Vengeance seems to be a very natural feeling that we can understand  but as Christians hope to avoid.  Writing on the  opinion page of the   Catholic Times a columnist, though not a great fan of TV soap operas,  does admit to watching a Chinese soap opera that deals with revenge in  the Chinese  kingdoms of  the 5th century before Christ.
One of the kingdoms was made to  surrender to another under with very humiliating conditions; the  desire for revenge on the part of the defeated kingdom is the story line.
The  columnist explains to us what he feels got him hooked on watching the  series. He looks upon our life as having two aspects, the real and the  imaginary. In watching a drama, we see the reality of the drama played  out in our own life and also in the world of our  imagination. Sometimes  there is harmony between them, and sometimes we have to struggle with  them and play around with them in our heads.
This situation is  called by some as receiving vicarious satisfaction from what we  experience: a form of compensation. The columnist is not too happy  with this way of describing what is happening. Can we receive  satisfaction vicariously? he wonders. He would prefer using the word  from Aristotle: cathartic. When we can identify with  some   tragic experience of our hero, there is a cleansing and a purification  of our inner world that gives us a sense of freshness and relief.
How  is it, he asks, that something tragic can cleanse our spirit and  elevate us to another sphere of beauty? He admits that this is not  readily answerable.
Getting back to the soap opera story: when  one kingdom overcame the other, the victors took all the vanquished,  along with  the queen and all the retainers, and made them slaves. Our  columnist surmises there  would be few who would not be in sympathy with  the losers and view the victors with indignation and antipathy.
The victors, vain, proud and cruel in their victory; the vanquished, pitiful in  their plight. He has little doubt where his readers would stand. Aren't the  just often the losers--the ones most of us would find sympathetic and attractive?  We have a lot to learn, he says, from the patient suffering of the losers.
Jesus  has asked us to love our enemies. We try to return love for hate; to  desire revenge is prohibited. However, when watching the serial drama,  the columnist did not find it strange to want to see justice done. It is  precisely this desire to see the proud victorious king subdued, getting  his recompense, which keeps our columnist coming back to the TV.
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