of the ethical and moral sense that they
are now into what is called as nihilism. That's the belief
that everything here in life really amounts to nothing.
This
ism, together with its contrary counterpart like fanaticism,
is what makes people prone to fall into terrorism, since life
here offers them no meaning and reason to live.
We
have to be wary of these developments that are taking place
quietly and subtly in our world today. And all of us are duty-bound
to do something about this.
The
sense of ethics and morality should be restored, strengthened
and defended. The challenge and requirements it demands should
be faced and met squarely.
This
means a lot-praying, sacrificing, recourse to sacraments,
catechesis, ascetical struggle, developing virtues, sanctifying
one's work, doing apostolate, etc.
**********
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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