By now, the capacity for one moderately sensible human being
to blame and castigate another for not being good enough according to their
personal standards shouldn’t amaze and distress me, but it does. It seems that
we identify the hypocrisies of others to reinforce our own sense of worth and
justify our own choices, which, as no human being can hope to be absolutely
consistently ethical, are just as likely to be full of inconsistencies and
moral holes.
‘You can’t be a feminist and a Zionist’; ‘you can’t be a
socialist and a carnivore’; ‘you can’t be a Christian and a Conservative’ are
all examples I’ve heard lately. Of course people are all these things, and
more, including perhaps more troubling combinations. Such inconsistencies, if
that’s how we should we think of them, may be down to personal experience –
which particular injustices we feel most keenly – or deliberately not thinking
about some issues, or to ignorance about them; blind spots, conscious or not.
Certainly how we actually behave is constrained by practicalities: a person
only has so much time, energy and money, and what they devote them to is never
down to a completely free choice between all the possible options they might select from, if all other things
were equal. As I get older I worry less what people care about, and more that
they care about something. It helps
if that ‘something’ has the capacity to open them to caring about wider things,
but whether it actually does is due less to any intrinsic qualities of the
thing, whether it’s trade-union activism or fly-fishing, than to the spirit
with which the person approaches it.
When Portia says in The
Merchant of Venice that ‘the quality of mercy is not strained’ she means
that it isn’t worn out by being used: a person can’t exhaust compassion through
being compassionate. They might become tired by the actions that result from
compassion, of course: they might run out of the finite resources we’ve already
mentioned, time, energy, or money; but they can never run out of compassion as such. When we learn to care about one
person, or one thing, we learn, at least potentially, to care about others, a
bit like Edmund Burke’s vision of our ‘affections’ expanding from the ‘little
platoons’ we find ourselves in naturally out towards society in general.
You might point reasonably to examples of this clearly not
being the case: that close affections, far from promoting general wellbeing,
actually narrow and constrain it. The inquisitor loves God and Christians and
so tortures the Jew; the mother loves her children, and so pushes drowning
orphans away from the lifeboat. Every decision to define some people or things
as ones I will care about, defines others as potential objects of cruelty or
indifference: creating the Umma generates
the Infidel.
I say this is to mistake what’s actually happening. Exactly
because we are, in Christian terms, fallen beings, and even our best and purest
motivations are fraught and mingled often with our worst, then, when the
inquisitor orders the rack to be tightened, or the mother prises the freezing
child’s hands off the lifeboat rail to see it slip back into the water, it is
not love that makes them behave this way,
it is the fear and desire wound up with that love: the fear of loss, the desire
to hold on to security or self-image. Sometimes this terrible world presents us
with choices in which no option is without some cruelty, while at other times
we deliberately harm others out of our own motivations: but loving one thing
can never actively promote harm towards another. If we love those we define as
close to us, that love cannot itself generate cruelty and indifference
elsewhere in our experience: it’s the limitations of our character or of the
world that do that. Equally, cruelty and indifference towards those close to us
can’t generate more generalised love towards others; though it might free more
time to pursue it, as in the case of Mrs Jellyby in Bleak House, one could reasonably question what was going on in
such a person. Equally, the obsessive fly-fisher or My Little Pony collector
or, I don’t know, fan of PJ Harvey, neglects their other relationships not
because of the nature of what they
love, but because of the insecurities and qualities of possessiveness and
competitiveness they might bring to it. Cruelty and indifference essentially spring
from other soil than love, and vice versa.
I’m learning, slowly, to value the enthusiasms and
commitments of others, no matter what they are, and to see what in them is
capable of being opened out to something wider: to see where love resides, and
where it can grow. If I can give vicarly advice about this, it is: join
something. Care about something. Love something. And don’t be too afraid of what
others join, care about, and love.
Amen.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
ReplyDeleteYes. It seems clear to me that we create the Other (the less-than-me, the to-be-disdained and blamed unconditionally)from our tightening into fear, from our defences, our anger. Our love is absent. Compassion is the only way to link what I love with the Other I have created. "Love is most nearly itself/When here and now cease to matter."