Great dialogue between two men of great faith.
Ernesto Sabato - One and the Universe “One sets off for distant lands, or seeks the knowledge of man, or investigates nature, or searches for G-d; only afterwards does he realize that the phantom he was chasing was Himself.”
Dialogue requires that each participant become acquainted with the other person.
“G-d’s candle is man’s soul which reveals the innermost parts of his being.” Prov 20:27
In its most profound sense, to have a conversation is to bring one’s soul nearer to another’s in order to reveal and illuminate his or her core.
The Divine Breath, which both possess, knows to unite the two and then form a link with Him that will never weaken, as it is written, “A cord of three strands is not quickly torn apart” Eccl 4:12
One day we set a time and place so that we could just sit together and talk.
The dimensions of spiritual life that one attains by oneself only acquire meaning when they are used to help uplift others.
Friendship means sharing meals and spending time together, but the sign of real friendship is the ability to reveal what is in one’s heart to the other person.
I cannot do without the path. One encounters God walking, moving, seeking Him and allowing oneself to be sought by Him. They are two paths that meet.
Every person must look inside himself. DIstraction is an interior fracture. It will never lead the person to encounter himself for it impedes him from looking into the mirror of his heart. Collecting oneself is the beginning. That is where the dialogue begins. Seek the experience of entering into the intimacy of your heart, to know the experience, the face of God.
Micah explains to the Israelites: Do justice and love goodness, and walk humbly with your G-d.
The work of man must maintain a balance between the gift and the task. When he keeps the gift alone and does not do the work, he does not complete his mission and remains primitive; when man becomes overly zealous in work, he forgets about the gift, creating a constructivist ethic. We receive creation in our hands as a gift.
Teachers that act as if everything they say is absolutely correct - you cannot trust
There always has to be room for doubt
Skorka Politics and religion are two systems that deal with the same problem - man & his difficulties. Education is the people’s only defense against leaders that would do them harm.
Bergogglio Celibacy is in the Western rite, but the Catholic Byzantine, Ukrainian and Greek rites can marry; bishops cannot - they remain celibate. Until 1100, Catholic priests chose celibacy little by little. Later, in Eastern Churches, they continued noncelibacy tradition as a personal option, and in the West it was the other way. It can change.
Skorka Aphorism in Talmudic literature: Respect everyone, and suspect them as well.
The verb “to pray” in Hebrew is “l’hitpalal’ which means to judge oneself. Every time we want to get closer to G-d, the first thing we do is determine our personal defects
Bergogglio Part of teaching includes not replacing another person’s decision. The priest who adopts an attitude of only being a boss nullifies and emasculates those who are searching for God. The priest proposes the truth as it is revealed, and accompanies. Though he may witness failure, he accompanies. The teacher who nullifies the decision-making for his disciple is not a good priest; he is a dictator, denying others their religious personalities.
Skorka In today’s world where there is such terrible uncertainty, where things change from one minute to the next, many people crave something that is ‘true,’ even if it is superficial; something solid to hold onto in the midst of an ever-changing reality. There are certain truths with respect to G-d that we can only find by ourselves. In Judaism, as in other religions, one can find leaders that dictate how others should live, denying the religious feelings that are supposed to emanate from within each person.
Bergogglio In Catholicism, the teacher presents the truth of God and shows the path. But if he is a true teacher, he allows the disciple to walk and he accompanies him in his spiritual life.
Skorka Fundamentalism is an attitude - things are understood to be a certain way and there is nothing to discuss -- there is no other way
No one can arbitrarily impose ‘the truth’ on anyone else. We should teach and guide people, after which each person will live the truth as they understand it, based on their sincere feelings. These are things that fundamentalism rejects.
Bergogglio This type of restorationist fundamentalism is an opiate because it takes you away from the living God. Opium is an idol that alienates you, as any idol does. It reduces God to a being that you can manage with prescriptions. If I do this, everything will be fine… It is a form of buying comfort, well-being, fortune and happiness, but it leaves behind the living God, He who accompanies you along the way.
Skorka Fundamentalism goes even further than that; it entails evaluating and judging others. Since that person does not live the way I believe G-d says they should, I can kill them. That is the type of extreme fundamentalism that leads to hatred.
When all is said and done, institutions are built by men.
Bergogglio My grandmother taught me 2 rhymes: "Mira que te mira Dios, / mira que te está mirando, / mira que te has de morir, / mira que no sabes cuándo" (Rodríguez Marín - perhaps?). See that God watches you, see that He is watching you; see that you will have to die and you do not know when.
Man who walks, stop and think about your pace, your steps, the final step.
The danger is to fall in love with the path and lose the vision of the goal; and another danger is quietism: to be looking at the goal and not do anything on the way. Christianity had very strong periods of quietist movements that went against the command of God, which says that one has to work and transform the earth.
Skorka (when visiting a terminally ill man) In Hebrew, I told him, “Stay at peace.” This man was completely at peace. He said goodbye to this life, with life. He passed away two days later.
Bergogglio Anguish exists. It is the moment of detachment, of separation. Detachment is not easy but I believe that God is there ready to take your hand when you are about to leap. One has to abandon oneself in the hands of the Lord; alone, one cannot survive.
The feminine presence in the Church has not been emphasized much, because the temptation of chauvinism has not allowed for the place that belongs to the women of the community to be made very visible.
Woman has been the object of use, of profit, of slavery, and was relegated to the background; but in the Scriptures we have cases of heroic women that have transmitted to us what God thinks about them, like Ruth, Judith…
Part of the great adventure, as you said, is to mutually decipher ourselves. There was a priest who said that God made us man and woman so that we would love one another and be needed by one another. In preaching on marriage, I usually say to the grom that he has to make the bride more of a woman and the bride that she has to make the groom more of a man.
There is a difference between a professor and a teacher. The professor presents his material in a detached manner, while the teacher involves others; it is profoundly testimonial. There is also a coherence between his conduct and his life. He is not merely a transmitter of science, as is a professor. We need to help men and women to become teachers, so they can be witnesses; that is essential in education.
Skorka charity is assistance that is urgently needed and extended to those in need quickly and immediately. Tzedakah - is a tax that we should pay to help the needy. Tzedek means justice. Any society with people in need is intrinsically unjust and through tzedakah we can try to correct this failure, at least in part.Another concept in Talmudic literature is that of gemilut hasadim translated as “acts of loving-kindness.” Every act of tzedakah should be performed with mercy.
Pope Pius XII was educated in the environs of the Vatican and his family was connected to the Holy See. He was part of a group that believed that anything could be achieved through diplomacy, and if a solution could not be found through diplomacy, then there was no solution. Roncalli, John XXIII, came from a humble family and a small village where people were taught how important it was for everyone to take care of one another through quick, practical solutions - the complete opposite of diplomacy. Therein perhaps lies the reason for the differences between the two popes.
Bergogglio John XXIII, until the moment of his death, continued being a rural peasant. On his death bed, his sister placed on his head cold cloths with vinegar, just like they did in the country.
Historical interpretation has to be understood from the hermeneutic of that time. As long as we use extrapolated hermeneutics, we distort history and become unable to understand it. If we do not study cultural contexts, we make outdated interpretations that are out of place; like what happens when we talk about the Crusades.
[hermeneutics = the branch of knowledge that deals with interpretation, especially of the Bible or literary texts]
“Little Susan” or Susanita is the most unsympathetic and judgmental character from Mafalda, one of the most popular comic strips in Argentina. Similar to Charlie Brown, most of the characters that surround Mafalda, who is the melancholic, though philosophical, protagonist, are children.
When one has a problem, only a mountain can be seen ahead and nothing else. Somebody has to say, “It would be better if you go over here, or try over there.” When I have a problem with someone, it helps me to have the same attitude that the Egyptian monks had at the beginning of Christianity. They accused themselves so they could find a solution; they put themselves in the defendant’s seat to see what things were not working well inside of themselves. I do it to observe how things are not working well inside of me. This attitude gives me freedom to, later, be able to forgive the fault of the other person. The mistake of the other person does not need to be emphasized too much because I have made my own mistakes and both of us have failures. The harmony between people is made by searching for ways; that is the manner to resolve animosities.
Skorka The truth can only be attained through humility.
Bergogglio The way of putting things in black and white is a sinful tendency that always conflicts over unity. Humility is what levels the paths for an encounter; favoring conflict only puts obstacles in the path, and the Spirit of God manifests itself in that leveling.
German Lutheran theologian, Oscar Cullman, proposes that we walk together in a reconciled diversity; he resolves the religious conflict of the many Christian denominations by walking together, by doing things together, by praying together. He asks that we not throw rocks at each other, but rather than we continue walking together. It is the way of advancing the resolution of a conflict with the virtues of all, without nullifying the diverse traditions or falling into syncretism. Each one, from their identity, in reconciliation, seeking the unity of truth.
syncretism = the amalgamation or attempted amalgamation of different religions, cultures, or schools of thought.
Skorka Man lives in conflict, wherein lies his greatness, and his possible downfall. There is a place in the Talmud that says that man has both angelic and animalistic traits. The angels are completely spiritual beings but they do not have free will as they simply comply with G-d’s commands. Man, on the other hand, does have free will, animal traits and spiritual traits. These characteristics are in constant conflict with each other.