Intolerance is
always unacceptable
When this magazine appeared,
eleven years ago, Brazilian
spirit was passing through a
troubled moment that we hoped
would normalize over the years.
That's not what happened.
There is in our midst a stirring
of ideas similar to what is
happening in the national
political scene.
Three facts that occurred in the
last ninety days, involving
prominent personalities in the
spirit movement of Brazil, prove
this thought. But the bad,
unpleasant environment,
incompatible with the spirit
teachings, has actually settled,
for a long time. According to
some, a few months after Chico
Xavier returned to spiritual
homeland.
Spiritism, since its inception,
has had to deal with ruthless
opponents. The persecutions
received from all sides
resembled what happened in the
phase that preceded the
Reformation and in the years
that followed, a theme of the
special "The Protestant
Reformation and Spiritism", one
of the highlights of this
edition, written by the confrere
André Luiz Alves Jr.
Just to remember, one of the
forerunners of the Reformation,
the priest and professor Jan
Huss (the last reincarnation
of Hippolyte Leon Denizard
Rivail, before returning as
Allan Kardec), who fought
for Christian truth and against
corruption in the Church, was
condemned to the bonfire,
sixteen years before Joan of Arc
was burned alive for the simple
reason of "listening" to the
Spirits.
Curiously, attenuated the
external persecutions, the
spirits seem to have decided to
fight against each other, in
tune with individuals who, being
disincarnated or not, do not
want spirit ideas and the
movement that represents them to
fulfil their goals.
The intensification of
ideological positions and
intolerance towards those who
think differently are not in
line with the Gospel proposal,
nor, of course, with the
thinking and recommendations of
Allan Kardec, the codifier of
the Spirit doctrine.
No one ignores this teaching
from Jesus noted in chapter V of
the Gospel according to Matthew:
"Love your enemies; do good to
those who hate you and pray for
those who persecute you and
slander you. "
As for Kardec, his
recommendation expressly set
forth in chap. XXVIII, item 51,
of The Gospel According to
Spiritism is that we should
not only love but also pray for
them, without excluding those
who present themselves as
enemies of Spiritism.
In this sense, the coder wrote:
"Of all freedoms, the most
inviolable is thinking, which
includes consciousness. To cast
an accursed person over those
who do not think as he is to
claim this freedom for himself
and to deny it to others is to
violate Jesus' first
commandment: charity and love of
neighbor. To persecute others,
for reasons of their beliefs, is
to attempt against the most
sacred right of every man to
believe in what is good for him
and to worship God as he
understands. To compel them to
external acts similar to ours is
to show that we value form
rather than substance, rather
than appearances, rather than
conviction." (The Gospel
According to Spiritism,
chapter XXVIII, item 51.)
Following these words, Kardec
presents us with a model or
suggestion of the prayer that
we, Spirits, must do for those
who persecute the doctrine we
embrace.
Well (someone will surely say):
How to be tolerant and affable
with our enemies and, at the
same time, intolerant and
unfriendly to our own
companions, just because at this
or that point we think
differently?
Is it not that a huge
counter-claim?
Translation:
Francine Prado - francine.cassia@hotmail.com
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