This article will
consider the following three concepts, applied to the Philippines, as defined
in the Humpty Dumpty New World Dictionary:
- Grace. Noun. The state of being kind and helpful toward others, a common application of the spiritual Christian meaning " that which is of God, through Jesus".
- Wisdom. Noun. The uniting of knowledge and perspective to generate an elaborate yet precise understanding of a situation or condition.
- Confidence. Noun. The assurance a person gets from within that he or she can do what needs to be done.
What is the
importance of these words? The importance is found in understanding when they
exist in Philippine daily living, and when they do not. And when they exist among political leaders . . . and when they do not.
Grace
Take the matter of
grace. It's meaning derives from religious faith, so it is easily found in
Philippine churches. Catholic priests walk in grace within the cathedrals and
in the outreach they do to ease the suffering of those in pain. This caretaking
is enormously kind and helpful to the Filipino faithful, many of whom do not
have much material wealth. They are granted spiritual ease through the grace of
the Church.
On the other hand, the priests, bishops and archbishops do not always walk in grace. When they engage in the dirt of political argument, they take positions. Hard positions, in many respects, helpful to some people and harmful to others. The Church is guided by rules, by doctrine. The rules are not elastic, not easily changed. They reflect choices: like the well-being of unborn babies over the well-being of the poor. The Church largely holds itself innocent of any result from its positions, from its doctrine. This is the opposite of grace which requires healthy doses of compassion and kindness and sober acceptance that decision means result. Doctrine that is imposed without responsibility is not grace.
Grace need not be a
strictly religious term. Cory Aquino walked in grace because she was a
fundamentally kind woman. We know now that Jesse Robredo worked and walked in
grace, aware of the importance of living by high-principled rules of fairness
and kindness and honesty. He was rare.
Most of us slog and connive and are weak of principle, taking advantage of
circumstances and using others.
Grace has a kind of innocence attached to it. Or maybe purity is a better word. Honesty and kindness. Simplicity and empathy.
We all have a little
of it, I suspect. We live it best in church.
Perhaps we should
figure out how to walk in grace outside the church, too.
And perhaps Philippine
political leaders should understand what faith REALLY means. Not use it as a
marketing tool to secure votes.
Wisdom
I am reminded of
basketball in the Philippines. The kids work hard on what I would call showboat
dribbling, the fancy-pants ball-handling aimed to impress. They enjoy the
one-on-one face-off with the defender. They love taking him off the dribble and
making him look the fool. It's all macho. Skill, for sure.
But they can't shoot
a bank shot. Can't score the points.
The goal is not
finding facts, or dribbling.
The goal is finding
knowledge, or scoring points. That is the distinction between ignorance and
knowledge.
Wisdom is yet one step
further than knowledge. It is found in comprehending that the score does not matter. How the
game is played matters.
Wisdom is a very
special enhancement of facts. It finds the deeper meanings. It is a rare
quality of knowledge that is expert at assessing context and the intricate
dimensions of smart. It takes a few knowns and unknowns and molds them into
profound and useful meaning.
I suppose the
opposite of a wise persona is a one-dimensional persona. Or a reactive persona, one that defines its
context by what has already happened rather than identifying the possibilities
and risks looking forward. Rather like the Philippines deals with storms. After
the damage and death, some of which may have been preventable if storm
preparation were wiser.
I personally think
wisdom is partially genetic; the brain has to be wired correctly. And it is
partly learned, the skills of observation, deduction and logic, where logic
includes an assessment of the risks of various choices. It also
requires a softer quality of heart or compassion or spirit.
Readers Coco and
Edgar Lores wrote that Philippine governing skills lack any special knowledge
or capability. Dynasty-style governance is power that promotes and protects
power. It lacks wisdom and utility. Lacks problem-solving that works in a
determined way to take care of the Philippines.
It is understandable
that the poor are practical and reactive. It is not understandable that
self-proclaimed leaders would fail to acquire the wisdom needed to properly
care for their nation.
Confidence
In college I studied
Radio and Television Arts at the University of Southern California. One of the
professors was a man named Ed Borgers. Dr. Borgers looked a little like a truck
driver, paunchy, big belly, tie too small resting on that big belly, sleepy-eyed,
wandering around in front of the class stroking his chin and pondering before
speaking. Each word measured and meaningful. He was a genius at seeing
relationships and context.
The good Doctor
argued that every expression contains three qualities: direction, weight and
intensity.
Might we apply
these dimensions to confidence? Direction is the outward act, purposeful and
certain as to success. Weight is the amount of certitude. We can be absolutely
convinced that we will achieve the goal. Or we can pray for the best in uncertain circumstances but proceed as if we know it will succeed. And
intensity would be the effort we put into following through to make sure of
success, the determination to overcome barriers that arise, without losing
grasp of our assurance.
I recognize
certitude in the Pilippines. Lots of ego and stubbornness. But many people seem to LACK confidence and use certitude as its proxy. Shout loud enough and
people will become convinced that you know what you are talking about. Say
often enough that something should be done "because I say it should be
done", not because it is the right thing to do, and it will be done.
The RH Bill is
stalled right now because two views are at loggerheads. The view of
the Catholic Church and the view of Women's Rights advocates. Backers of both
are absolutely convinced they are right. And therefore, will not bend.
Given those closed
views, neither can possibly be confident they can accomplish what the
Philippines needs. Confidence requires a comprehension that there is no one
single path to achievement. It requires comprehension that problems will arise. That circumstances change.
That give is as important as get.
A confident person
would understand that either extreme is not the goal. The goal is a program
that (1) promotes health care that is sensitive to the values of the
Philippines and (2) builds values in the Philippines that are sensitive to the
health of its citizens.
Values are not
cement. They can change. They can be changed by confident people. Flexibility is an important part of confidence.
Philippine leaders do not exude confidence, I think. They exude bluster which is one part
braggadocio and one part excuse-making. Hubris is a confidence of Ego, not a
confidence of accomplishment.
Grace, Wisdom, Confidence
Each requires the
other.
Philippine
democracy, to be deep, rich and successful, requires all.

