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In one of the great ironies of history, Athens, which gave the world
democracy, as well as famous Schools and Academies, is also the city which
bears the shame of having put to death one of its finest citizens, the
philosopher, Socrates.
The trial and execution of Socrates, is
an irrevocable blot on Athenian history; for the man who taught the city's
citizens to examine their lives, was essentially executed for expressing
the truth which he thought and felt. His last words, as recorded by his
pupil, Plato, still to this day echo
the man's calibre of mind and spirit: "The
hour of departure has arrived, and we go our ways I to die, and
you to live. Which to the better fate is known only to God."
Nearly
half a millennium later, Jesus of Nazareth
was tortured and crucified after a sham trial. Prior to his suffering
he spoke to his disciples:
"A man planted a vineyard, and leased it to tenants,
and went to another country for a long time. When the season came, he
sent a slave to the tenants in order that they might give him his share
of the produce of the vineyard; but the tenants beat him and sent him
away empty-handed. Next he sent another slave; that one also they beat
and insulted and sent away empty-handed. And he sent still a third; this
one also they wounded and threw out. Then the owner of the vineyard said,
'What shall I do? I will send my beloved son; perhaps they will respect
him.' But when the tenants saw him, they discussed it among themselves
and said, 'This is the heir; let us kill him so that the inheritance may
be ours.' So they threw him out of the vineyard and killed him. What then
will the owner of the vineyard do to them? He will come and destroy those
tenants and give the vineyard to others.' When they heard this, they said,
'Heaven forbid!' But he looked at them and said, 'What then does this
text mean: "The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone"?'"
(Luke 20: 9-18, NRSV)
Christ's death and resurrection reverberates
over all the Ages since, and epitomises the great struggle for Truth in
this world, for goodness over evil.
A conspiracy of blindness...
Since Christ's death, the history of humanity
is a record of men and women who have witnessed to His Truth, and paid
for their lives by so doing. Whether it be: John
Fisher in Henry's Tudor England, Martin Luther
King Jr. in the seething racism of Georgia, Josaphat
Kuncevyc in Polotsk, or Irene McCormack
in Peru, it would seem that there is something inherently repulsive to
the human psyche of hearing the Truth confronting our consciences. Nothing
seems to sting greater than Truth applied to the open wound of a bad conscience.
For this reason another martyr for the Truth,
John Chrysostom, asked his audience about
their personal courage to stand up for what they believe: "Are
you willing to open that person's eyes? Are you willing to expose the
excuses as false? Are you prepared to risk that person's wrath, as wounded
pride rises up in anger? Or do you prefer to
blind yourself to your friend's faults and so join a conspiracy of blindness?"
The task of the Christian in the world, according to Chrysostom
is difficult. It is easier to partake in 'a conspiracy of blindness',
not bringing attention to oneself, being comfortable in ignorance, than
to grasp and defend a principle, even to the point of risking one's life.
Thomas More's self-proclaimed epitaph: "I
die the King's good servant, but God's first", says much.
More died being the best possible friend Henry could ever wish for, a
man willing to tell his friend the Truth, even to his own personal demise;
but for this expression of Truth he was reviled, ridiculed and physically
destroyed.
So why do we so often seek to destroy those very people who appear in
painful hindsight as visionaries? Adam Curle
in his work of 1972 entitled: Mystics and
Militants: A Study of Awareness, Identity and Social Action
(p. 108-109), perhaps best encapsulates the
problem which the great Christian activists of history have faced. According
to Curle, these Mystics are "a
constant threat to people whose security depends on a belonging-identity.
They threaten either to make them, too, feel uncomfortable and dissatisfied,
or actually to disrupt their protective systems of belonging. Throughout
history the aware have been ridiculed, disowned, hated, tortured, and
killed by those who feared them. The persecution and crucifixion of Jesus
is just one example. But they are hated so much precisely because they
are also attractive. Few people are so blind that they do not feel the
compelling force of awareness and with part of their hearts yearn for
it. Thus our attacks on the more aware are violent because contact with
awareness has aroused doubts in ourselves. We hate those who force us
to question ourselves and we escape from having to answer by attacking.
We project our inner struggle outwards and many suffer or die or kill
because we will not acknowledge our blindness, or try to regain our sight".
In such a light it becomes easy to see why so many 'stones are rejected'
they challenge us; they seek to rouse us from our contented slumber
in the hope of creating a better world. These people not only see the
tangible realities of the world around them, but witness these machinations
as effects of either spiritual health or disease. Astonishingly, these
individuals take St. Paul's Letter
to the Ephesians seriously: "For
it is not against human enemies that we have to struggle, but against
the principalities and the ruling forces who are masters of the darkness
in this world, the spirits of evil in the heavens". (Ephesians
6: 12, The New Jerusalem Bible)
The salt which preserves human society from decay
Individuals
such as, Dag Hammarskjöld of
the United Nations perceive with unfettered vision the reality of the
world they seek to tackle, they are far from being blind-idealists, they
are driven by a passion for the Truth which springs from deep within.
As Hammarskjöld penned in Vägmärken
(Eng. Trans.: 'Markings'): "He
who has surrendered himself to it knows that the Way ends on the Cross
even when it is leading him through the jubilation of Gennesaret
or the triumphal entry into Jerusalem". Such people pursue
the Truth in the hope of giving a higher form of life to humanity. Aldous
Huxley noted, it is these men and women who are: "The
salt which preserves human society from decay". Without
them wherein lies the hope for humanity? Without those willing to die
for the Truth, what would our lives be; perhaps a steady course of Social
Darwinism, a mere pondering as to who on this small globe will survive
to be the fittest.

IMAGE
SOURCES: The keystone image used in the headline is sourced
from www.stonecarver.com.
Clicking on the other images will take you to the original source for
each image.
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Andrew
Thomas Kania is Director of Spirituality of Aquinas College,
Manning. Prior to this appointment Dr. Kania was a lecturer for
the School of Religious Education at the University of Notre Dame
Australia as well as for the Catholic Institute of Western Australia
at Edith Cowan and Curtin Universities. Dr. Kania belongs to the
Ukrainian Church and is interested in ecumenical issues as well
as contemporary problems facing religious educators.
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©2007
Dr Andrew Thomas Kania
[Andrew Kania's Archive]
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