The following is a blog post from Frater Richard Rohr, a Franciscan priest. Quote:
Most of us have grown up with a capitalist worldview, which makes a virtue and goal out of accumulation, consumption, and collecting. Normally
we cannot see this as an unsustainable and unhappy trap because all of
our rooms are decorated with this same color. It is the only obvious
story line that our children see. “I produce therefore I am” and “I
consume therefore I am” might be our answer to Descartes’ “I think
therefore I am.” They are all terribly mistaken.
This foundational way of seeing has blinded us, so that we now tend
to falsely assume more is better. The course we are on assures us of a
predictable future of strained individualism, severe competition as the
resources dwindle for a growing population, and surely perpetual war.
Our culture ingrains in us the belief that there isn’t enough to go
around. This determines much if not most of our politics. In the USA
there is never enough for health care, for education, for the arts, for
basic infrastructure. The only budget that is never questioned is for
war and armaments and military gadgets.
Anything you need more and more of is not working—as the people in
addiction recovery love to say. That’s exactly why we always need more
of it. The fact that we need more and more, and better and better—of almost everything except love—tells
us that we are in a finally unworkable situation. But there is an
alternative worldview, one that has been deemed necessary and important
by most spiritual masters. It isn’t a win/lose worldview where only a
few win and most lose. It’s a win/win worldview, which alone makes
community, justice, and peace possible.
E. F. Schumacher said years ago, “Small is beautiful,” and many other
wise people have come to know that less stuff invariably leaves room
for more soul. In fact, possessions and soul seem to operate in inverse
proportion to one another. Only through simplicity can we find deep
contentment instead of perpetually striving and living unsatisfied. Simple living
is the foundational social justice teaching of Jesus, Francis, Gandhi,
and all hermits, mystics, prophets, and seers since time immemorial. [1]
The Franciscan alternative orthodoxy asks us to let go, to recognize that there is enough to go around and meet everyone’s need but not everyone’s greed. A
worldview of enoughness will predictably emerge in a person as they
move to the level of naked being instead of thinking that more of
anything or more frenetic doing can fill up our basic restlessness.
Francis did not just tolerate or endure such simplicity, he actually
loved it and called it poverty—a word which we often view as a
bad thing. Francis dove into poverty and found his freedom there. This
is hard for most of us to even comprehend. Thank God, people like
Dorothy Day and Wendell Berry have illustrated how this is still
possible even in our modern world.
Francis was known in his lifetime as the joyful beggar. He
communicated happiness, freedom, humor, and joy to everyone around him.
Francis and his followers wore ropes for belts to indicate they had no
money (at the time, leather belts were used to carry money). Francis
wanted people to see that humans could be happy even without money. I
have met some poor people and some homeless people who prove to me that
this can still be true, although I don’t think we need to make it our
goal as Francis and Clare did. But we can indeed be happy in mutual
interdependence with nature, with the kindness of others, and with our
own hard work and creativity, while living in the natural rhythms of
life.
Francis knew that just climbing ladders to nowhere would never make
us happy nor create peace and justice on this earth. Too many have to
stay at the bottom of the ladder so I can be at the top. It is a zero
sum victory. I suspect simplicity and a worldview of enoughness will
forever be an alternative orthodoxy, if not downright heretical, in most
of the “developing” world.
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