Francis 4 Principles: UNITY PREVAILS OVER CONFLICT
226. Conflict cannot be ignored or concealed. It has
to be faced.
But if we remain trapped in conflict, we lose our perspective, our
horizons shrink and reality itself begins to fall apart. In the midst of
conflict, we lose our sense of the profound unity of reality.
227. When conflict arises, some people simply look
at it and go their way as if nothing happened; they wash their hands of it and
get on with their lives. Others embrace it in such a way that they become its
prisoners; they lose their bearings, project onto institutions their own
confusion and dissatisfaction and thus make unity impossible.
But there is also
a third way, and it is the best way to deal with conflict. It is the
willingness to face conflict head on, to resolve it and to make it a link in
the chain of a new process. “Blessed are the peacemakers!” (Mt 5:9).
228. In this way it becomes possible to build
communion amid disagreement, but this can only be achieved by those great
persons who are willing to go beyond the surface of the conflict and to see
others in their deepest dignity.
This requires acknowledging a principle
indispensable to the building of friendship in society: namely, that unity is
greater than conflict. Solidarity, in its deepest and most challenging sense,
thus becomes a way of making history in a life setting where conflicts,
tensions and oppositions can achieve a diversified and life-giving unity.
This
is not to opt for a kind of syncretism, or for the absorption of one into the
other, but rather for a resolution which takes place on higher plane and
preserves what is valid and useful on both sides.
229. This principle, drawn from the Gospel, reminds
us that Christ has made all things one in himself: heaven and earth, God and
man, time and eternity, flesh and spirit, person and society.
The sign of this
unity and reconciliation of all things in him is peace. Christ “is our peace”
(Eph 2:14). The Gospel message always begins with a greeting of peace, and
peace at all times crowns and confirms the relations between the disciples.
Peace is possible because the Lord has overcome the world and its constant
conflict “by making peace through the blood of his cross” (Col 1:20). But if we
look more closely at these biblical texts, we find that the locus of this
reconciliation of differences is within ourselves, in our own lives, ever
threatened as they are by fragmentation and breakdown.[183] If hearts are
shattered in thousands of pieces, it is not easy to create authentic peace in
society.
230. The message of peace is not about a negotiated
settlement but rather the conviction that the unity brought by the Spirit can
harmonize every diversity. It overcomes every conflict by creating a new and
promising synthesis.
Diversity is a beautiful thing when it can constantly
enter into a process of reconciliation and seal a sort of cultural covenant
resulting in a “reconciled diversity”. As the bishops of the Congo have put it:
“Our ethnic diversity is our wealth… It is only in unity, through conversion of
hearts and reconciliation, that we will be able to help our country to develop
on all levels”.[184]