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What
is Tolerance?
by Plinio Correa de Oliveira
When it comes to tolerance,
confusion reigns supreme. Everyone talks about it, but few
seem to know exactly what it is.
What, then, is tolerance? Imagine a
man with two sons, one with sound principles and a strong
will and the other with undecided principles and a vacillating
will. One day there passes by the town where the family lives
a professor who will present a holiday course that would be
of extraordinary use to both of them. The father wants his
sons to take the course, but sees that this will mean depriving
them of various outings that both are very fond of. Weighing
the pros and cons, he decides that it would be better for
his sons to forego their diversions, however legitimate, rather
than miss this rare opportunity for intellectual betterment.
The youths react to this decision in different ways. The first
son, after a moment of reluctance, accepts his father's wish.
The other complains and implores his father to change his
mind, showing such irritation that his father fears a serious
gesture of revolt.
In face of this, the man upholds his decision with his good
son. On the other hand, considering the difficulty his mediocre
son would have in following the academic routine and foreseeing
many occasions of dissension that would arise in their daily
relationships, he decides, for long-term safe guarding of
immutable moral principles, that it is better not to insist.
He relents, and this son does not have to take the course.
Acting thus with his mediocre and slothful son, the father
reluctantly gave his permission, but it was not in any way
an approval. It was an extorted permission. To avoid
an evil (friction with his son) he granted him a lesser
good (the holiday trips) and relinquished the greater good
(the course). It is this kind of consent, given without approval
and even with censure, that we call tolerance.
It is true that tolerance sometimes means accepting not a
lesser good to avoid an evil, but a lesser evil to avoid a
greater one. Such would be the case of a father who, having
a son who has acquired several grave vices that would be impossible
to overcome all at once, plans to combat them successively.
Thus, while trying to thwart one vice, he closes his eyes
to the others, acceding to them with profound disgust as a
way to avoid a greater evil, which would be to make the moral
correction of his son impossible. This is characteristically
seen as an attitude of tolerance.
As we have just seen, tolerance can only be practiced in abnormal
situations. If there were no bad children, for example,
there would be no need for tolerance on the part of parents.
The more that members of a family are forced to practice tolerance
among themselves, the more abnormal their situation would
be.
The reality of all this is more striking when considering
the case of a religious order or an army whose superiors must
habitually practice unlimited tolerance with their subordinates.
Such an army would be unlikely to win battles, and such an
order would not be heading toward the high and rugged summits
of Christian perfection.
In other words, tolerance can be a virtue. But it is a virtue
characteristic of abnormal, difficult, and dangerous situations.
We can say, then, that it is the daily cross of the fervent
Catholic in times of desolation, spiritual decadence, and
the ruin of Christian civilization.
For this reason, one understands how necessary it is in a
catastrophic century like ours. At every moment the Catholic
of our time encounters the prospect of tolerating something.
On the train or bus, on the streets, in the workplace, within
the homes he visits, in hotels where he vacations, he encounters
abuses at every instant that provoke an interior cry of indignation.
It is a cry that he is sometimes forced to restrain in order
to avoid a greater evil. It is a cry that in normal circumstances
would be a duty of honor and coherence.
In passing, it is curious to observe the contradiction into
which the adorers of this century fall. On the one hand, they
emphatically praise its qualities to the clouds and silence
or play down its defects. On the other hand, they do not cease
to apostrophize intolerant Catholics, calling for tolerance,
clamoring for tolerance, demanding tolerance in favor of this
century.
They do not tire of affirming that this tolerance should be
a constant, all-encompassing, and unlimited. It is hard to
understand how they cannot perceive their inconsistency. For,
if there is tolerance only in abnormality, then proclaiming
the necessity for more tolerance affirms the existence of
abnormality.
One way or another, the Greeks and Trojans concur in recognizing
that tolerance is acutely necessary in our epoch.
Given these conditions, then, it is easy to perceive how erroneous
is the current usage regarding tolerance. In fact, the word
is commonly used eulogistically. When someone says that
another is tolerant, the affirmation is accompanied by
a series of implicit or explicit complements: magnanimous,
big hearted, broadminded, generous, objective, naturally prone
to sympathy, cordiality, and benevolence. And, logically,
qualifying someone as intolerant brings with it a sequence
of more or less explicit reproaches: narrow-minded, bad-tempered,
malevolent; spontaneously inclined to suspicion, hatred, resentment
and vengeance.
In reality, nothing is further from the truth. If there are
cases in which tolerance is a good, there are others in which
it is not. And it can even be crime. Therefore, no one merits
praise for being systematically tolerant or intolerant, but
rather for being one or the other as circumstances demand.
The question, then, is somewhat different: It is not the case
to decide whether someone should be systematically tolerant
or intolerant. What matters is to decide when one ought to
be one or the other.
Before all else, it is appropriate to point out that there
is a situation in which the Catholic must always be intolerant,
that is, toward sin, to which there are no exceptions.
One cannot tolerate committing some sin in order to please
others or to avoid a greater evil. Since all sin is an offense
against God, it is absurd to imagine that in a certain situation
God can be virtuously offended.
This is so obvious that it may seem superfluous to state it,
but, in practice, how necessary it is to remember this principle.
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For example, no one has the right, in order to be tolerant
with friends and gain their sympathy, to dress immorally or
to adopt the licentious or frivolous manners of those who
lead disordered lives. Nor does anyone have the right to exhibit
rash, questionable, or even erroneous ideas, nor to boast
of vices that in reality - thanks be to God - they do not
have.
To give another example, a Catholic who is conscious of the
duties of fidelity entrusted to him by Scholasticism but who
professes another philosophy solely to win sympathy in certain
circles, practices an unacceptable form of tolerance. He sins
against the truth by professing a theory that he knows contains
errors, even if they are not against the Faith.
The obligation of intolerance, in cases such as these, goes
even further. It is not enough that we abstain from practicing
evil; it is necessary that we never approve of it, either
by action or omission.
The Catholic who takes a sympathetic attitude in face of sin
or error sins against the virtue of intolerance. This is what
happens when he witnesses, with an unreserved smile, an immoral
conversation or scene, or when in a discussion he admits a
right of others to embrace their own opinion about the Catholic
faith. This is not respect for the adversary but rather for
his errors or sins. This is to approve of evil, a point to
which no Catholic can go.
At times, however, one reaches that point thinking he has
not sinned against intolerance. Such is the case when silence,
in face of error or evil, gives an idea of tacit approval.
In all of these cases, tolerance is a sin, and virtue is found
only in intolerance.
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It is understandable that certain readers
will be irritated on reading these affirmations. The instinct
of sociability is natural in man, and it is this instinct
that allows us to socialize with others in an agreeable and
harmonious way.
Within the logic of our argumentation, the Catholic is obliged
in an ever-increasing number of circumstances to repeat before
the world the heroic "non possumus" of Pius IX:
We cannot imitate, we cannot agree, we cannot remain silent.
Consequently, an ambience of war, cold or hot, soon forms
around us, and the supporters of the errors and fashions of
our epoch persecute with implacable intolerance, in the name
of tolerance, all those who dare to disagree with them. A
curtain of fire, of ice, or simply of cellophane, surrounds
and isolates us. A veiled social excommunication puts us at
the fringe of modem ambiences. Men fear this almost as much
as, or even more than death itself.
We are not exaggerating. In order to have the right of citizenship
in such ambiences there are men who work themselves to death
from heart attacks and women who fast like ascetics of the
Thebaid to the point of seriously jeopardizing their health.
Now, to forfeit a "citizenship" of such "value,"
merely out of love of principles, one must dearly love those
principles.
And besides, there is laziness. In order to study a subject
in depth, to have the arguments entirely in hand for
any opportunity, to justify a position, how much effort...
how much laziness. Laziness in regard to speaking, to
discussing, is evident. Yet, even greater is the laziness
in regard to study, and, above all, the supreme laziness regarding
thinking with seriousness about something, mastering
something, identifying oneself with an idea, a principle!
How far removed from the subtle, imperceptible, manifold laziness
regarding being serious, thinking seriously, and living seriously
is the inflexible, heroic, and imperturbable intolerance that
on certain occasions and in certain matters - perhaps it would
be better to say on so many occasions and in so many matters
- is the duty of the true Catholic, today as always.
Laziness is the sister of indifference. Many will ask, why
so much effort, so much combat, so much sacrifice if our attitude
isolates us and the others do not improve? Strange objection!
As if we should practice the commandments only so others will
also practice them and are dispensed from doing so if
the others do not imitate us.
We witness before men our love of good and hatred of evil
in order to give glory to God. Even if the entire world disapproves,
we must continue doing so. The fact that the others do not
accompany us does not diminish the right that God has to our
complete obedience.
However, these are not the only reasons for disdaining intolerance.
There is also opportunism. To be in concert with the dominant
tendencies is something that opens all the doors and facilitates
all careers. Prestige, comfort, money, everything, but
everything, becomes easier and more obtainable if one accepts
the prevailing influence.
From this perspective, one sees how costly is the duty of
intolerance. This gives us the point of departure for the
next article where we intend to examine the limits of intransigence
and the thousand sophisms that surround it.
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