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When Tolerance
is Intolerable
by Plinio Correa de Oliveira

Granting that in a given case, we may
be called to practice this difficult and dangerous virtue,
how should we do so? Tolerance
- even when necessary - bears
its own particular perils. What are these hazards and how
may we avoid them?
I shall present a brief theoretical consideration, followed
by a relevant historical example.
To tolerate an evil is to consent to its existence. Just as
good produces good, evil yields evil. When we are obliged
to tolerate something evil, we must limit the evil effects
of this tolerance to the greatest degree possible and diligently
prepare the conditions for eradicating the evil, rendering
further toleration unnecessary.
This principle is elementary in medicine. If, for clinical
reasons, a patient suffering from a malignant tumor cannot
be operated upon immediately, the physician's treatment consists
in retarding the tumor's ill effects in every way possible.
Not satisfied with this, he will diligently prepare the patient
for the eventual surgery. Even the most tolerant man would
not tolerate his doctor acting in any other way. I do not
understand why this clear, logical, and wise process
should not also be lauded when, instead of the danger of a
malignant tumor, we face the threat of a moral cancer such
as heresy.
Indeed, wherever error is introduced, we must remedy the situation
with the suave and deliberate clinical means of apologetics
and charity. Should these means fail, or when the evil spreads
so rapidly that it cannot be treated over time, or is so resistant
that no argument or act of charity will root it out, we must
resort to surgery. If this surgery cannot be performed
at once, we must resolutely combat the further infiltration
of the disease, while preparing for an auspicious day to operate.
By way of example, let us consider a religious association
into which an evil influence has entered, permeating it with
a spirit of worldliness, sensuality, and doctrinal relativism.
If the association is well disposed to resist the evil, it
is preferable not to expel the fallen member immediately in
order to afford him the opportunity to reform. Nonetheless,
throughout the treatment, the superior will have to be particularly
attentive regarding the infectious member, his associations,
his sphere of influence, and so on. He must - at the slightest
symptom - take every necessary measure to halt the contagion.
Above all, the fraternity's director should practice a constant
preventive medicine with the healthy members in order to inoculate
them against the deadly dangers of infection. In this way,
he will have practiced virtuous tolerance, for he will have
offered good to the bad without risking grave harm to the
good.
Virtuous tolerance requires much work, demands strict precautions,
and takes considerable time. Let us suppose that the fallen
member is a person of rare charm who immediately begins to
influence his confreres. Since it is far easier to influence
men towards evil than good, the superior sees that despite
his best efforts to the contrary, numerous members will soon
be entirely deformed. He now faces the following choice: to
permit the evil influence to remain within the bosom of the
association, risking the loss of once healthy members; or
to expel the carrier of contagion, who will likely be lost
in any case, thus saving the good and restoring the fraternity
to its former order, good spirit, and peace.
What is the director's duty? It can be but one. The well-being
of the innocent is worth more than that of the guilty. It
is necessary to expel the wolf in sheep's clothing as soon
as possible. Failing to take the necessary action to
protect the innocent, the superior will have betrayed his
duty and will have to render account to God for the lost souls
he could and should have saved.
Finally, let us suppose another situation. The evil individual
infiltrates the association and quickly begins to ensnare
his victims. In a short time, his success is such that if
he were expelled, even the best members would fail to understand.
His expulsion would precipitate a crisis that would dissolve
the fraternity, and its members, deprived of any protection,
would risk being lost themselves.
What should the director do? Evidently, effect a strategic
compromise, but only with understanding, intelligence, and
wisdom. The superior will have to employ every direct and
indirect means to improve the disposition of the black sheep
and, at the same time, to restrict his influence over the
rest of the flock. At the same time, he will have to prepare
the faithful members so that they may understand the urgent
need for the infiltrator's expulsion. As soon as they are
prepared, it is necessary to carry out the indispensable amputation.
Even then, virtuous tolerance will have been virtuously practiced,
for the society will have been saved, whereas rash action
would have destroyed it.
In contrast to these examples of virtuous tolerance, we should
mention some examples of defective tolerance.
Lacking firm principles and convictions, the superior of the
association is superficial, vain, impressionable, and timid.
When the evil individual enters the fraternity, the unprincipled
director perceives, to a degree, the seductiveness of the
attitudes and principles that the infiltrator deftly introduces.
As he is superficial, however, he is incapable of understanding
all that is implicit in the evil member's words and actions.
In his vanity, he deems himself the idol of his peers and
subordinates and thus cannot conceive the possibility of anyone
undermining his influence. Impressionable, he is perfectly
content as long as the association's members show him kindness
and render him homage. He shuns principles, doctrine, and
polemics as impediments to the sweet tranquility of his untroubled
life. Timid, he is afraid of every reaction. Were he
to take measures, he would be called intolerant within and
without his social circle.
Now that would be quite uncomfortable, for the intolerant
are never tolerated anywhere. We live in the age of tolerance.
Every opinion is permitted - except intolerance. Anyone who
would maintain that certain opinions are unacceptable would
make himself the object of persecution, antipathy, and sarcasm.
How could anyone expose himself to such ridicule?
Under the weight of so many pressures, the soft superior finds
it easier to be tolerant, closing his eyes to the problem
and permitting the evil to spread freely or, at least, imperceptibly.
When the association is completely undermined and a cataclysmic
crisis explodes, he submits with fatalism: "Such is life."
He may even embrace the evil to save his own position from
being overthrown.
This is how one makes a revolution from above, before those
below do so. Such tolerance could not be more wicked.
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