Reclaim the Primacy of God's Reign in Our Lives: Reject Imperialist
Globalization and Join the Struggle of the Poor for Human Dignity and
Rights!
by Benjamin Alforque, MSC
It is so good to be back in Bacolod, to hold our PCPR National Council
Meeting in the place where the historic expose' of the miserable lot of the
sacadas at the hands of despotic and oppressive landlords and comprador-
bourgeois shocked the conscience of
the leaders of the Church. In a sense the Philippine Church in our modern
Philippine
History was never the same again after that. She began to take her education
from the poor once again, especially from the poor who struggle here, in
your very own province.
Today, we are tasked to do once again a biblico-theological reflection on
our own life- situation, focusing on the state of human rights of the
Filipino people. It is very important for us, Christians and believers,
never to lose this task and to waver in our biblico-theological reflection.
This task will help us deepen our Christian conviction of the seriousness of
God's Reign before the triviality of the worship of Mammon. This will help
us recognize the primacy of the people's praxis of liberation over the
forces that seek to destroy it, to neutralize it or to co-opt it in favor of
an advocacy without pain within the framework of the status quo. Biblico-
theological reflection will hopefully lead us to our roots, and radicalize
our sense of being human for the event of God's Reign.
Because this is a biblico-theological reflection, therefore, it shall be
concerned with the Primacy of Experience of Material Reality:
In the first place, what we now read as the texts of the bible are actually
the fruits of theological reflections that have undergone three moments in a
single process. The process of self-understanding on the one hand, and of
discerning God's will (divine revelation) on the other - and both
essentially and organically linked to one another
- did progressively develop from the first stage of experience of material
reality, to the second stage of secular celebration and finally to the third
stage of liturgical ceremonies (Stuhlmuller and Senior, Biblical Foundations
for Mission, p. 13-ff).
The experience of material reality always pointed out to moments of
liberation, no matter how insignificant, in a situation of oppression, no
matter how little and private; this basic
experience was then committed to memory and celebrated as a secular
occurrence in the life of the people. Remembering, either done by an
individual who articulates the experience with which the community as a
whole can resonate or as a collective effort of bringing back a moment of
liberation shared by all, contains an explosive power of its own: it can
galvanize the people into one community that possesses one common history,
asserts one common identity and struggles for one common destiny. That is
why memory can be a dangerously subversive activity.
This secular event now repeatedly experienced through a secular celebration
is now raised to the level of liturgical ceremony: when people find in it
meaning and depth, then a whole new interpretation is given to that primary
secular experience. The profane takes on a sacred character; the materiality
of experience a religious-spiritual dimension and what has been a secular
celebration is now turned into a liturgical ceremony: a worshipping ritual
and a celebration of life with the divine. At this level of discourse, at
the third moment of reflection, one wrestles with the questions of the
ultimate and
understands life as basically an experience with the Author of all Creation
in the midst of evil and human weakness.
It is awareness to an invitation to liberation, beyond death, in the
fullness of life with the Giver of Life. It is on this level that we accept
the biblical text: "its confessional not its critical history, which gives
us the teaching of the Bible" (George H. Soares-Prabhu, The
Bible as Magna Carta of Movements for Liberation and Human Rights in
Concilium, 1995/1, p. 89).
Our biblico-theological reflection shall also be concerned with Conflictive
History and the Integration of Opposites:
Our biblico-theological task today also fundamentally includes going into
the heart of the matter, to go beyond the propaganda line that the communist
insurgency, the people's armed struggle, constitute the fundamental source
of evil in our time. For in our national historical experience, the
assertions of the poor to live were always from the beginning movements of
liberation from certain oppressive conditions of, either, radical earthly
finiteness or of some historical injustice or of the radical essential
interconnectedness of both. In this light, what constitutes evil is not so
much the conflict that these movements for liberation generate, but the
hardness of heart and the violence that this hardness of heart creates from
among those who block the movement for change and untenably cling
on to the interests and structures of oppression and injustice.
Therefore, our biblico-theological reflection will also mirror the
geo-political class struggle as the material setting of our experience of
conflict and struggle.
This primacy of experience of material reality and of conflict is seen
through the optic of the poor.
It is our hope that, in the heart of the matter, we shall discover the
gospel imperative of redeeming love, made real by the struggle of men and
women to proclaim the Reign of God even at the cost of their freedom and of
their very own lives. It is our final task to discover in this heart of the
matter the giftedness of the Resurrection, and creation's glorious share in
this great victory of life over death, of love's triumph over every form of
hatred.
1. After listening to an analysis of our contemporary human situation, we go
now to the heart of the matter: this globalization, this imperialist
globalization, is fundamentally truly an anti-thesis of God's Reign.
Globalization is technically and basically the plot of the rich nations, and
the clique that rule over them, to "integrate all national economies into
one global economy within the neo-liberal capitalist framework, under one
superpower, the USA." As such, it has no respect whatsoever for nations and
national boundaries, for national freedom and cultural identities, for
constitutions, laws and traditions, for peoples and nations. Its god is the
dollar; it follows the law of the market, and it has no qualms of conscience
to sacrifice and kill life and to destroy creation at the altar of global
competitiveness, by acts of war and terror. Therefore, we must reject it at
its roots. "As for you: do not set your heart on what you are to eat and
drink; stop worrying. Let all the nations of the world run after these
things; your Father/Parent knows that you need them. Seek rather the Kingdom
and these things will be given
to you as well" (Luke 12, 29-31).
There is a distinction between earning a living, on the one hand, and
accumulation of wealth and capital on the other. The former predisposes us
to love, service, sharing and
solidarity; the latter feeds insatiable greed and unbridles irrational
appetite. For "the
Kingdom of God is not a matter of food and drink; it lies in justice, peace
and joy in the Holy Spirit, and if you serve Christ in this way, you will
please God and be praised by people" (Rom 14, 17-18).
2. Our experience of imperialist globalization has shown to us that its
social base in our country is domestic feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism.
The harshness of the
conspiracy of the landlords, the bureaucrats in government and foreign
monopoly capital
can be seen in the undernourished lives of landless peasants and the
famished existence of impoverished farmers. It is evident in the muscular
yet tubercular muscles of the unschooled workers, whose brute force
exploited by capital cannot even buy that which it produces. It is in this
sense that we must reject, together with imperialist globalization, this
domestic feudalism and bureaucrat- capitalism because they intrinsically
violate the dignity of the human person and trample on the rights of the
people, especially the poor.
In fact this system of domination that we now experience is actually what is
called the dictatorship of the ruling class. It is a dictatorship that not
only preys upon the labor
of the poor and the gifts of creation but also thrives as parasites and
leeches of that
very society within which it lives. It is a system that feeds on the blood
of the innocent and flaunts on the oppression of the people.
This is the reason why the present ruling class led by the US-GMA regime
cannot do anything right, or if it ever does, it hits it so with evil
intentions.
Its shameless puppetry to the US imperialist policy and its war on terror
has opened our land and nation to direct foreign intervention, smiling as it
does while our sovereignty and national patrimony are raped by foreign
hegemonic capital and pretending at the same time to be a strong republic by
the sheer force of its military arm, bereft of
the deepest respect and recognition of the people. It is precisely for this
reason that it wants to change the constitution of the land.
It promotes human rights violators and criminals in government service even
as it allows the imprisonment, abduction and killings of human rights
advocates go unpunished and with impunity.
It promotes the violence of war and the culture of silence and death, rather
than seek the ways to peace that are the works of justice.
In the face of economic crisis brought about by globalization policies and
extravagant spending to win an election at all cost, it is now bent on
exacting heavy levies and taxes from the people instead of cleansing
government of grafters and corruptors, of repudiating unjust debt and of
putting into prison well-known cheats and tax-evaders.
But it is impotent to do so for they are its own benefactors.
It protects hegemonic capital in its self-accumulation through profits but
leaves the eople underpaid, underemployed and unemployed and with least
social services.
It would now scare the people by the increasing number of its population,
rather than distribute the wealth and resources of the nation to its very
own people. It would rather produce more goods for the market, than lives
and people who will produce and benefit from the fruits of their labor.
And the officialdom of the churches is silent, because it wants to give this
GMA regime a chance. Actually it has its own men and women in the echelons
of this administration making ready the largesse of the system for the needs
of its churches. And more, this officialdom has great stakes in the system,
for they too have large investments in conspiracy with hegemonic foreign
capital.
There lies the greatest evil - the structures of sin - for it commits all of
us to the deceptive largesse of the system, without our knowing it, and
makes all of us participants in the
structures of the violence of injustice and exploitation. It is the whole
structure of Baalism that teaches us to sin; a structure built on money,
power and prestige and soaked by the sweat and blood of the poor and
oppressed.
In this sense, there is really no place for the dignity of the human person
and rights of the people in this system. It is an evil system. It opposes
violently the values of God's Reign.
Therefore, it must go!
Already the prophets have counseled us so.
Is. 6, 10: This is the resounding condemnation of Yahweh upon the structures
of the violence of injustice and, therefore, of sin in a period of
Israelites history when the State and the Temple conspired to dispossess the
people: because of the taste of comfort, power and fame and because of the
pervading influence of the system of greed and abuse, therefore, no one
heard of the Justice of Yahweh anymore for no one spoke ever again about it.
Hence, everyone's heart became wrapped with fats, and, therefore, bound to
complete heart failure by cardiac arrest! In the same manner must Jerusalem
fall, barren, exiled and forsaken!
Jer. 6, 13-15: In another yet stirring prophetic exposé of the structures of
the violence of injustice and exploitation, here comes Jeremiah now
proclaiming the total bankruptcy of
a system that pretends to proclaim the peace of silence and quietude in the
midst of
wanton loot, lies and deprivation perpetrated and led by the ruling class
through the Temple and the State that it uses against the people. The fakery
of this peace lies fundamentally not in the absence of war but in the
presence of infidelity, thievery, deception and all kinds of abominable
wickedness that permeated the whole social order.
The prophets Amos and Hosea and all the other minor prophets have described
this situation of landlessness, homelessness and uncare for the poor, the
widow and the orphan as precipitated primarily by the blood-thirsty upper
class, in their thirst for money, power and prestige through deception and
corruption. Generally then, the whole social order - the structure of the
violence of injustice and sin - has fallen into the morass of moral decay.
It is interesting to note that the biblical author pictured this sinfulness
and violent society as unfaithful, likened to a person not contented with
just one paramour, from the highest level of officialdom to the lowest level
of the ordinary hoi polloi. For the cultural apparatuses of the rich have so
shaped and engulfed the consciousness of the poor. Thus, Israel ceased to be
a people with a backbone on behalf of justice. Therefore, it was bound to be
further exploited by the imperialist powers that were then emerging:
Assyria, Babylon, Persia, and Greece and, finally, Rome, in the name of some
god, including the emperor-god, against the God of justice, peace and
integrity of creation.
3. The hope is in our hands, the hope for a better tomorrow is in the hands
of the people who struggle, and who remain to be the sacraments of God's
loving presence among our people in our time.
This is a profound biblical conviction already introduced to us in the story
of Cain and Abel (Gen. 4, 1-16). The first time that sin entered into the
picture of biblical history is found in the conflict between Cain and Abel,
which was resolve by Cain through violence defined as an act of shedding
innocent blood. With Abel's death, the tradition of the good would have
ended, and the mark of wandering sin as slayer of innocent life would have
gone roaming around the earth, a fugitive but nevertheless free. This
explains the historical phenomenon of the seeming triumph of evil and of its
capacity to socially reproduce with power and impunity. And we wonder: why
would the good and the innocent die so young; while sin and violence thrive?
But the conflictivity was not, and cannot be resolved by the shedding of
innocent blood. That is why the biblical author picked up again the theme of
the good with the birth of Seth who shall from then on take
up the innocent cause of Abel. From this primordial history, an intuitive
insight into the integration of opposites is laid down: good and evil do co-
exist; but the good will always rise over evil. For such was the promise
that originated from the struggle between the woman and the serpent, between
her seed and its seed, and its resolution in the crushing of the serpent's
head by the bruised feet of her offspring (Gen 3, 15).
Gen. 14, 11-24: On the other hand, in the social scale, this struggle of
opposites and the violence that it generates in human history is taken up
again in Abram's violent act of
liberating his nephew Lot from his kidnappers, without ransom. It must be
said that the cause of these tribal violent wars which finally reached Sodom
and Gomorrah was no other than the capture of wealth at the expense of
innocent lives. "The booty belongs to the victor" became a law that put
prizes to economic wars of aggression. And Abram, whose act of liberation
was considered an act of justice that led to peace (Heb. 7,1-2; cf. Also
Benjamin E. Alforque, MSC, Freedom from Feudal Bondage, Land Abuse and
Economic Exploitation, in ECJN 2000), overturned this ungodly practice by
refusing the riches offered to him as prize of victory (Gen. 14,22). It is
never a case of justice to obtain
wealth by violence, especially that wealth that comes at the cost of
innocent lives, yes,
and even those innocent lives of the foot soldiers. For accepting the bounty
and the loot is an act of violence, mercenary violence itself!
But we must ask: is our God a god of violence or a god of tenderness and