NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

What I do not want you to do to me, I do not do to others

- ● Read full article on www.newsday.co.zw Fr Oskar Wermter SJ is a social commentato­r. He writes here in his personal capacity.

IT has been disputed since ancient times if the various religions are all the same, or there are difference­s. It is very clear that this golden rule occurs in almost all major religions, in a positive or negative formulatio­n.

Tobit 4: 15 “Do to no one what you yourself dislike.”

Sirach 31:15: “Recognise that your neighbour feels as you do, and keep in mind your own dislikes”.

Matthew 7:12: ”Do to others what you would have them do to you. This is the law and the prophets.”

Luke 6:31: “Do to others as you would have them do to you.”

Despite all the difference­s between Judaism, Christiani­ty, Islam and Asian religions like Hinduism, Buddhism, there are some common elements (Walter Kasper, Mercy, Paulist Press, 2013, p37)

It is basically this common saying: ”Do not do to another, what we do not want done to ourselves.”

This is a value and a piece of common experience which is universal.

No one can dispute this, we must all of us accept this saying. It fits in with all religions and philosophi­es.

Here is a saying which we can all share, it is common to all human beings, like something written by the Creator into our hearts.

Examples:

Let us now look at some practical examples: My son keeps telling me lies; he frequently says: “You tell me that the sun, the moon and all the stars are in the sky because we ourselves and our astronomer­s have put them there. But this is clearly not true.

If we believe this then all our knowledge and wisdom about sun, moon and stars is just rubbish and does not help us at all.

Then we must give it up and start again to do research into space and stellar bodies (stars).

● If a businessma­n tells us that he can sell us a car for half the cost of the present price of a car, how can we buy it?

How can we go through with a business deal if what we have been told is all based on lies and fantasy?

● All the business that we do becomes unreliable and we feel deceived and we suspect that the “deal” we have concluded is fraudulent and simply a bad lie.

A young man wants to marry a girl he likes and loves. But whatever he tells her about his life, turns out to be untrue and unreliable.

How can he marry a young woman, if all young women are just liars, and if most young men are more or less the same?

● What business life teaches us, showing us negative examples, is even more confusing to citizens in political life. Citizens, generally speaking, are very suspicious of what political leaders tell them. They take it for granted that whatever the leaders tell them are false rumours and lies, lies and more lies.

We resent it and become angry and very annoyed if we find out about all the false informatio­n we were given.

Will we be more honest and sincere in what we tell our clients. If they are known to be liars and conmen, can we ever trust them again?

● if we tell a lot of lies, what about our business partners?

Can we trust that they are honest, or are we right in assuming that since they tell us only lies, we must tell the same kind of stories which are also without even a small grain of truth?

If we tell people lies, they will think that they can also tell us lies. The relationsh­ip gets spoiled, trust breaks down.

● A liar copies the partner who we know from experience has also been known to be very “economical” with “truth- telling”.

If one side is full of lies, is not that our side is also riddled with falsehoods, lies and fraudulent statements? If you start the habit of telling lies without end, how do you think you will tell the truth?

If we are told many lies, will we ever tell the truth again to anyone?

If a man has abused a woman, will she respect and trust him some other time?

Everything between partners depends on mutual trust.

Business can only be concluded if there is a relationsh­ip of trust and good faith between partners.

No marriage will succeed if a wife cannot trust her husband, if the husband retains deep-seated suspicions about their relationsh­ip then there is a need for repair.

Social life, and more especially family life, is built on reliabilit­y, confidence, good faith and similar qualities: Without these qualities of a good and reliable character, marriage partners will find that their relationsh­ip is crumbling.

A politician is canvassing for votes before an election, if he is not trustworth­y who will vote for him?”

“What we do not want to be done to ourselves, we will not do to others”.

The golden rule emphasises equality and equity. There is a balance in how we evaluate ourselves and our partners and companions.

This rule is based on mutuality. What we appreciate in our brothers and sisters, friends and co-workers and partners, we should also practise ourselves.

The golden rule is connected to love, in actual fact it is connected to love of the enemy, the adversary and the rival, and, indeed, to embracing the stranger and the alien who we still have to accept as our own, our close companion, walking the same road.

This rule presuppose­s that we respect the partner, the brother and friend as much as our selves, in mutual trust and warm companions­hip.

If we love ourselves, then even more the stranger who relies on our friendship, our close relationsh­ip and our sharing life and having the most precious things in life in common.

We can only accept the stranger and alien as brother and friend, if he is a loved, appreciate­d and respected companion.

“What we expect for ourselves, we have to give with great affection to the stranger, even to foreigners.

What I seek for myself and for my friends, I am ready to give to the stranger when he visits my home, as if it was a precious gift that belongs to all of us.

What we share as one is owned mutually by all of us.”

If we encounter an alien or foreign visitor, we see in him a person so similar to ourselves.

The golden rule — a signpost

The Fact that we find the rule in so many contexts, in so many religions and philosophi­es shows us the way forward.

The rule found everywhere enlightens us about the truth of our lives. It gives us a pointer towards a commonalit­y which we had not discovered yet.

Time and again we realise that we have so much in common and can share it as common property and precious treasure which enlightens us on our path and our road which we follow in community or as a family.

If we recognise the authority of the golden rule, its validity for all of us, we can no longer glorify violence and armed warfare, because that is in conflict with the wisdom which we hold in common and regard as one treasure that belongs to all of us: “According to the basic conviction­s of every religion, the connection of religion with violence represents a misunderst­anding, a misuse and an aberrant form of authentic religion.” (38)

Jesus ties up the golden rule with the Sermon of the Mount, which includes the command to love one’s enemies” (39).

“The fact that compassion and mercy are universal human virtues can encourage us to engage in dialogue with other cultures and religions and to work together with them for understand­ing and peace in the world.” (W Kasper, Mercy, p39).

The commonalit­y of the golden rule, the fact that it can be found in so many contexts, points out to us that the golden rule is not one isolated piece of wisdom found in this rule (in a collection of wisdom sayings), but that it is wisdom which reaches the depth of our hearts and has as such a unifying power.

In all of us, we must discover and see the human face of all that the golden rule seeks to unite in one humanity.

If the human face is the face of all of us together, there cannot be enmity between us that the rule wishes to overcome by dialogue and common action.

 ?? ?? Fr Oskar Wermter SJ
Fr Oskar Wermter SJ

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