Tough times demand toughness
There's no doubt we are in for some tough, correction, tougher, much tougher times. The papers, the internet all talk about it. Even though we already are at Christmas' doorstep, the familiar feel and texture of Christmas are missing.
The government can only admit of some economic slowdown. But people and experts are talking about business contraction, recession, depression, etc. Whatever! Some tightening of belt and screws is urgently needed.
What I know is that in the technical school where I'm chaplain of, many partner companies for our students training on-the-job are downsizing and are suspending the taking in of our student-trainees.
Many students and their teachers have come to me asking for prayers. Good sign! Their faith and hope are still intact. The challenge is how to sustain and strengthen them.
I've heard stories of how investments of some local people to the tune, for example, of P10M have suddenly been reduced to P4M in value. Whoa! That's quite a fall.
Some of my economist-friends are giving me different scenarios of this economic crisis, showing me how macroeconomic factors are likely to play out.
Frankly, I prefer not to know a lot. It's one of my defense mechanisms against a choking feeling of helplessness. At my mind's back, though, I pray this could just another cycle. A rebound is going to happen at some point along the way.
Meanwhile, many people are getting depressed. I think most especially of those who barely are surviving with what they have been earning so far. And now this! It's truly heart-breaking when you start to picture them.
We have to go through these hard times by being tough ourselves. And we can use these times to raise a notch or two in our understanding of this virtue called toughness.
Tough times call for tough actions and for toughness itself. They test our mettle. They surface the kind of spirit we have, for in the end it's the spirit, more than anything else, that holds the key.
Like a reagent, tough times detect the range and scope, the breadth and depth of our ultimate anchor beliefs. That's the saving grace of these unwelcome times.
We have to understand that toughness is not just a matter of physical strength or intellectual superiority. Much less is it a question of wealth, power and fame.
Toughness has its roots, branches and fruits mainly in the spirit. And it's where our spirit takes root, where it's established and fixed that determines the quality and authenticity of our toughness, whether our toughness can really run the gauntlet.
If it's just based on things human and natural, then we are in for great trouble. But if it's founded on faith in God, then even the troubles become a source of strength.
St. Paul says so: "Strength is made perfect in weakness. Gladly therefore will I glory in my infirmities, that the strength of Christ may dwell in me. Wherefore I am satisfied with persecutions, with distresses. For when I am weak, then I am strong." (2 Cor 12,8-10)
We have to understand this reasoning of faith well. This is what truly corresponds to who and how we are. We are not just any creature, biological, social and intellectual. We are persons and children of God. We are mainly a spiritual being with a supernatural goal.
What is proper of us is to live in the life of God. That's what our spiritual faculties—our intellect and will—are for. We just don't depend on material nourishment. It's in our living union with God, through grace and our will, where we develop our true life and derive our toughness.
Such toughness combines both hard and soft qualities, enabling us to be strong without being rigid, energetic without being violent. It lets us to be patient and hopeful without being inactive. On the contrary, it allows us to be creative and flexible, resourceful and enterprising.
Such toughness distances us from the clutches of excessive worries and self-pity. It empowers us to find joy and peace even in the midst of suffering. It teaches us how to suffer with a smile, and how to wait productively. It breeds and keeps our determination.
Our emerging tough times demand such toughness.
(Fr. Cimagala is the Chaplain of Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE), Talamban, Cebu City. Email: roycimagala@hotmail.com)