1.
Introduction
- One
of the
best
known
teachings
of the
Christ -
even
among
those
who do
not
profess
any
Christian
belief -
is that
expressed
in the
synthetic
sentence
"love
your
enemies,"
which we
find
both in
the
Gospel
of
Matthew
(V: 44) and
in that
of Luke
VI: 27)
Although
greatly
publicized
and
proclaimed
with
resolute
sincerity
by many
of those
who
consider
themselves
Christians,
it is
also one
of the
teachings
of the
Master
less
understood
and
experienced
in the
daily
acts of
the
corporeal
life, in
the face
of the
difficulties
we still
encounter,
as
beings
in the
process
of
evolution,
to
understand
the
offenses
we
suffer
and to
forgive
those
who
strike
us.
These
difficulties,
natural
in the
present
evolutionary
stage of
our
planet,
are
largely
explained
by the
incomprehension
still
existing
in the
human
being
about
the true
meaning
of love
and
forgiveness
in
Christ,
true
foundations
of the
Moral
Laws of
Progress
and
Justice,
Love and
Charity.
In this
harvest,
Spiritism,
because
of its
character
as a
Redemptive
Gospel,
masterfully
codified
by Allan
Kardec
in the
form of
science,
philosophy
and
religion,
gives us
the
necessary
light to
understand
this -
and all
the
others -
postulates
of the
Gospel
of
Christ,
specially
to show
us that
life is
eternal
and that
we
reincarnate
to
progress,
hence
the
problems
and
disturbances
experienced
- and
their
causers
-
instruments
of tests
and
atonement
that are
present
in our
lives
and that
allow us
to
evolve,
walking
towards
God,
towards
the
moral
perfection
possible,
before
our
condition
of
eternal
Spirit.
What is
proposed
here in
this
unpretentious
work is
nothing
more
than
revisiting
the
evangelical
teachings
on the
love to
be
dedicated
to our
enemies,
having
as a
mark the
Spiritist
Doctrine
codified
by Allan
Kardec
and the
gaze in
today's
reality,
with all
the
complexity
that
characterizes
human,
social
and
political
relations
in
modern
society.
For
this, we
propose
to
analyze,
first,
what we
should
understand
as
"enemy"
in the
present
day, or,
in other
words,
to whom
should
be
destined
love
according
to the
aforementioned
Christian
precept;
still,
we will
seek the
necessary
understanding
of the
feeling
of
"love"
to which
Christ
refers,
especially
in the
face of
the
apparent
incompatibility
of the
act of
loving
the one
who
desires
us evil,
or whom
we do
not
consciously
or
unconsciously
associate
with;
and
finally
we
intend
to
understand
forgiveness
as a
manifestation
of love
and
charity
towards
our
neighbor
in the
light of
the
moral
laws
prescribed
by the
Higher
Spirits
and
codified
by Allan
Kardec.
2. The
enemy,
the
Gospel
and
Spiritism
- The
Encoder,
in his
monumental
work The
Gospel
According
to
Spiritism (1864),
dedicated
a
specific
chapter
to the
evangelical
precept
"love
your
enemies"
(Chapter
XII),
outlining,
with his
superior
wisdom
and from
the
master
lines
presented
by the
Superior
Spirits
, the
lessons
we must
take
into
account
on the
subject.
This
chapter
is a
true
guide to
lead
human
thinking
and
action
in
relation
to this
commandment,
enlightening
us today
and
always
with
precious
observations
that, if
properly
followed,
will
drive us
to the
path of
love and
charitable
forgiveness
to our
enemies.
However,
it seems
strange
to speak
of
"enemies"
today.
In fact,
there
are many
people
who,
confronted
with
this
evangelical
teaching,
say to
themselves
or in
public
that
they
have no
"enemy",
referring
to
someone
they
clearly
consider
as their
adversary,
antagonist,
whom
they
antagonize
or by
whom
they are
antagonized.
But
these
same
people
often
confess
that
they
keep
"sorrows"
and
"disappointments"
toward
others,
or that
they do
not like
them
well,
claiming
that
they do
not hate
them,
but that
they do
not love
them
either,
and
“indifference"
is the
feeling
that
marks
the
mental
projection
relative
to them.
In a
more
profound
analysis,
there
may
remain
the
impression
that the
figure
of the
"enemy"
to which
Jesus
Christ
referred
in the
context
of his
time and
Allan
Kardec
in his
work has
little
relation
to the
reality
of
contemporary
societies,
especially
those of
a more
civilized
nature,
where
there is
a
considerable
diminution
of
bellicosity
in
relations
between
people,
despite
violence
and
perversity
still a
very
present
reality
in
different
human
groups.
However,
it is
important
to
remember
that,
just as
the
Gospel
of
Christ
itself,
the
teachings
contained
in the
Doctrine
set
forth by
Kardec
are
universal
and
timeless,
therefore
valid
anywhere
and at
any
time,
which
allows
us to
understand
them and
interpret
them
according
to the
reality
of our
time and
our
social
environment.
It is
true
that
today's
political,
social,
and
cultural
scenario
is
largely
unlike
that of
the time
when
Christ
was
among
us.
There
has been
an
undeniable
evolution
of
Humanity
on the
path to
the
construction
of more
democratic,
just and
fraternal
societies,
much
owing to
the
influence
of
Christian
morality,
but also
of other
religious
matrices,
in the
formation
of the
different
generations
that
have
succeeded
each
other in
the last
two
thousand
years,
mainly
in the
western
world.
Although
there
are
still
acts of
violence
and
barbarities
characteristic
of an
inferior,
savage
and
primitive
world,
the
evidence
points,
indeed,
to the
progress
of
mankind
in
various
aspects,
including
moral
issues,
by
fraternal
charity
finding,
in our
times, a
fertile
field,
based or
not on
some
religious
faith,
like the
many and
varied
institutions
of
organized
civil
society
that are
dedicated
to
benevolent
assistance
to the
helpless
and
needy.
The
Spiritist
Doctrine
explains
to us
very
well
this
gradual
change
in our
world,
by
explaining
that the
Earth no
longer
occupies
the
position
of the
primitive
world,
where
savagery
and
wickedness
prevail
among
human
beings;
and it
is now
in the
category
of a
world of
tests
and
atonement,
moving
forward
to
become a
world of
regeneration,
as
Kardec
teaches
us in
his
work.
Thus, in
the
evolutionary
stage in
which we
live, in
which
evil and
perversity
still
rages in
our
world,
but in a
more
surreptitious,
camouflaged
way,
with
less
incidence
of clear
and
ostensible
antagonisms,
at least
in the
more
civilized
societies,
the
enemy to
which
Christ
referred
is not
to be
understood
only as
the
"opposite",
the
"antagonist,"
the
"incarnation
of evil"
in our
lives,
but in
the same
way
that
they
feel
towards
us, or
we feel
towards
them,
some
level of
dislike,
from the
most
serious
and
dangerous
to the
simplest,
and
which we
find in
our
daily
life
often in
our work
environment,
family,
in the
neighborhood
relations,
in the
use of
social
networks,
in the
traffic,
i.e., at
any
moment
of
interaction
with
other
people
in
society.
In this
sense,
the
"enemy"
can be
that
neighbor
that we
dislike,
because
he likes
to
listen
to loud
music at
an
inappropriate
time;
that
co-worker
who,
although
we think
he is
less
competent
than us,
he was
promoted
by merit
while we
remain
stationary
in our
careers;
it may
be that
ex-girlfriend
or
ex-boyfriend,
who we
can no
longer
look in
the face
for past
events,
despite
the need
to grant
him or
her
forgiveness,
among
countless
other
situations
of the
social
reality
that we
face
while
incarnated
in our
body.
The
Spiritist
Doctrine
clearly
shows us
that
these
aversions
can be
originally
raised
in the
present
reincarnation
or,
also,
what is
very
common,
can
derive
from
past
lives,
which
are
still
present
precisely
because
we did
not
solve
them at
the
right
time,
and the
hostilities
of the
past
remain
intact
or,
given
the
progress
already
made,
they
come
back as
remnants
of
capital
enmities
in
previous
lives.
Likewise,
Spiritism
throws
light on
another
phenomenon
that
finds in
the
enmities
of the
past one
of its
main
origins:
the
obsession
carried
out by
Spirits
over
others,
incarnated
or
disincarnated.
The
Encoder,
in the
mentioned
Chapter
XII of The
Gospel
According
to
Spiritism,
gave
special
attention
to this
form of
enmity,
pointing
out, in
the item
"The
Disincarnated
Enemies",
that
there
may be
enemies
between
the
incarnated
and the
disincarnated,
and that
"the
enemies
of the
invisible
world
manifest
their
wickedness
through
obsessions
and
subjugations,
which so
many
people
are
exposed
to, and
which
represent
some of
the
tests of
life".
It is
noteworthy
that the
theme of
the
obsession
has a
vast
Spiritist
literature,
including
the
works of
Manoel
Philomeno
de
Miranda
(Spirit),
through
Divaldo
P.
Franco’s
psychographics,
which
reveal
several
examples
of the
malevolent
effects
of the
obsession
of evil
Spirits
in the
face of
incarnate
enemies,
and the
reason
of their
evils,
disagreements,
and
antipathies
or
sorrows
is found
in past
lives.
We find,
therefore,
that in
our
different
corporeal
experiences
we are
confronted
with
various
and
varied
persons
who, for
present
or past
reasons,
lead us
to
varying
feelings
of
antipathy,
enmity,
aversion,
more or
less
intense,
and is,
without
a doubt,
the
Divine
Mercy
which
enables
us,
through
the
various
reincarnations
and in
accordance
with the
appropriate
reincarnation
plan, to
exercise
our free
will, to
recover
our
debts
and to
solve
the
remaining
problems,
in order
to
progress
in our
spiritual
improvement.
3. Love
dedicated
to
enemies
- The
Gospel
of
Christ,
in its
essence,
is the
Gospel
of Love
– a
feeling
as a
true
amalgam
to unite
the
different
souls
and them
to God,
love
figures
as the
focal
point of
the
teachings
of
Jesus,
the
basis of
the
Second
Revelation,
which
propelled
mankind
to a new
period
in its
evolutionary
march.
Because
of their
importance,
there
are
several
evangelical
passages
that
show
love as
a divine
command
to
sustain
all
Christianity.
Indeed,
in the
Gospel
of John,
it is
inferred
that the
love of
one's
neighbor,
in the
words of
Christ,
is a
commandment
that
finds a
pattern
in the
love
dedicated
by Him
to all
men.
Such a
high
standard
may at
first
appear
to us as
something
difficult,
if not
unlikely
to be
attained
in the
evolutionary
stage in
which we
find
ourselves;
for, let
us
remember,
Jesus
faced in
incarnation
all
earthly
hardships
and with
immense
physical
sufferings
sacrificed
his own
bodily
life for
the sake
of
Humanity.
But it
is also
true
that
Christ
himself,
notwithstanding
on
placing
His love
for the
other as
a model
to be
followed,
explained
the
postulate
of love
to his
neighbor
by a
parameter
closer
to that
understood
by the
man of
his time
- and of
any
time: “You
shall
love
your
neighbor
as
yourself”
(Matthew,
XXII:
39).
Allan
Kardec,
in his
excellent
analysis
of this
commandment
of the
Master,
from the
teachings
of the
Superior
Spirits,
left us
a
valuable
lesson
in
explaining
that:
"To love
our
neighbor
as
ourselves,
to do
for
others
what we
want
others
to do
for us," is
the most
complete
expression
of
charity,
since it
sums up
all the
duties
to the
neighbor.
You
cannot
have a
safer
guide,
in this
case,
than by
taking
what we
want for
ourselves.
By what
right
would we
require
of our
fellow
beings
good
procedures,
indulgence,
benevolence,
and
devotion
if we
ourselves
do not
have
them?
The
practice
of these
maxims
leads to
the
destruction
of
selfishness.
When men
take
them by
rule of
conduct
and by
the
basis of
their
institutions,
they
will
understand
true
brotherhood
and make
peace
and
justice
reign
among
them.
There
will be
no more
hatred
or
dissension,
only
union,
concord
and
mutual
benevolence.
The
author
is a
Police
Officer
in the
State of
São
Paulo. Professor
of the
Police
Academy
"Dr.
Coriolano
Nogueira
Cobra".
Professor
at the
University
Center
Anhanguera
Sao
Paulo -
Campos
Vila
Mariana. Teacher
in
preparatory
courses
for
public
tenders.
Postgraduate
in
Criminal
Law and
Criminal
Procedural
Law.
Student
of the
course
of
Spiritist
Doctrine
of the
Spiritist
Center
Nosso
Lar
Casas
Andre
Luiz.