IN
EXILE
By Rev. Ron
Rolheiser, OMI
It’s
not a crime or a sin to be incompatible, it’s only unfortunate
In her the first
volume of her autobiography, Under My Skin, Doris Lessing, shares this
story: During her marriage to Gottfried Lessing, it became evident to
both of them at a point that they were simply incompatible as a married
couple and that they would eventually have to seek a divorce. However,
for practical reasons they decided to live together as friends until
they could both move to England, at which time they would file for a
divorce. Their marriage was finished but unexpectedly their friendship
began to grow. They had accepted their incompatibility as a fact and as
something that didn’t call for resentment from either of them. Why be
angry at someone just because she feels and thinks differently than we
do?
One night, lying
in their separate beds in the same room, both smoking and unable to
sleep, Gottfried said to her: This kind of incompatibility is more of a
misfortune than a crime. That’s a mature insight: it’s not a crime or a
sin to be incompatible, it’s only unfortunate.
Would that in
our daily lives we could appropriate that truth because there is an
important emotional, intellectual, moral and religious challenge
contained in it. We spend too much time and energy angry and frustrated
with each other over something that basically we cannot control or
change. Our differences, however much they may frustrate us and tax our
patience at times, are not a crime, a sin or indeed (most times) even
anyone’s fault. We don’t need to blame someone, be angry at someone or
resent someone because he or she is different from us, no matter how
much those differences separate us, frustrate us, and try our patience
and understanding.
We shouldn’t
blame and resent each other for being different. Yet that is invariably
what we do. We resent others, especially those closest to us in our
families, in our churches and in our places of work, because they are
different than we are, as if they were to blame for those differences.
Funny how we
rarely reverse that and blame ourselves. But generally we blame someone
or something. Incompatibility within families, church circles and
professional circles rarely helps produce respect and friendship, as it
did between Gottfried and Doris Lessing. The opposite is true. Our
differences generally become a source of division, anger, resentment,
bitterness and recrimination. We positively blame the other person for
the incompatibility as if it was a moral fault or a willful separation.
Of course,
sometimes that can be the case. Infidelity or even simple laziness and
lack of effort in a relationship can also eat away at harmony and
insert insurmountable obstacles to understanding and compatibility.
An affair with
someone who isn’t your partner can help trigger incompatibility in a
marriage pretty quickly. In such a case, it wouldn’t be as true to say:
“This is just a misfortune.” There is someone to blame. However, most
of the differences that separate us are, in the words of Gottfried
Lessing, mostly just a misfortune, not a crime.
Who is to blame?
Who’s at fault? If anyone is to be blamed, let’s blame nature and God.
We can blame
nature for its prodigal character, for its overwhelming abundance, for
its staggering variety, for its billions of species, for its
bewildering differences within the same species, and for its proclivity
to give us novelty and colour beyond imagination. We can also blame God
for placing us in a universe whose magnitude, diversity and complexity
befuddles both the intellect and the imagination. Our universe is still
growing both in size and in variation, with change as its only
constant.
God and nature,
it would appear, do not believe in simplicity, uniformity, blandness
and sameness. We aren’t born into this world off conveyor-belts like
cars coming off a factory line. The infinite combination of accidents,
circumstance, chance and providence that conspire to make up our
specific and individual DNA is too complex to ever be calculated or
even concretely imagined.
But blame isn’t
the proper verb here, even if in our frustrations with our differences
we feel that we need to blame someone. God and nature shouldn’t be
blamed for providing us with so much richness, for setting us into a
world with so much colour and variety and for making our own
personalities so deep and complex. How boring life would be if we
weren’t forever confronted with novelty, variety and difference. How
boring the world would be if everything were the same colour, if all
flowers were of one kind and if all personalities were the same as
ours.
We would pay a
high price for the easy peace and understanding that would come from
that uniformity.
Gottfried
Lessing was an agnostic and a Marxist, not an easy friend to
Christianity. But we (who vow ourselves by our baptism to
understanding, empathy, forgiveness and peace-making) should be
strongly and healthily challenged by his insight and understanding:
it’s not a sin or a crime to be incompatible, it’s only unfortunate!
Rolheiser,
theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is president of the
Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, TX. He can be contacted
through his website: www.ronrolheiser.com.