Showing posts with label Unity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unity. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

WHEN GRANDEUR REPLACES INCLUSION: NATIONALISM AS A SHOWPIECE OF PROJECTED POWER AND PRIDE


Intro: India’s 79th Independence Day and the Politics of Optical National Pride

As India marks its 79th Independence Day, the speeches, parades, and televised images once again swell with the refrain that we are the “world’s greatest, mightiest, and largest democracy.” The present regime repeats this mantra so often it has become a kind of national soundtrack — but like all rehearsed lines, it risks masking more than it reveals. Behind the grandiloquence lies a calculated projection of strength and magnificence, a deliberate crafting of political theatre in which the spectacle of nationalism is prized over the substance of inclusive nationhood.

The Age of Monumental Optics

As the columnist Vasudevan Mukunth notes in The Hindu (12 August 2025) nothing better illustrates this shift than the recent inauguration of the Chenab railway bridge in Jammu and Kashmir — celebrated as the world’s highest rail arch. Its graceful steel curve across the Chenab River is undeniably a marvel of engineering. Yet, the decision to feature it prominently on Independence Day invitation cards reveals the underlying strategy: national pride is now anchored less in social equity or democratic vibrancy, and more in monumental imagery.

Over the past decade, India’s political narrative has been dotted with superlatives — the tallest statue, the longest expressway, the largest stadium. The Statue of Unity looms 182 meters above the Narmada, a colossal tribute to Sardar Patel that also subtly recasts him into a Hindu-first icon, aligning him with the ideological thrust of the current regime, says Vasudevan. Each new infrastructure project is wrapped in a media blitz and infused with nationalist rhetoric, designed to elicit awe rather than invite scrutiny.

The size is the message. These structures are not simply public works; they are symbols — declarations etched in stone, steel, and concrete — meant to impress upon citizens an image of a strong, capable, and resurgent India. But the question lingers: whose aspirations do they fulfill, and whose needs do they overshadow?

Grandeur vs. Grassroots

India’s obsession with gigantism coincides with a selective rewriting of history. Projects like the Kashi Vishwanath Corridor, according the same columnist,  are framed not merely as urban redevelopment but as civilisational reclamation, reclaiming “Hindu heritage” while marginalising other cultural narratives. This is less about serving diverse communities and more about curating a singular cultural identity — one that flattens India’s pluralism into a monolithic vision.

It is not that nation-building has no place for spectacle. The Eiffel Tower, the Hoover Dam, or the Great Wall of China have all functioned as rallying points for civic pride. But in India’s present political climate, spectacle operates with a dual purpose: it signals “progress” while simultaneously asserting dominance. Expressways slice through rural landscapes while adjacent villages still await basic sanitation. Mega-dams displace Adivasi communities, while stadiums are built in cities where slums remain untouched by development.

The physical grandeur becomes a substitute for social justice, replacing the slow, difficult work of inclusion with the faster, flashier work of construction. This is a governance of optics, where engineering feats are brandished as proof of political will, even if the benefits remain unequally distributed.

From Inclusion to Exclusion

The scale and ferocity with which the current regime pursues these projects reveal a deeper pattern: the deliberate anchoring of national belonging in monumental forms that inherently exclude. Public consultations, when they happen, are often perfunctory. Legal and environmental safeguards are waived in the name of urgency. Development becomes something done to communities rather than with them.

The rhetoric surrounding such projects mirrors the language of military triumphs — shrinking distances, fortifying borders, taming nature. The government’s Himalayan tunnel projects are presented as marvels of ingenuity, yet they scar fragile mountain ecosystems and uproot Indigenous populations. The price of speed and spectacle is borne by those least visible in the national imagination.

This exclusionary nationalism is reinforced by the erasure of minority contributions from the nation’s story. The grandeur projects are almost always framed within a selective historical narrative, celebrating certain icons while silencing others. It is a nationalism that prefers a perfect postcard image to the messy, contested realities of democratic life.

Security, Stature, and the Rhetoric of Vigilance

This year’s Independence Day rhetoric is also shaped by a heightened discourse on national security. At the 8th National Security Strategies Conference in July, Union Home Minister Amit Shah warned that India’s “rising stature” would bring greater security challenges in the coming decade. His prescription — tighter coordination between central and state agencies, increased anti-narcotics drives, and the use of indigenous technology for policing — reinforces the government’s narrative that India is under constant external and internal threat.

This security-first framing dovetails neatly with the politics of spectacle. When a nation is constantly reminded of threats, the construction of monumental symbols becomes not just a celebration of pride but also an assertion of power — a visual guarantee of safety and stability. But this visual reassurance often conceals the cracks: unaddressed social inequalities, stifled dissent, and communities left behind in the march toward a “great” India.

The Lost Tradition of People-Centric Engineering

India’s history offers a different blueprint for pride. Ancient stepwells, Mughal gardens, and traditional irrigation systems were engineering marvels too — but they were built to serve communities directly, to provide water, shade, and sustenance. They reflected a vision of nationhood where achievement was measured in lives improved, not just in records broken.

In contrast, the present fixation on record-breaking structures sidelines this heritage of people-oriented development. Nationalism becomes a stage performance where the citizen is an audience member, not a participant. Grandeur becomes the idiom of pride, while inclusion — the true test of democracy — is relegated to the margins.

Independence Day: Between Reality and Projection

The annual Independence Day celebrations are the perfect stage for this politics of projection. The Prime Minister’s address from the Red Fort is less a policy roadmap and more a showcase of India’s “achievements” — bullet trains, digital economies, smart cities — often without acknowledging the gaps between these promises and lived realities.

In a country still grappling with child malnutrition, agrarian distress, and unemployment, the emphasis on “world’s largest” and “world’s tallest” rings hollow. The grandeur may photograph well, but it does little to address the lived experience of millions whose independence remains incomplete.

Rethinking National Pride

True national pride need not be small-minded or anti-modern. India can and should celebrate its achievements in science, technology, and infrastructure. But pride loses its moral weight when it is used to paper over inequalities, to exclude rather than include, or to replace democratic participation with passive admiration.

The challenge before India, as it enters its 80th year of independence, is to reclaim a vision of nationhood where the measure of greatness is not the height of our statues or the span of our bridges, but the breadth of our inclusion — where every citizen can see themselves in the nation’s story, not just as spectators of grandeur but as stakeholders in its promise.

As the fireworks fade and the flags are folded this August 15th, the question lingers: Will we continue to equate patriotism with spectacle, or will we dare to build an India whose grandeur lies in the dignity, security, and participation of all its people?


Monday, June 9, 2025

From Division to Discipleship: The Spirit’s Call in a Troubled World


The World We See and the Hope We Hold

The glorious nearly 100 days of Easter season is over—a sacred time that reminds us of the most transformative truth in human history: Christ has conquered sin and death. Yet, in the present ordinary time, when we look at the world around us, we are struck not by triumph but by turmoil. News headlines speak of division, hatred, and conflict. We see it globally and nationally, but also in our own communities, in our families, and, heartbreakingly, even within the Church.

But there is hope.

This recent Pentecost feast, proclaims a world made new through the Spiritus Sanctus—the holy breath of love between the Father and the Son– the love that exists between the two. This Spirit doesn’t just inspire; it sanctifies, unifies, and sends us out. It is the same Spirit that empowered the apostles in the Upper Room and sent them into the world to proclaim the Good News.

The same Spirit that Sends Us Forth

The Church was never meant to remain cloistered. From the very beginning, it has been propelled outward with a divine urgency. The Holy Spirit is not passive; it moves with “centrifugal energy,” drawing us out of comfort and into mission.

Jesus’ ministry was the meeting of heaven and earth. His life and Resurrection shattered the illusion that darkness has the final word. His wounds remind us of our sin; his peace assures us of our salvation. And through Pentecost, we are filled with the very Spirit that raised him from the dead.

As disciples, we are summoned—not by our own plans but by God’s. True evangelization doesn’t stem from strategy, but from surrender; from Spirit-led inspiration and not from motivated human suggestion. The question is no longer “Will I go?” but rather, “Where is the Spirit sending me?” What does the Spirit prompt me to do next?

Evangelizing a Wounded Culture

We believe that to evangelize a culture, you must first love it. Cardinal George wisely noted, “You can’t evangelize a culture you don’t love.” This mission—to propose the true, the good, and the beautiful in a spirit of unity—is what drives the present-day media outreach, both old and new.

In a world deeply fractured, this love, born of the Spirit, is the only force strong enough to reconcile. And reconciliation, as the Latin root reminds us, is about intimacy—being brought “face to face” with the other. That is the power of Christ: to restore, to heal, and to reconcile humanity with God and one another.

Your Role in the Mission

As we have reflected on the Solemnity of Pentecost and today the Memorial of Mary, Mother of the Church, we are reminded that the Spirit and the Blessed Mother are not relics of history—they are agents of the present. Just as they once brought Christ into the world, they now seek to bring Christ to birth in our hearts, our homes, and our culture.

All are invited to this Spirit-led mission. Our reciprocal support helps the Church (People of God) continue proclaiming Christ across platforms and continents, reaching those who might never step inside a church. We have received the Holy Spirit. We are encouraged to share the ‘Spirit force’ generously so that more hearts may be kindled with the fire of divine love.

Go Forth, United in the Spirit

Jesus offers us both a reminder and a mission: “Peace be with you.” This is not a peace the world can manufacture. It is a divine peace—Shalom—that flows from the heart of God. The world may be broken, but the Church is alive. And the Spirit is still moving.

Let us go forth, not with fear but with fire. Let us follow Christ, deny ourselves, take up our crosses, and bring God’s peace to every corner of the earth.

Together, let’s “make disciples of all nations” (Matt. 28:19) and “renew the face of the earth”– our common home.

Monday, April 8, 2024

GIVE PEACE A CHANCE


"Peace is a divine gift but at the same time the fruit of human efforts," the Vatican message for Ramadan 2024  states. It continues, “The desire for peace and security is profoundly rooted in the soul of every person of good will, since no one can fail to see the tragic effects of war in the loss of human lives, the toll of serious injury and the throngs of orphans and widows."  Because of this, Ramadan calls for respect for the gift of life, the  conviction that hatred, violence and war – which is “fratricide, useless, senseless, and dark” – must be rejected and peace preserved. For preserving this peace, we need "closeness and friendship"  in order to "extinguish the fire of war and light the candle of peace."

The ongoing production and trade of arms as the primary driving force, accompanied with the enduring human aspiration for control, geo-political ambitions, and economic interests are the roots of conflicts. The global  human family suffers much from the devastating effects of the use of arms – as “dipping a morsel of bread in the blood of our brother”, says Pope Francis.  Inter-State conflicts, armed clashes, military combat,  criminal organizations, armed gangs, killing of innocent civilians, millions of people displaced, arms trade, immoral commerce, have been on the increase. This increase in hostilities is transforming “a third world war fought piecemeal” into “a genuine global conflict.”

Like the Christian Lent, Ramadan focuses more arduously on prayer, fasting, almsgiving. In fact, all religions consider human life sacred. Therefore,  it must be respected and protected. Consciences are to be formed "to respect the absolute value of the life of each person and the right to physical integrity, security and a dignified life."

Giving peace a chance requires courage and conviction, especially in a digital landscape where outrage and polarization often reign supreme. Yet, if we are to truly honor the legacy of Jesus, we must rise above the fray, resist the temptation to engage in hostility and vitriol, and instead strive to cultivate a culture of empathy, understanding, and respect.

Ultimately, living the Lent and Ramadan, or celebrating Easter, Resurrection or Id AI-FITR in the present times, is not just about restoring religious faith and practice and defend its ‘sacredness’ and its ‘greatness’, but about giving peace a chance. It is about reclaiming the transformative power of universal message of love and peace – a message that transcends time, culture, and ideology and speaks to the deepest longings of the human heart; reclaiming his message of compassion and kindness, and applying it to the challenges of the modern world. By embracing the values that each religious belief embodies and promoting a culture of dialogue and understanding, we can work towards a more peaceful and just society.

We recall the words of Jesus himself: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God" (Matthew 5:9). The word, Islam, coming from an Arabic root,  etymologically means peace, salaam, or shalom in Hebrew. In a world torn apart by conflict and division, may we be instruments of peace, channels of love, and beacons of hope, both online and offline. The followers or believers of the world Religions must form a peace-attitude of the mind and heart that outlines a life program for them. It implies a total sharing of peace and unity as the way of life and a mission. All must imbibe the ability to observe it and put it into practice.

The very first greeting of the Resurrected Jesus is: “Peace be with you.” This must be the be-all and end-all of all faith practices. Faith is not just a subjective experience for one’s own salvation; rather, it is a way to peace, love and unity. Otherwise, all Religions are a fraud and fake. Universal peace is  the fullness of God Kingdom on earth. True, that peace in this imminent world is not all. There is still a greater possibility for God to be up to a permanent peace. And the path of permanent peace is ever open to everyone. Jesus went all the way to death seeking this eternal peace – peace for all. The stunning lessons from Him and from the world-evil should stimulate us all to work for lasting peace.  

Human beings are often trapped in their own remorse, unable to see hope at the end of the tunnel; they feel helpless, discredited.  Peace is not the absence or removal  of outside problems though; instead, peace infuses trust and hope for a better future; disheartened people are put at peace with themselves. Therefore, we move from remorse to a peace-mission, by breaking out of ourselves, from the self-absorption, from our self-centered imprisonment. Peace is an irreplaceable fruit of justice and human Rights; it is the absence of evil in us, for evil has its price. We, therefore, cannot run far away from our duty of finding peace through justice and Rights, thus emerge from the depths of abandonment – a sense of being unwanted. Peace is about being freed by setting our feet on the ground and keep walking in the midst of uncertainty. Consequently, peace rehabilitates us and lifts us up from the human dungeon of hopelessness, dispelling the darkness and fear that are residing within us. Peace touches our inner core to raise us up to confidence so that through a shared mission we can live a fuller life on earth. A renewal of peace happens, therefore, when we stoop humbly to serve and bind the wounded, and those broken hearted.

Pope Francis tells the Christians and Muslims, and all people of goodwill, to extinguish “the fires of hatred, violence and war, and instead light the gentle candle of peace.” God loves all those who devote their lives to the service of peace. Peace is an outcome of justice; it is the fruit of human efforts to build a just world. Human being is called to lay the conditions necessary for its preservation by “drawing upon resources of peace that are present in our rich human and religious traditions” and by acting as “witnesses of hope”. Again, at Easter “Urbi et Orbi” on Wednesday, 3rd April 2024, the Pope called for peace in the world amid global conflict, war, human suffering, destruction, homeless refugees, social tensions,  humanitarian crises, human rights violations, and human trafficking,  proclaiming Jesus Christ as “the way of peace, reconciliation and fraternity.”  War is "always an absurdity” and “a defeat."

In the midst of these conflicts, people of goodwill of all Religions and non-believers are to enter into dialogue for building up of peace through “encounter, coexistence and pluralism”  especially in Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, Ukraine, Russia, Western Balkans, Armenia and Azerbaijan, Rohingya in Myanmar and Africa. Let us all break the ‘Good-Friday-Ramadan fast’  along with other religious groups, including the Bahá', Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, and Taoists, in fellowship, friendship, solidarity and peace. Let our greetings to each other be: Shalom, Shanti, Peace, Salam, and serve our neighbors in need, thus contribute to the common good of the society.

 

 





Saturday, March 30, 2024

THROUGH JESUS, GOD DRAWS ALL THINGS BACK TO HIMSELF

 

The Chief priests and the Pharisees unite in a plot to kill Jesus, not because he broke the Sabbath law by healing the sick, but for blasphemy in claiming himself to be the Son of God and for raising Lazarus from the dead. They found a worth issue to accuse him of, using the tactic of scapegoating:  a hierarchical group of a society, in a conflict situation, decides to blame an individual allegedly responsible for the social, political and religious instability.

That these religious figures like Caiaphas preserve their socio-religious positions and influences, the group decides that “one man should die instead of the people, so that the whole nation may not perish.” This scapegoating strategy is followed even today by political and religious leaders.  But God stands for the Truth. He stands for the ‘scapegoated’ victims. God does not want divisions and violence, instead, He wants a society based on love, justice, peace, forgiveness, compassion and unity. Through Jesus, God wants to draw all People of all nations on earth, to Himself — as one body in the One Lord of all.

The Pharisees and the socio-political leaders were socially, psychologically and ideologically insecure. They felt unsafe, apprehending a people’s uprising against them and the Roman Occupants. There was a sense of future uncertainty about their continuity, control and dominance over the Jewish society. We know well that all conscience acknowledges the truth, the good and what is just. They knew what they ought to have done. Their socio-religious instability and insecurity pressed on them to put Jesus to death and be done with.  From the heaven, His home, Jesus who descended to the earth for the sake of humankind, was killed by his own kith and kin. He who  became a man for us all, –  lived, taught, served and healed – was betrayed, denied, scourged, crowned with thorns, mocked, spitted upon, whips blowed, weighed down by the heavy Cross, hands bound, stretched and nailed to a wood, crucified, side pierced with a sword, died and was buried.

A somber Good Friday recalls the crucifixion and death of Jesus on Calvary, inviting Christians to accompany Jesus in his suffering on the cross.  No Mass is celebrated on this day. Tabernacles are empty of the Eucharist all over the world. The faithful and all people of good will (People of God), are drawn to the cross, following in the footsteps of Jesus on to Calvary. But, why? Precisely because it perfects human nature through his Passion. As a fully human person, Jesus identified himself with sinful humanity and did not want to die. No human being wants to die just for the sake of it.  Rather, Jesus accepted it, as his Father’s will– to take upon himself the sins of the world. He chose obedience to death out of a filial love –  an obedience learnt through human nature.

 

Christ’s Passion on the cross, led him in the midst of human frailties that destroyed him; but made it clear that “by his stripes we were indeed healed.” Entering into “godforsakenness” his  sacrificial death brought “the divine light to the darkest place”, writes Bishop Barron. His willing obedience in sacrificing his self, Jesus “reestablished the right relationship between divinity and humanity.” All this happened for establishing the Kingdom of God, inhabited by a united people of good will. The Son Jesus who called God his Father accomplished so, in full agreement with the Father. As the image of the Father, he executes his Father’s project: bestowing new life to all. Humanity had pinned their hopes on Him.  In facts, he fulfils that hope, raising humanity up, by falling down and dying. The dormant life-principle inside the ‘seed’ grows by being mixed with the earth, water, heat, air and light, that together crack open the seed, to bring much fruit.  This dying self leads to regeneration – a new life. “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified” because this grain of wheat dies to produce much fruit, by bringing all people where God is. And Jesus said, “it was for this purpose that I came to this hour”. The enemies “of this world will be driven out. And when I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw everyone to myself.” (cf. Jn12:20-30). In the Gethsemane Garden Jesus prayed for the strength to fulfil this project of the Father. On the Cross with courage he conquered death, to give new life to humanity and to all beings on earth – bringing all things to completion.


God’s work was undoubtedly all finished at the beginning of the world. It was in perfect unison, but humanity failed Him  through disobedience. God fixed ‘another day’ for people to listen to him (obey) and reach Him.  The covenant of creation, once broken through idolatry and earthly preoccupations, was renewed and sealed within human hearts with a desire to seek intimacy with God, and be with Him forever. The New Covenant, therefore, was established through Jesus’ death on the Cross, extending to all peoples. Jesus draws everyone to Himself by service of love, indicating how all peoples in all times will be able to see him and encounter him. His death on the Cross will bring forth fruitfulness for all peoples. Through his Resurrection, the dead grain of wheat will become the bread of life for the entire world (cf. Benedict XVI, Wednesday Audience, June 14, 2006). God will lift him up and draw all peoples to himself through his Son and in the Spirit, and all nations will experience Jesus through this sacrificial love. From the Cross Jesus draws all to experience God’s love.

Jesus is more than a spiritual teacher. Bishop Barron says: “Something else is at stake in him and our relation to him.” As the Son of God, Jesus is divine. Jesus declares: “The Father is in me and I am in the Father.” So are we. According to Charles Williams, the basic foundation of Christianity is “coinherence,” – mutual indwelling of all plants, animals, planets, human beings, angels, and saints. According to Bishop Barron, the oneness of all sons, brothers, daughters, sisters, mothers, fathers, associates, Church members, is established through the Trinitarian relationship – God, the ultimate reality marked by the capacity for unity by a mutual act of love.  Therefore, we all are related and inter-linked. Jesus’ death and resurrection invites us to enter fully into their plural divine-coinherence, whose linking love is the Holy Spirit.

The inner blindness (Jn 9:39) often keeps human race from this union. The Jewish hierarchy presumed that “the Romans will come and take away both our land and our nation.” We know well that earthly nationhood and nationalism are on the rise today. But the desire for an “everlasting possession” (Genesis 17:6) has been there in human history – to be God’s and with God as His descendants. But the rulers and religious leaders have failed to keep this covenant. Kingdoms were divided, people forced into exile, Jerusalem fallen (Ez 33:21), temple pillaged, and kings deposed. Yet, God will gather the scattered children from among the nations and bring them back to the promised land. God will make them one nation. Jesus, the new David, through his ruling from the Cross, will bring peace on earth. God will dwell on earth. He will be our God and we will be his people. There will be one kingdom, one nation, one God, united by an everlasting love.

 

The new commandment of love, given by Jesus at the Last Supper, was executed on the Cross. The high priest Caiaphas fail to realize the truth; he thinks by eliminating Jesus, the problem of destabilizing the society caused by Jesus, will be solved, and consequently, it will preserve the status quo. But, we know, Jesus’ death will gather the dispersed children of God: “And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself” (Jn 12:32). Jesus’ death becomes the key to the Kingdom of God on earth.

 

According to Sarah Coleman, the Cross is a symbol of death and life, hate and love, violence and peace, accusation and forgiveness, sin and purity, brokenness and wholeness, as well as of gathering to all people to one community of brothers and sisters. Through it, affirms Bishop Barron, “everything is gained, destruction and restoration, death and victory. The cross, once the cruelest form of execution, is now a symbol of abundant life.”

 

Christ died for people out of a choice made in love. God manifested his love through human Jesus to reveal his divinity. Bishop Barron says that the cross was a brutal instrument, through which “the fallen powers of the world are subverted; sin, death and the devil are vanquished.” The crucifixion is “the portal to the resurrection” – to a new life, a new humanity, a new earth.

 

As St. Paul says, we are called to share “in his sufferings and become like him in his death.” We read, “Though he was of God, he did not regard equality with God as something to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking on the nature of a servant, made in human likeness, and in his appearance found as a man, he humbled himself by being obedient to death on the cross.” (Phil 2: 6-8). Through this humble act of will, God fulfilled the plan of uniting the whole humanity in Christ. As we gaze at Christ hanging on the cross, let all pain and anguish, struggles and achievements be seen with God’s lens, that goes way beyond the perspectives of this earthly life.

God is ever alive and active in creation, wherein  no created thing can escape from His grace. God in flesh has uncovered all secrets and has raised up all who have slept in sin. Jesus who died in the flesh, God has freed Him and all those in bondage, and has enlightened those in darkness. All beings, created in His image, are welcomed to live with Him, in Him and through Him, forming only one person, one Body. God has “refashioned our warped nature in His image”, to restore to us the life with Him, for the Kingdom of heaven has been prepared for us all from all eternity (cf. Office of reading, Ancient homily on Holy Saturday).

 

 

Friday, March 22, 2024

HAVE REASONS FOR A FAITH THAT HEALS THE WORLD

 



A Christian should “give reason to anyone who asks to account for the hope that is in you” (1 Pt 3:15), but we are often not given practical guidance on how to prepare. S/he should combine historical wisdom, practical skills, strategies, spiritual insights and practical principles inspired by Jesus, to explain to another the faith with charity and clarity; be ready to dialogue, evangelize and respond to questions about the Catholic faith in any given opportunity.

The book, The Everlasting Man, a compelling defense of Christianity, (apologetics) by G.K. Chesterton changed the young atheist C.S. Lewis, on the path toward Christianity. In fact, he was convinced that Jesus compels his disciples to make a choice: either you are with Jesus, or against him. There is no third way. This historical, mythological, philosophical, and theological story written in an obscure literary style, on humanity and religion looks quite paradoxical and disorienting, writes Ron Rolheiser. Yet, it is a classical literary genius, apt even today. It can become life story of a Christian of 21st Century, applicable to modern life. To understand this paradox is already a step close to becoming a true Christian. 

 Jesus’ life principle was one of healing humanity and the world at large, bringing in the original order set by God, which a part of the humankind has disfigured and desecrated. This is a spiritual adventure for all of us, who are destined to heal. Like the cripple who, being healed by the apostles, began “jumping and praising God” (Acts 3:1–9). This is the hope produced by a spirituality of healing. That’s why Jesus came. In Jesus the healer, divinity and humanity meet, wherein his whole body, mind and spirit become a “conduit of God’s energy”, meant to set right a world gone wrong.  Jesus manifests the healing love of God, whose ultimate intention is establishing His totally healed Kingdom. We all can be ‘conduits’ of God’s healing energy.

God reaches out to the sinner (destroyer of the Kingdom), the sufferer, the marginalized. Jesus, following the Father’s will, seeks out the sinners with love and humility. He just wants to know if we want to be well again; if we really want to heal others. But there is always opposition to this healing process in the world. Often the healing work is condemned. There is the resistance to God’s creative work, to deny that it is not needed. The leaders of the world are confounded with diverse decisions. Many lawmakers of the state ignore ethics, natural laws, morality and conscience. Why do the governances want their way? Why don’t they seek together the common good? It is because God’s ways threaten their stay in power. They expose their strategies of oppression and exclusion to boost their egos.

Jesus’ passion, death, and resurrection will continue to heal the world and restore its humanity to sanity, free those under bondage of sin, enlighten those still in darkness, and heal the ‘sick’ and hungry humanity. God will not stop the healing mission, because his love is unchangeable. God will comfort his people and show mercy to them for He is gracious, faithful, holy, just, and near to those who call upon him.

“To set right a disjointed universe, God broke open his own heart in love” writes Bishop Barron. God worked through many prophets, to gather the scattered children of the dysfunctional world into a divine life. Humanity is God’s centre of love. God’s power breaks open to include both the happy and the hopeless. The human quest for God is reversed, as God himself as the ‘hound of heaven’ goes out in search of the ‘sick’ for a wholistic healing. The essence of Christianity is, therefore, a self-emptying divine love, wherein we partake in the essential healing mission of the Trinitarian God.

In the actual world, on the contrary, we see a “scapegoat mechanism” (René Girard) worked out by the powerful of the world, who have the insatiable human need for scapegoats, in order to justify their misdeeds. According to Bishop Barron, God’s power acts in opposition to that energy of scapegoating:  God directs the energy of scapegoating violence back on the self-powered leaders, exposing the dangerous consequences of scapegoating over the unstable order of the society.

God sets a new order: a transformed world, through the divine and creative healing touch, perfecting the human nature, conformed to the original natural plan. This new order – Kingdom of God– is breaking out in the world; divided people are coming back together, and God is going to reign. Human race must live now as members of this new kingdom. People themselves will engage the enemies of the world, to deal directly with those powers opposed to God’s creative mission, confronting the “political oppressors, religious charlatans, and self-absorbed Pharisees.” And the Universal Truth will set the enslaved people free, and heal them from the worldy ‘diseases’ and its many extended symptoms. The ill-motivated people will be called to come out of their stubborn self. God wants the good, and only good of humanity. We all ought to be healed of all our ego. We all ought to opt for ‘Theo-drama’ and not ego-drama, following God’s will in our life. Consequently, we shall worship God in spirit and truth in a healed world. Ultimately, a healed humanity will realize that no devotion (worship) is more pleasing to God than that which is directed to the poor needy (St. Leo the Great). A healing faith helped by reason, like a hidden force, can bring about transformation in the world, beyond what our eyes perceive, because “faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Heb 11:1).

 

 

 


Saturday, January 27, 2024

Living in a multi-religious India today

 Pranprathistha is done at the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya on January 22nd;  the BAPS Hindu Temple in Abu Dhabi  will be inaugurated on 14th February. Elections could be anticipated then, while the Lotus 2.0 project continues to poach MLAs and destabilize the elected non-BJP governments! The PM  with the “aura of raja and rishi” — avatar of Indian political, religious and economic development– is all set for electorate gain, and  for Hindu Rashtra (Ram Rajya). Ache din, assurance of job and  benefit for  those socio-economically poor, are all gone! Now it is all about realizing the Hindutva ideology of the RSS. With a majoritarian political pressure and campaign  on centralising Hinduism, there is hype to instigate the religious sentiments of people, which has terrible psychological impact.  It is an irony, that in a secular country, democracy is measured by a majoritarian religious faith and practice. A nation where Schedule Caste, Dalits and other lower-caste people who converted to Islam, Sikhism and Christianity to escape the Brahminical caste-based oppression, are now treated as outsiders. The persecution of minorities is on the rise, and the perpetrators of oppressive offences go scot-free. And all this is done with “a discreet variant on strident saffron, a spiritual hue glowing with political purpose.”  The intention is not to improve the citizens’ living conditions, but to control their minds and actions on the pretext of ‘Ram Rajya’ based on a pseudo-‘dharma’. Beyond all else, the Hindutva spirit is forcefully hovering  all around.

 In short, Hindu religion is amalgamated with Indian nationalism – a fascist Hindutva consciousness, with ‘improvised’ ethics and ethos. Contrary to Gandhi’s inclusive common mission, the seeds of discord and division have already been sown in the secular nation’s lives, changing the core of belief systems of Indian society and politics. India with its past democratic,  inclusive and pluralist credentials beyond  caste or creed appears to be fragile today. The polarising  political currents with Hindutva dominance, afflict the Indian Republic.  The minorities are in need of protection from the formidable socio-religious and political ferment, with “signs of the triumph” of a particular faith. Today,  a cultural consciousness is embedded with  explicit and particular religious sensibilities, ingrained in  inequality and injustices.

 

The ruling dispensation is making mockery of democracy, by making mythically based idol-worship a primary political issue. It is a forceful move to make India a Hindu nation, trying to revive the ‘Sanatan Dharma’s, “Hindu social ethics of intrinsic inequity of castes.”  As Vishal Mangalwadi, in his open letter to Modi, writes about him, promoting the worship of  “mythical gods” instead of praying to “the sovereign Creator, the shaper of India’s destiny (Bharat Bhagya Vidhata)”.[1]  The national motto, Satyameva Jayate (Truth Alone Triumphs) has been overturned with myths and lies.  According to Gandhiji only truth liberates, myths enslave.

 

The invisible God who is pure Spirit without shape or form, cannot be turned into an image. Man-made gods, says Mangalwadi, are false gods, out of human imagination. Instead, we are created to seek truth and wisdom to understand the divine in us. Human civilization is built on this search for the truth, seeking God’s kingdom here on earth, based on social, moral and ethical values. Religion helps in righteous living with justice and equality. The present dominant political culture, on the contrary,  twists and turns, to fabricate false gods by ‘abusing’ religion for electoral gain. Infected with corruption, the Indian leadership has lost credibility. Human dignity must be protected, for the divine in the human is sacred.

 

We the people of a multi-faith India, along with the civil society activists, thinkers, writers, journalists, artists and other like-minded people need to work together to stop the fascist forces from misrule through different means. Unconditionally, without any selfish motives, we need to oppose strongly and forcefully, such arbitrary governance, and work towards rebuilding the federal, democratic and secular Indian Republic that guarantees a free dignified life of the common people. These bodies need to take a positive direction to ensure the same, through inter-faith dialogues and socio-cultural programs.

 

Together we need to demand that all anti-people Policies, and Acts be scrapped, and replace  them with the “People First” Policy, that ensures a stable, dignified and peaceful life of all Indians living in harmony with each other. The government is to be set at the centre that takes stringent action to curb the forces that indulge in spreading communal hatred; caste discrimination; violence against minorities and women; oppression of the weaker sections; and against those who destroy the environment.

 



[1] Cf. A letter "Idolatry: Essence and Consequences" written to Mr. Arun Shourie in 1994 (30th Aug) was published in Vishal Mangalwadi, Missionary Conspiracy: Letters to a Postmodern Hindu, Nivedit Good Books Distributors 1998.

 

 

Thursday, January 25, 2024

UNITED INTEGRAL LIVING IN INDIA WITHIN RELIGIO-SPIRITUAL PLURALITY

 


India is a country of diverse religions, cultures, and traditions. It is also a country that has faced many challenges and conflicts due to its diversity. However, India has also shown remarkable resilience and creativity in finding ways to live in harmony and mutual respect among its different communities. One of the concepts that can help us understand this phenomenon is united integral living, which refers to a holistic and inclusive approach to life that transcends narrow identities and boundaries. Now, this same India, that is Bharat,– influenced by the majoritarian RSS-BJP politics that emboldens its Right-Wings affiliations to persecu­te and oppress the minorities– is living through a phenomenon of Hindutva nationalism, and in the words of Arundhuti Roy, the “collective, psychological capture” leading to the “centralization of Hinduism”. In this present situation, how can then India achieve a united integral living within its religious spiritual plurality? This article aims to explore this question by examining the concept of united integral living, the factors that promote or hinder it, and the possible ways to foster it in the Indian context.

Integral living is a holistic approach to life that encompasses physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual dimensions. It is based on the recognition that all aspects of life are interconnected and interdependent, and that one's well-being depends on the well-being of others and the environment. Living in unity within Indian religio-spiritual plurality means that people of different faiths and backgrounds can coexist peacefully and cooperatively, while also respecting and celebrating their differences. It also means that people can integrate their spiritual values and practices into their daily lives, without compromising their integrity or authenticity. A united integral living in India is not a utopian ideal, but a realistic and achievable goal that has been demonstrated by many examples throughout history and in the present. It also implies a respect for diversity and a willingness to learn from different perspectives and traditions.

Here are some of the factors that contribute to united living within religio-spiritual plurality:

One of the factors that can promote united integral living in India is the common heritage of spirituality that underlies all religions. The ancient and rich philosophical traditions of India, such as Vedanta, Yoga, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, and others, that offer various paths and perspectives to attain the ultimate reality, which is often seen as one and the same by different names. India has been a cradle of such various spiritual traditions living in harmony, including  Islam, Christianity, and others. These traditions share some core values and principles, such as compassion, non-violence, service, harmony, and transcendence. They also offer different paths and practices to realize one's true nature and connect with the divine. By acknowledging and appreciating this common spiritual heritage, Indians can foster a sense of unity in diversity and a mutual respect for each other's beliefs and practices.

Another factor that can promote unity in religio-spiritual and cultural diversity in India is the culture of dialogue and pluralism that has been nurtured by its history and constitution. India has been a land of dialogue and exchange among different civilizations, cultures, and religions for centuries. The syncretic and pluralistic nature of Indian culture, which has absorbed and assimilated influences from various regions, civilizations, and eras, resulting in a mosaic of diverse expressions and manifestations of art, literature, music, architecture, cuisine, and more. The constitutional and legal framework of India, adopted a secular and democratic constitution that guarantees freedom of religion and expression, as well as equal rights, opportunities  and protection for all citizens regardless of their faith or background. By engaging in dialogue and pluralism, Indians of the Democratic Secular Socialist Federal Republic can enhance their understanding and appreciation of each other's views and values, as well as their common interests and challenges. They can also resolve their differences peacefully and constructively, without resorting to violence or extremism. The social and civic movements and initiatives that promote interfaith dialogue, harmony, and cooperation among different communities, such as the Sarva Dharma Samabhava (equal respect for all religions), the Interfaith Harmony Foundation of India, the United Religions Initiative, and others.

The personal and collective examples of leaders and role models who have embodied and advocated for unity in diversity, such as Mahatma Gandhi, Rabindranath Tagore, Swami Vivekananda, Mother Teresa, Abdul Kalam, Dalai Lama, and many more.

However, there are also some factors that can hinder harmonious living in Indian religious plurality. One of them is the rise of communalism and fundamentalism that threatens the secular fabric of the nation. Communalism is the tendency to emphasize one's religious identity over one's national identity, and to view other religions as enemies or rivals. Fundamentalism is the tendency to adhere to a rigid and literal interpretation of one's religion, and to reject any form of diversity or dialogue. Both communalism and fundamentalism can lead to intolerance, hatred, violence, and discrimination against those who belong to different religions or sects.

Another factor that can hinder unity is the lack of education and awareness about the richness and diversity of India's religious spiritual plurality. Many Indians are ignorant or misinformed about the beliefs and practices of other religions or sects. They may also have stereotypes or prejudices about them based on media portrayals or political agendas. This can result in mistrust, fear, or hostility towards those who are different from oneself. It can also prevent one from learning from or collaborating with them for the common good.

Therefore, it is imperative to foster an united integral living in India within its religious spiritual plurality by addressing these factors. Some of the possible ways to do so are:

- Promoting interfaith dialogue and cooperation among different religious communities and organizations. This can help to build bridges of understanding, respect, and friendship among them. It can also help to identify and address the common issues and concerns that affect them all.

- Educating the youth about the diversity and richness of India's religious spiritual plurality. This can help to instil a sense of curiosity, appreciation, and openness towards other religions or sects. It can also help to dispel myths, misconceptions, or biases about them.

- Encouraging personal exploration and experimentation with different spiritual paths and practices. This can help to develop one's own spirituality and find what works best for oneself. It can also help to expand one's horizons and perspectives by experiencing different ways of relating to oneself, others, and the divine.

- Integrating spirituality into everyday life and social action. This can help to cultivate a holistic lifestyle that balances one's physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual needs. It can also help to express one's spirituality through service, compassion, justice, peace, and ecology.

 By implementing these measures, India can achieve integral living in unity within its religio-spiritual plurality. This can enhance its social cohesion, cultural diversity, national integration, global citizenship, and human development. Living in harmony in India is not only a possibility but a necessity for the survival and flourishing of humanity in the 21st century. It is a way of life that can foster peace, harmony, happiness, and well-being for all. It is a vision that can inspire us to transcend our differences and discover our common humanity. It is a challenge that can motivate us to grow and evolve as individuals and as a society.

 

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Love Your Neighbour: A Christian Unity Octave Ecumenical Reflection

 


The theme ‘You shall love the Lord your God… and your neighbour as yourself’ (Lk 10:27) of the Christian Unity Octave (2024), initiated by the Catholic and Protestant Churches, the World Council of Churches and other ecumenical bodies, and collaborated generously in drafting the prayers and reflections, reflects on the familiar story of the Good Samaritan, and all are encouraged to ‘Go and do likewise’. The ecumenical bodies of Churches through this moment, try to collaborate in making unity happen. The Gospel theme connects between love of God and love of neighbour beyond boundaries – in giving of self in service of the other. Jesus, throughout his ministry had only one Mission: to gather the ‘scattered tribes’— the rich and  the poor, the sinners and the saints,  the outcasts and the marginalized in charity, mercy, justice, and unity. All are welcome  to establish the unity of all God’s people, created in His image of loving the mankind. This presents, the coming together of heaven and earth — the coming of the Kingdom of God of unity, justice and peace; the coming together of divinity and humanity in Jesus, the Unifier and the Unified— yet distinct, in the plural-Trinity. Yet, how many divisions we find among the followers of Christ! Christian Unity Octave, is aimed at promoting unity, not just within the Churches, but among all peoples. This event, was influenced by French Catholic priest and theologian Paul Couturier (1881-1953), and based on Jesus’ prayer to God die Father: "That they may he one!" (John 17:21). Jesus asked for this not only for his followers, but for all humanity.

 What must we do to achieve such unity? This crucial question we all need to answer, if we are to find meaning of our life on earth and for eternity. Every person wants a life of fullness ( Jn 10:10), for “The glory of God is a human being fully alive” (St. Ireneus). The existential realities of life, with divisions and disunity, often distance us from the quest for the One God.

Our inner quest for unity brings us closer to God and to each other, by strengthening the Christian unity, through collaboration with Christians of all Churches. This can be a difficult task. It requires solid commitment to dialogue and discernment, ever open to the Spirit for the sake of serving God, and God alone, fulfilling Christ’s prayer– that all be one.  Jesus showed equal love to all, including the enemies. Being on the path of Christian unity, through loving one’s neighbour means not being selective, but being attentive to their needs, despite of diverse traditions.

Loving one’s neighbour “as yourself” presumes self-acceptance just as we are, and self-respect, acceptance of one’s own Church or community, with all its assets and failures. It is of natural instinct to love someone of the kin, of own faith, those sharing the social status, outlook and values. We prefer people and places of familiarity. Yet, the obligation is to love all, regardless of caste, colour, culture and creed. To be a ‘neighbour’ within a reality of distrust and uncertainly, is to open our hearts with love towards all,  especially those who are in need.

 Christians of diverse denominations need to go beyond convention, overcome “ecclesial and culturally conditioned short-sightedness” and see how the life and witness of other Christian faith-fellows reveal God’s love to others. It is only through widening our vision that we will be drawn to others in union with Christ. The story of the Good Samaritan teaches us that we learn more from those who are different from us, than those who think alike. Every situation serves as an opportunity to help the needy ‘other’. How do we, then, respond to our ‘neighbours’, within the Christian fold? How do we heal Christ’s ‘broken’ and ‘crumbling’ Church, manifested in superiority, insecurity, distrust and division?  Do the diverse prayerful and sacramental rituals of reconciliation, healing and blessings, build up the Church or do they persist in divisions that distance us further from God,  and wound the Body of Christ (Church). A Christian union that builds up the broken Church,  also enhances a national unity in diversity.

 The crave for social unity through solidarity requires  the recognition of others as brothers and sisters. However, when faced with insecurity, suspicion and distrust of our neighbours, hospitality and ecumenical dialogue become the starting steps towards unity, in contexts of religious and cultural pluralism. Christians, therefore, are challenged to find Christ within their Christian communities, by loving one another. Moving  beyond the confessional traditions overcoming hostility and hate, and by practicing ecumenical hospitality, we become ‘neighbour’ to each other –‘the one who shows mercy.’

 Neighbours are discovered in the most unexpected people and in unexpected situations. For example,  in today’s society that is so much polarized  by politics which set majoritarian religion against the minorities and by inter-communal conflict, Christians are challenged to cross the walls of separation and build unity. Following the Lord’s command –“Go and do likewise”, we are called to act mercifully, and genuinely love our neighbours – to be “other Christs.” We accept, recognize and respect, and not reject those who are different. We bring down the peace of God on all people of goodwill.  Christ calls all of us to enter in close relationships with members of other church traditions, and bear witness together to God’s love. We are called to be ambassadors for Christ (2 Cor 5:20), being reconciled to God and to one another. Working together for Christian unity through mutual trust, by  opening up ecclesial wounds, will only help rebuild the single Body of Christ.

 To some conservative factions of the various Church denominations, who consider the Catholic Pope Francis to be  a dangerously progressive, in his epiphany homily this year on the issue of  ideological splits in Church, asked the faithful to abandon “ecclesiastical ideologies”, and focus on poor, not 'theory'. He warned against “basking in some elegant religious theory” instead of finding “God who comes down to visit us”, especially in the poor. The Church needs to ensure that "our faith will not be reduced to an assemblage of religious devotions or mere outward appearance.” Instead, we open up more to each other, resolve conflict, and strengthens our bonds of unity. In fact, the same Francis and the Archbishop of Canterbury jointly have commissioned bishops for a unified mission. A special summit, took place during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, that brought together over 50 Anglican and Catholic bishops representing 27 countries. Additionally, some recent publications related to ecumenical movements, evoke the spirit of Pope Francis in charting a new course, exploring the “desire for Christian unity” with a global reach.[1]

 In the midst of many existing divisions among the followers of Christ, the effort towards Christian unity promotes ecumenical unity, as well as unity among all peoples, who seem to be in distress and pain. The prevalent practice is to claim an individual’s, group’s, or nation's distinct identity as different from others, by creating distance. It’s all about being oneself. Within this global ‘egotistic’ disorder and false nationalism with diverse identity-based communities, further fragmented by Hindutva political propositions,  the Christians face the challenge of identifying themselves as a single body of Christ, as mistrust is on the rise. It proves difficult to break the barrier of denominational identity in order to be recognised as 'Christians', building up a visible unity in Christ. Acknowledging each Church’s vulnerabilities, the varied voices and the prevailing cacophony, and by speaking with one voice under a common formula, the principle of unity is to be sought after, so that there be only one flock and one Shepherd – the Christ. Christian unity cannot be achieved through mere theoretical discussions. We need to seek new practical ways: to encounter one another, challenge each other, harmonize diversities, overcome conflicts and reconcile differences.

 In this context, the prayer moments during the Christian Unity Octave seeks the spiritual support of the ecumenical movement. A complete and universal Church unity is not just a goal, but a prophetic path for all Christian communities lead towards the common good of all, realized through a shared mission and witness. Through such ecumenical observances, prayer moments, dialogue and discussions, we can find concrete and creative paths to grow together in joint witness and mission. Jointly, as apostles of Christ, ecumenically we need to be ‘sent’ in reciprocal pairs, or through ecumenical groups, to be witnesses to Christian unity.

 It’s time for all the Churches and denominations jointly to move closer – a hard task though. All it needs is the will act now,  if we want to overcome the disunity in the Body of Christ. Through dialogue, personal friendships, learning from each other,  listening to the Gen-X youth, tapping their energy and enthusiasm, we can stir up the ‘ecumenical mantra’ against institutional inertia that is existing today. Let all denominations together make statements about political and social matters by resourcing all investigations and commissions through joint initiatives. And mostly, let the ecclesial authorities act in the light of the Gospel, through shared responsibility. Unity cannot be achieved through the personal authority of the supreme heads of the Churches alone. There is the need to explore ‘synodality’, within the ecumenical process, keeping guard against autocracy while being open to dissent, and to  exercise the freedom to be different. The need for pastoral care of the wounded and excluded through social charity  and through a leadership from below, would act as a catalyst to connect and build up that Christian unity – a hope for the future.

Finally, only an ecumenical opening to God’s love and love of neighbour, – the primary principle of pursuing peace and reconciliation – will help discover our shared identity. Such quest may be hindered by the eroded moral values and a commercialized spirituality, a lack of humaneness and of concern for the common good, probity and integrity. Therefore, faced with these realities, it is all the more imperative for all the Christian Churches to witness to God’s love as a single member of the Body of Christ. 

 Lord Jesus Christ, as we walk with You towards unity, let us not avert our gaze from the world, but keep it vigilant. Grant that, as we travel the paths of our life, we are able to stop and hold out our hand, to bind up the wounded and thus feel that You are present in them, You who live and reign forever and ever. Amen.



[1] The ecumenical movement is understood as a twentieth-century movement of European origin with a global reach. The book, (L’unità dei cristiani. Storia di un desiderio. XIX-XXI secolo. I. Aurora ecumenicae), A History of the Desire for Christian Unity. Ecumenism in the Churches (19th–21st Century) is a multi-volume reference work on the history of ecumenism, "a reference work, a reconstruction of the arc of time in which the Christian churches transitioned from a position of hostility to one of dialogue, and from separation to forms of communion. Scholars across the continents and disciplines explore a history of individuals and groups, generations and assemblies, documents and programs, theologies and practices, all firmly placed within the framework of a desire for unity." An international research project its text brings together contributions from scholars of various disciplines and different Churches. It shows how Christians, during the 19th  and 20th centuries, participated in a process unprecedented in the history of the Church, towards the need for the unity not only of Christians, but of all people. This is the first of three-volume work project.  Cf. Alberto Melloni (Author), Luca Ferracci (ed), A History of the Desire for Christian Unity - Ecumenism in the Churches, 19th-21st Century, Dawn of ecumenism, Foundation for Religious Sciences,  Brill, Leiden, 2021.

 

 

শ্রেণী বিভক্ত জাতীয়তাবাদ: সমব্যাপী অন্তর্ভুক্তিকরণ ছাড়া জাঁকজমক ----ভারতের ৭৯তম স্বাধীনতা দিবস ও লোক দেখানো গর্বের রাজনীতি

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