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UNIT III.

CALLED TO THE FULLNESS OF LIFE LESSON A: • By virtue of baptism, as adopted sons and daughters
GENUINE FREEDOM: THE PURSUIT OF THE GOOD of God, man’s body becomes the temple of the Holy
Spirit.
Man’s Freedom
God created man a rational being, conferring on him • God’s presence in man makes him/her holy, sacred
the dignity of a person who can initiate and control his Authentic Freedom
own actions. - CCC 1730 It is not the right to say and do anything but to do good.
“Man is rational and therefore like God: he is created It is not my own individual private possession, but a
with free will and is master over his acts.” - St Irenaeus shared freedom with others in community. It is not
found in prejudice, deceit, or ignorance but in truth.
Freedom is the power rooted in reason and will, to act - CCC 1740
or not to act, to do this or that, and so to perform
deliberate actions on one’s own responsibility. ASPECTS OF AUTHENTIC FREEDOM
Human freedom is a force for growth and maturity in FREEDOM FROM
truth and goodness; it attains its perfection when Freedom from everything that opposes our true self
directed toward God, our beatitude. - CCC 1731 becoming with others in community such as interior
obstacles like ignorance, disordered passions, bad
1. Freedom as Expression of Dignity: God’s Image and habits, prejudices or psychological disturbances and
Likeness in Man exterior forces such as violent force or violence.
Freedom is anchored on man’s dignity, being made in
the image and likeness of God Freedom towards the SOURCES OF IMPEDIMENTS TO FREEDOM
good can only be achieved and perfected in God while Biological
being totally aware of the call to be always faithful to Include inherited handicaps and defects as well as
one’s dignity external substances like drugs
True (Authentic) freedom is a freedom only for the Psychological
good. Interior compulsions, including those originating from
the unconscious
- Human person as the perfect and the crowning glory
Social Pressures
of God’s creation must participate in Gods creative
Such as the many economic, political, and cultural
works which are good.
obstacles which impede the right to freedom. All these
- Thus, man is always expected to choose the good in all factors diminish our freedom and thus moral
his/her undertakings. imputability and responsibility
Genuine freedom must be given emphasis in order to Sin
straighten man’s path toward the awareness of one’s The greatest single obstacle to authentic freedom.
fidelity to the dignity which was lost to sin. Liberation to true freedom means first and foremost
As man strives to become ‘like-God’, he/she is called to liberation from the radical slavery of sin. Instruction on
always be reminded that the more we become like Christian Freedom and Liberation 23
God, the more we become human, and the more we FREEDOM FOR
become humans, the more we should be like God. Freedom for growing as full persons and children of
Ex: St. Mother Teresa has become an icon of holiness God, sharing in the life of Christ our Liberator through
because she exercised the genuine freedom that his Spirit. It is the freedom found in authentic love.
Christians are all called to do: the works of God Individually, this would consist of the freedom of choice
and fundamental freedom
2. Dignity and Freedom: The Fulfillment and Freedom of Choice
Manifestation of God’s Presence in Man It is the freedom by which I direct my moral acts. One
has the freedom to choose to act in this way or that
• Man’s life is from God and God alone has the sole way, to do good or evil. But by consistently choosing to
right to take it away. do the good, we gradually become free loving persons.
- Veritatis Splendor 65-68
• Washing man’s inequities through the blood of Christ
makes man acceptable before God.
Fundamental Freedom head towards freedom. But this is only the beginning of
By gradually becoming free-loving persons striving to freedom, not perfect freedom..." VS, 13
overcome the obstacles from within and without, we
gradually grow towards authentic, mature fundamental 3. FREEDOM AND LAW
freedom. Thus, freedom for is both a process and a "Of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall
task. not eat" (Gen 2:17)
In the Book of Genesis, we read: "The Lord God
= Now freedom enters here when man treats the other
commanded the man, saying, 'You may eat freely of
with outmost respect and high regard for the presence
every tree of the garden; but of the tree of the
of God in each person.
knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the
= It is by virtue of our dignity that we are equal before day that you eat of it you shall die' " (Gen 2:16-17). VS,
the eyes of God. 35.
= Creation happened because of the unconditional,
a. The Imagery of Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil:
undying and unending love of God.
• Revelation teaches that the power to decide what is
= Man’s response to that overflowing love is good and what is evil does not belong to man, but to
faithfulness. God alone.
= Cognition of one’s and other’s dignity must be the • Man is certainly free, in as much as he can understand
basis of a person’s genuine exercise of genuine and accept God's commands. And he possesses an
freedom. extremely far-reaching freedom, since he can eat "of
As man navigates the ins and outs of genuine freedom, every tree of the garden".
ideally, the good must always take precedence. • But his freedom is not unlimited: it must halt before
the "tree of the knowledge of good and evil", for it is
The responsibility in exercising freedom entails that a called to accept the moral law given by God. In fact,
person must always bear consciously and human freedom finds its authentic and complete
unconsciously that he/she is the only one answerable fulfilment precisely in the acceptance of that law.
and accountable for all the actions he/she committed.
• God, who alone is good, knows perfectly what is good
• The intrinsic goodness of man is exercised through for man, and by virtue of his very love proposes this
the aid his/her freewill and intellect. good to man in the commandments. VS, 35

• The election toward the good is only achieved if the • God's law does not reduce, much less do away with
human freedom; rather, it protects and promotes that
person is definitively bound to God and is totally aware
freedom.
of the call to be always faithful to one’s dignity.
• In contrast, however, some present-day cultural
• Through this, man is able to perfect himself/herself tendencies have given rise to several currents of
and is capable of arriving at the promised salvation of thought in ethics which center upon an alleged conflict
Christ between freedom and law.
• Freedom is our ability to be faithful to our dignity. • These doctrines would grant to individuals or social
groups the right to determine what is good or evil.
• Doing God-like actions: loving, showing mercy,
• Human freedom would thus be able to "create
extending compassion, forgiving, etc.
values" and would enjoy a primacy over truth, to the
• Therefore, freedom is the ability to choose the good. point that truth itself would be considered a creation of
• “The more we choose the good, the freer we freedom.
become.” • Freedom would thus lay claim to a moral autonomy
which would actually amount to an absolute
The beginning of freedom, Saint Augustine writes, is:
sovereignty. VS, 35
”To be free from crimes...such as murder, adultery,
fornication, theft, fraud, sacrilege and so forth. When • In response to the encouragement of the Second
once one is without these crimes (and every Christian Vatican Council, there has been a desire to foster
should be without them), one begins to lift up one's dialogue with modern culture, emphasizing the rational,
and thus universally understandable and
communicable, character of moral norms belonging to • Not only the world, however, but also man himself
the sphere of the natural moral law. VS, 36 has been entrusted to his own care and responsibility.
God left man "in the power of his own counsel" (Sir
• Some people, however, disregarding the dependence
15:14), that he might seek his Creator and freely attain
of human reason on Divine Wisdom and the need,
perfection.
given the present state of fallen nature, for Divine
Revelation as an effective means for knowing moral • Attaining such perfection means personally building
truths, even those of the natural order, have actually up that perfection in himself. Indeed, just as man in
posited a complete sovereignty of reason in the domain exercising his dominion over the world shapes it in
of moral norms regarding the right ordering of life in
accordance with his own intelligence and will, so too in
this world.
performing morally good acts, man strengthens,
Such norms would constitute the boundaries for a develops and consolidates within himself his likeness to
merely "human" morality; they would be the expression God. VS, 39
of a law which man in an autonomous manner lays
down for himself and which has its source exclusively in At the heart of the moral life, we thus find the principle
human reason. of a "rightful autonomy" of man, the personal subject of
his actions.
In no way could God be considered the Author of this
law, except in the sense that human reason exercises its The moral law has its origin in God and always finds its
autonomy in setting down laws by virtue of a primordial source in him: at the same time, by virtue of natural
and total mandate given to man by God. reason, which derives from divine wisdom, it is a
These trends of thought have led to a denial, in properly human law. VS, 40.
opposition to Sacred Scripture (cf. Mt 15:3-6) and the The rightful autonomy of the practical reason means
Church's constant teaching, of the fact that the natural
that man possesses in himself his own law, received
moral law has God as its author, and that man, by the
from the Creator. Nevertheless, the autonomy of
use of reason, participates in the eternal law, which it is
not for him to establish. reason cannot mean that reason itself creates values
and moral norms.
b. God left man in the power of his own counsel" (Sir Were this autonomy to imply a denial of the
15:14) participation of the practical reason in the wisdom of
Second Vatican Council explains the meaning of that the divine Creator and Lawgiver, or were it to suggest a
"genuine freedom" which is "an outstanding freedom which creates moral norms, on the basis of
manifestation of the divine image" in man: historical contingencies or the diversity of societies and
cultures, this sort of alleged autonomy would contradict
"God willed to leave man in the power of his own the Church's teaching on the truth about man.
counsel, so that he would seek his Creator of his own
accord and would freely arrive at full and blessed It would be the death of true freedom: "But of the tree
perfection by cleaving to God". VS, 38 of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for
in the day that you eat of it you shall die" (Gen 2:17)
The exercise of dominion over the world represents a
great and responsible task for man, one which involves Man's genuine moral autonomy in no way means the
his freedom in obedience to the Creator's command: rejection but rather the acceptance of the moral law, of
"Fill the earth and subdue it" (Gen 1:28). God's command: "The Lord God gave this command to
the man..." (Gen 2:16).
In view of this, a rightful autonomy is due to every man,
as well as to the human community. This is the Human freedom and God's law meet and are called to
autonomy of earthly realities, which means that intersect, in the sense of man's free obedience to God
"created things have their own laws and values which and of God's completely gratuitous benevolence
are to be gradually discovered, utilized and ordered by towards man.
man". Hence obedience to God is not, as some would believe,
a heteronomy, as if the moral life were subject to the
will of something all-powerful, absolute, extraneous to LESSON A: LAW: ABIDING IN TRUTH (AQUINAS)
man and intolerant of his freedom. VS, 41
1. SENSE OF LAW
By forbidding man to "eat of the tree of the knowledge Law is not limited to:
of good and evil", God makes it clear that man does not • A legislative or judicial domain
originally possess such "knowledge" as something • Commands, obligations, moral imperatives
properly his own, but only participates in it by the light • Controlling what other people are free to do.
of natural reason and of Divine Revelation, which Law is a teacher
manifest to him the requirements and the promptings = It is about a rational or reasonable principle of order
of eternal wisdom. by which things are directed to their ends. In this way,
law is a teacher.
Human Freedom
Law is a Ruler
The more one does what is good, the freer one
= A measure of human acts
becomes. There is no true freedom except in the service
= A guide in drawing straight lines.
of what is good and just. The choice to disobey and do
➢ The straightness and length of the rule is also the
evil is an abuse of freedom and leads to the “slavery of measure of the line you’ve drawn.
sin”. – CCC 1733
➢ The law guides us in our actions to make sure that
Man’s freedom is limited and fallible…by refusing God’s they are upright and ordered to the common good.
plan of love, he deceived himself and became a slave to ➢ It also gives us a way to judge our actions. It
sin. – CCC 1739 measures them, whether we have conformed our
actions to the standard of the law.
“By deviating from the moral law man violates his own
freedom, becomes imprisoned within himself, disrupts 2. DEFINITION OF LAW
neighborly fellowship, and rebels against divine truth.” –
Aquinas’ Definition of Law
CCC 1740
An ordination of reason for the common good from him
“I am the way, the truth and the life.” - (John 14:6) who has care of the community, which is promulgated
or made known. (ST lallae, Q, 90, a.4)
“And the truth shall set you free…” - (John 8:32)
LAW- is an ordinance of reason for the common good,
“For freedom Christ has set us free.” - (Gal. 5:1) made by him who has care of the community, and
promulgated.
Two Elements:
• Law is an ordination of reason
➢ law involves some kind of ordering and specifically
an ordering according to reason.
➢ Law is not a command of the will of the superior.
➢ Law is an expression of his (superior) reason
consisting in a kind of reasoned plan or ordering of
things towards the common good.

• Law is an Ordering to the Common Good


➢ Common good is the end that law aims at and serves.
➢ Common good is a good of radically different kind
because it is an end and it can be shared by many
without loss or diminishment, (truth, justice). Goods
that can be shared by many, it is higher and nobler.
➢ It is not a private property of none of them and yet it
is genuinely good for each of them because it is a
common good.
➢ The common good is the explanation of why a law Natural Law
exists and what it is doing. - rational creature’s participation in the eternal law.
✓ law is an ordering based on reason for the sake of ➢ The way that rational creatures, like human beings,
and directing the community towards the common participate in God’s plan, i.e., in the eternal law.
good.
✓ Common good can be found in the right ordering to ➢ Unlike lower creatures, we human beings are not
God as the common good and final end of all that is. only moved to our end from the outside, but we use our
reason, minds, to actively participate in directing
LAW is for the common good of the society, not just for ourselves, ordering ourselves, and ordering and
the good of the individual directing others towards their ultimate end and we do
Law is a rule of reason, made and promulgated by one this insofar as we understand what kind of beings we
who has charge of the community or society. are and what is really good for us and so act accordingly
*Philosophy of Law (CHRISTIAN VISION OF THE HUMAN
PERSON – THY1) ➢ This eternal law, this plan of God is implanted in
- aims to make men and society good. It directs men rational creatures in a special way, Aquinas calls this the
through reason and virtue to their true end in life. It natural law.
aims at what is good for the people. Law makes us
good! ➢ Thus, we are capable of understanding the world
around us, grasping with our minds, what is good for us
3. TYPES OF LAW to do and moving ourselves to do it according to this
= These are arranged as a hierarchy where the lower rational desire called, will.
law types of law participate in and make more specific
the higher types. Human beings have a higher participation in God’s
providential plan than other creatures do because we
Four Types of Law can understand it and become willing agents in bringing
Eternal Law it to completion for ourselves, for others, and for our
- order of creation as it preexists in the divine mind.
communities.
➢ Ultimately, that creation would reflect and share in
➢ Endowed with the power of reason means that we
the glory and splendor of God.
are not simply moved by brute force or instinct. The
➢ Aquinas begins with the Highest possible level: God precepts of the natural law follow the order of our
himself, who not only is the creator of the universe but natural inclination.
also its end, the source of its order, and who governs it
➢ This means that as we understand the inclinations of
by his providential plan.
our spiritual nature, we come to grasp what God made
➢ This plan of order emerges from God’s divine reason a human being to be and what human life is ordered to.
as an idea in God’s mind and like God himself this plan And so, we come to know what a human being ought to
is eternal. Thus, eternal law do and avoid.

➢ Eternal law is not only in God’s mind but is in the Five Principles of Natural Inclinations:
• To good (to what perfects us)
things that God makes.
• To self-preservation
➢ Because God has created all things according to a • To sexual union
plan as coming from him and ordered back to him, he • To knowing the truth
imprints on their very being, in their very nature an • To Living in society (justice, truth, fairness towards
others)
inclination for creatures towards their proper acts and
ends. So, they will tend to their perfection and
➢ These inclinations are features of the kind of beings
fulfillment precisely as the kinds of things they are
that we are.
according to the nature God has given them.
➢ They give us a fundamental orientation towards
what will make us increasingly happy and increasingly
free.
➢ Natural law does not impose on us, it is rather the the triune God completely exceeds what our nature is
very design of our being. As we come to know this with capable of by its own power
our minds, we are able to participate intentionally and
Human Law
freely in this plan. Application or determination of the natural law on
➢ We order ourselves, our actions according to this various levels in particular community.
plan by the use of our freedom. This is the purpose of ➢ Also, an ordination of reason for the common good,
our freedom, that we be the creatures that order in this case the common good of a nation, of the state,
ourselves freely and knowingly to God according to his of the city.
plan. ➢ More particular and specific than the natural law.
➢ It does not apply everywhere like the natural law
Properties of the Natural Law does but only in this jurisdiction and it aims to direct
• Universal. Binds all men at all times and in all places, this particular community and its members to their
proper common good.
for it is the very nature of men.

• Indispensable. Man has no authority over natural law. Church Laws the Six Commandments of the Church
God is the source of natural law. • To hear mass on Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation.
• To fast and abstain on the days appointed.
• Immutable and Dynamic. Exists for as long as human • To confess at least once a year.
nature exists. Changes in the condition of man results in • To receive the Holy Eucharist during Easter Time.
modified or new demands of the Natural Law. • To contribute to the support of the Church.
• To never violate laws concerning marriage.
Relation between Human Law and Natural Law

• Human law is only just in accord with the natural law Traditional Norms: Law
CLASSIFICATIONS OF LAW
and that laws that conflict with the natural law are not
- Origin- Divine and Human
morally binding.
= Divine when the law comes directly from God
✓ The natural law is most clear with respect to certain = Human when God delegates law-making to men by
general and negative precepts, e.g., decalogue: theft, virtue of their responsibilities and positions in society.
= Civil when they refer to secular society and
murder, adultery…these are wrong always and
= Ecclesiastical when they refer to the Church.
everywhere because they are contrary to what the
natural law teaches us is the good for human beings, - Duration- Eternal and Temporal
e.g., self-preservation, sexual union, and the raising of = Eternal is that objective and universal law whereby
children God orders, directs and governs the whole world and
the ways of the human community according to the
✓ The important job of lawmakers is to specify and plan of wisdom and love. This law has no end and co-
apply the general precepts of the natural law in a exists with God.
particular context and for a particular community. = Temporal are laws subject to time and therefore can
be changed, abrogated, amended or superseded by
✓ Then, always respecting what the natural law other laws. Human laws are temporal laws.
demands in its negative precepts, human lawmakers
- Manner of Promulgation -Positive and Natural
should make laws that order their communities towards = Positive when the laws are directly promulgated
its common good. whether human or divine.
Divine Positive Law = Natural when they are indirectly promulgated or is
found in the nature of creation. It is the law that guides
What God has revealed through divine revelation in the creatures towards their end.
OT and NT about how human beings should live in order • Natural law applied to irrational creatures is called
to come to the supernatural good of heaven physical law or law of nature while the moral law or
natural law guides rational creatures.
➢ These are things that we could not have discovered • Natural Law is the participation of the eternal law in
on our own since knowing and travelling on the way to rational creatures.
- Effect- Moral, Penal and Mixed Hierarchy of Laws
PRESCRIPTIONS
= Penal when the transgression of the law entails a
punishment.
= Moral when the transgression of the law entails sin or
a fault.
= Mixed when the transgression of the law entails both
a sin and a punishment.

THREE LAWS THAT MAKE US GOOD


• DIVINE LAW OF GOD
• NATURAL LAW OF BEINGS
• HUMAN LAW OF SOCIETY

The DIVINE LAW is the eternal law of GOD. It is a divine


wisdom that directs all our acts and movements in life.
- the Law of Yahweh - works for the good of all
mankind. It brings them to heaven in holiness.
“Good men follow God’s Divine law and bad men As a matter of principle, where there is a conflict
disobey it.” between a lower law and a higher law, the higher law
must prevail over the lower law.
THE NATURAL LAW It is the human awareness of the Ex. The President cannot issue an Executive Order that
Divine Law. It consists in recognizing the requirements is contrary to the provisions of the Constitution, being
of doing good and avoiding evil. Natural Law is the highest law of the land. Otherwise, people can
sometimes referred to as Law of Morality. question its constitutionality before the Supreme Court,
which then decides whether in fact, it is constitutional
The HUMAN LAW Human Laws are community laws. or not.
These are the laws of our society, of our government
and of our community Thus, where the Civil (State) Law contradicts the Moral
- It is a reflection of both the Divine Law and the Natural Law, a Christian must in good conscience obey the
Law. moral law which is higher and universal over the civil
law which is local and limited.
Human Law and Civil Law should be virtuous, just,
according to the customs of a country, suitable in place ETERNAL LAW > NATURAL LAW > MORAL LAW:
and time, necessary for what is good, useful, clearly -ECCLESIASTICAL LAW or -CIVIL LAW
expressed, framed for no private benefits, but for the
common good of all the people.

CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD HUMAN LAW


• Reasonable
• Honest
• Useful
• Relatively permanent
• Duly promulgated

Much as we dislike civil laws, they are essential for


existence. The good civil laws are reflections of God’s
Laws and good human morality.

We cannot live without civil laws but neither can we live


with them unless they are good laws. Civil law must be
aimed at holiness, morality and the good of all people.
acceptance of the personal tasks entrusted to him by
CONSCIENCE God.”
Man’s Sanctuary
The relationship between man's freedom and God's law Conscience, broken down into its root terms, means
is most deeply lived out in the "heart" of the person, in “with knowledge” (conscientia).
his moral conscience. • Conscience is not a mere feeling, and still less is it a
Vatican II observed: private preference
In the depths of his conscience man detects a law which • Conscience is a power for knowing right from wrong in
he does not impose on himself, but which holds him to particular circumstances. It works through sound rules
obedience. Always summoning him to love good and and reasoning.
avoid evil, the voice of conscience can, when necessary,
speak to his heart more specifically: 'do this, shun that'. Conscience cannot come to us from the rulings of
For man has in his heart a law written by God. To obey it society; otherwise, it would never reprove us when
is the very dignity of man; according to it he will be society approves us, nor console us when society
judged (cf. Rom 2:14-16)" VS, 54 condemns.” – Cardinal Fulton Sheen

Moral conscience, present at the heart of the person, Functions of conscience


enjoins him at the appropriate moment to do good and Conscience gives us three things:
to avoid evil. ▪ an awareness of good and evil
▪ a desire for good and aversion to evil
It judges particular choices, approving those that are ▪ a feeling of joy and peace and rightness at having done
good and denouncing those that are evil. It bears good, and of unease and guilt at having done evil
witness to the authority of truth in reference to the
supreme Good to which the human person is drawn, These three functions of conscience work in the three
and it welcomes the commandments. parts of the soul:
❖ the mind, or intellect, or reason (an awareness of
When he listens to his conscience, the prudent man can good and evil)
hear God speaking. CCC, 1777
❖ the will (a desire for good and aversion to evil)
❖ the emotions, or feelings (a feeling of joy and peace
= is a judgment of reason whereby the human person
and rightness at having done good, and of unease and
recognizes the moral quality of a concrete act that he is
guilt at having done evil)
going to perform, is in the process of performing, or has
already completed. (CCC, 1778)
Some common errors:
= A judgment of the practical reason on the morality of
1) Conscience is just a feeling. It is first of all a knowing,
a concrete action commanding to do what is good and
an awareness of the truth about good and evil.
to avoid what is evil.
2.) Conscience is not infallible. It can err, like anything in
= “It is the most secret core and sanctuary of man. There
us. It can mistake what is evil for good, or good for evil.
he is alone with God, whose voice echoes in his depths.”
Therefore, one of the first things consciences obligates
(GS 16)
us to do is to educate and inform our conscience
“Conscience summons us to love good and avoid
evil…for in our heart is a law written by God. To obey “A human being must always obey the certain judgment
this law is the very dignity of man.” of his conscience. If he were deliberately to act against
it, he would condemn himself” (C 1790).
In all he says and does, man is obliged to follow
❖ Ignorance resulting in errors of conscience may be
faithfully what he knows to be just and right. It is by the
either vincible ignorance or invincible ignorance.
judgment of his conscience that man perceives and
recognizes the prescriptions of the divine law. CCC, ❖ Conscience is not merely negative but positive.
1778
3.) Conscience is not a passive “given,” but can be
” The sanctuary of man, where he is alone with God trained.
whose voice echoes within him". This voice, it is said, An indispensable exercise is honest listening to the
leads man not so much to a meticulous observance of Word of God. “It is important for every person to be
universal norms as to a creative and responsible sufficiently present to himself in order to hear and
follow the voice of his conscience” (C 1779).
Conscience, as the judgment of an act, is not exempt Reflex Principles
from the possibility of error. VS, 62. Rules of prudence which do not solve a doubt
• As the Council puts it, "not infrequently conscience concerning the existence of a law, moral principle or
can be mistaken as a result of invincible ignorance, fact by intrinsic or extrinsic evidence, but only indicate
although it does not on that account forfeit its dignity; where, in cases of unsolvable doubt, the greater right is
• but this cannot be said when a man shows little usually to be found and the lesser evil to be feared.
concern for seeking what is true and good, and
conscience gradually becomes almost blind from being • In doubt, the condition of the possessor is the better.
accustomed to sin". • In doubt, favor the accused.
• In these brief words the Council sums up the doctrine • Crime is not presumed, it is proven.
which the Church down the centuries has developed • In doubt, presumption stands on the side of the
with regard to the erroneous conscience. superior.
• In doubt, stand for the validity of an act.
DIVISIONS OF CONSCIENCE • In doubt, amplify the favorable, restrict the
- Right or erroneous unfavorable.
RIGHT
• In doubt, presumption stands for the usual and the
It is when conscience is in conformity with reality. It is
ordinary.
an agreement with the objective norms of morality.
• A dubious law does not bind.
ERRONEOUS
PERPLEXED
They can either be:
A type of conscience that is confronted with two
• Lax conscience
alternatives and fears sin in whatever choice it takes.
on insufficient grounds is inclined to judge a thing lawful
when it is not; something light when it is grave. One must postpone first the action in order to obtain
information and deliberate on it. But, if the decision
- Certain, doubtful or perplexed cannot be postponed, one must choose what appears
CERTAIN to be the lesser evil or – if this is impossible to settle –
It is when conscience passes judgment without any fear either of the alternatives.
of error. For moral certainty it suffices that all
reasonable fear be excluded. - Lax or scrupulous
A certain conscience must always be obeyed when it • Scrupulous conscience
commands or forbids. It may always be followed when due to:
it permits something. Conscience is that appropriate • Temporary crises in life
faculty of man which tells him his moral duties. • Obsessive-compulsive
Consists in disturbance and inhibition of psychic
DOUBTFUL development, resulting from a person’s inability to
If conscience is in a state of uncertainty as to the integrate certain basic drives and values of life into the
lawfulness of an action, whether it suspends its structure of his personality obstructed by unconscious
judgment or whether it inclines to one side but with factors built up in early childhood.
the fear that the contrary might be equally true.
Such scrupulosity is caused by the unilateral and
In practical doubt about the lawfulness of an action one inconsistent moral and spiritual education, the
may never act. The action must be postponed until infantile past (over perfectionistic, too demanding,
certainty can be reached. sternly rigid parents) and the rigorism of educators.

Practical certainty can be gained by: DEVELOPMENT OF CONSCIENCE


- Directly Solving the doubt through reflection on the = Everyone is obliged to use serious diligence to possess
case in the light of general principles, through in all occasions a true conscience. The proper cultivation
consultation with experts, books, etc. of the integrity of conscience includes:
- Indirectly Through reflex principles. = Awareness of the Spirit
= Careful knowledge of the norms
= Removal of obstacles of sin
In the formation of conscience, the Christian ought to light the truths which it ought already to possess,
attend carefully to the sacred and certain doctrine of the developing them from the starting point of the
Church. ( Dignitates Humanae, 14) primordial act of faith.

Formation of Conscience The Church puts herself always and only at the service
We are called to form our conscience, to make it the of conscience, helping it to avoid being tossed to and
object of a continuous conversion to what is true and to for by every wind of doctrine proposed by human deceit
what is good. (cf. Eph 4:14), and helping it not to swerve from the
truth about the good of man, but rather, especially in
Saint Paul exhorts us not to be conformed to the more difficult questions, to attain the truth with
mentality of this world, but to be transformed by the certainty and to abide in it.
renewal of our mind (cf. Rom 12:2). It is the "heart"
converted to the Lord and to the love of what is good “In the formation of conscience, the Word of God is the
which is really the source of true judgments of light for our path; we must assimilate it in faith and
conscience prayer and put it into practice”

Indeed, in order to "prove what is the will of God, what The two most important keys to hearing it are these:
is good and acceptable and perfect" (Rom 12:2), • We must honestly and passionately will to hear it, to
knowledge of God's law in general is certainly know the truth.
necessary, but it is not sufficient: • We must be alone with ourselves and God to hear this
gentle voice.
What is essential is a sort of "connaturality" between
man and the true good. Such a connaturality is rooted It can easily be drowned out by external noise. “This
in and develops through the virtuous attitudes of the requirement of interiority [an inner life] is all the more
individual himself: necessary as life often distracts us from any reflection,
self-examination or introspection” (C 1779), especially in
Prudence and the other cardinal virtues, and even our complex modern society
before these the theological virtues of faith, hope and
charity. This is the meaning of Jesus' saying: "He who
does what is true comes to the light" (Jn 3:21). VS, 64.

Christians have a great help for the formation of


conscience in the Church and her Magisterium. As the
Council affirms: "In forming their consciences the
Christian faithful must give careful attention to the
sacred and certain teaching of the Church.

For the Catholic Church is by the will of Christ the


teacher of truth. Her charge is to announce and teach
authentically that truth which is Christ, and at the same
time with her authority to declare and confirm the
principles of the moral order which derive from human
nature itself ".

It follows that the authority of the Church, when she


pronounces on moral questions, in no way undermines
the freedom of conscience of Christians.

This is so not only because freedom of conscience is


never freedom "from" the truth but always and only
freedom "in" the truth, but also because the
Magisterium does not bring to the Christian conscience
truths which are extraneous to it; rather it brings to
UNIT IV. Called to Holiness A. Following Christ perverted nor sadistic, that they were, and still are,
terribly and terrifyingly normal.
as the Primordial and Essential Foundation of
From the viewpoint of our legal institutions and of our
Christian Morality
moral standards of judgment, this normality was much
Dennis, being a perfectionist, wants to accomplish all works meticulously.
There is only one way that he knows how to do things: his way. Because of more terrifying than all the atrocities put together, for it
this, Dennis tends to be very strict, short-tempered, and critical of others. He implied — as had been said at Nuremberg over and
always gets angry at people who do not meet his expectations. People are
afraid to be around him because of his attitude. Nobody wants to be friends
over again by the defendants and their counsels — that
with him. Realizing his excesses and shortcomings, he turned to God in this new type of criminal, who is in actual fact hostis
prayer to ask for the grace that would give him the strength to change for the generis humani, commits his crimes under
better. Once in a while, he slips into his old grumpy self. But he recovers
because he is determined to be good for God. Thus, every day, he prays in circumstances that make it well-nigh impossible for him
thanksgiving to God for those successful daily bouts with his imperfections. to know or to feel that he is doing wrong

Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem, A Report on 1.Man as Disfigured by Sin


the Banality of Evil. VICE - A settled habit caused by sinful action which
disposes to further sinful action.
For when I speak of the banality of evil, I do so only on - happens in us when we follow the inclination of our
the strictly factual level, pointing to a phenomenon animal nature against the order of our reason. We were
which stared one in the face at the trial…Except for an created to be men and women following our reason
extraordinary diligence in looking out for his personal because our reason is to be aligned with the reality that
advancement, he had no motives at all. And this is created and sustained by God who is truth, goodness,
diligence in itself was in no way criminal; He merely, to and love itself
put the matter colloquially, never realized what he was
doing. We become enamored with vice and imprisoned to vice
when we commit sin routinely in one or two areas of
In principle he knew quite well what it was all about, our life. These are the temptations we face.
and in his final statement to the court he spoke of the
“revaluation of values prescribed by the [Nazi] Our temptations are all individualized according to our
government.” carnal dispositions, e.g., others are more tempted to
gluttony, others to the sins of the flesh. etc.
He was not stupid. It was sheer thoughtlessness –
something by no means identical with stupidity – that Vice is the condition St. Paul is referring to when he
predisposed him to become one of the greatest said. “I do not do the good that I want to do, but I do the
criminals of that period. very evil that I hate. Romans 7:19

And if this is “banal” and even funny, if with the best The person stuck in a vice continues to sin and justifies
will in the world one cannot extract any diabolical or that sin. But when you are living in grace, grace frees
demonic profundity from Eichmann, that is still far from you to see your vice clearly and to see that it must go.
calling it commonplace. It surely cannot be so common Routine sins develop vice within us.
that a man facing death, and, moreover, standing
beneath the gallows, should be able to think of nothing SIN- Inordinate action that discords with truth and
but what he has heard at funerals all his life, and that goodness in its intention, object, and circumstances.
these “lofty words” should completely becloud the • Every sin for Saint Thomas is an inordinate act.
reality – of his own death. • An act that is not properly ordered nor lined up with
That such remoteness from reality and such the reality of truth and goodness in its intention, object,
thoughtlessness can wreak more havoc than all the evil and its circumstances.
instincts taken together which, perhaps, are inherent in
man – that was, in fact, the lesson one could learn in Sin (ccc)- offense against truth and certain and correct
Jerusalem. But it was a lesson, neither an explanation of conscience it can be an utterance, deed, or desire
the phenomenon nor a theory about it. contrary to the eternal law
The trouble with Eichmann was precisely that so many
were like him, and that the many were neither
DEVIATION
Voluntary turning away or departure from the right GRAVITY OF SIN: MORTAL AND VENIAL SIN
order • Not all sins are equal. Saint Thomas agrees with the
CONTRADICTION distinction of mortal and venial sin that the church still
It is an internal conflict between the true nature of man teaches today.
as oriented to God and his earthly pre-occupations and
tendencies. Mortal Sins
• Those sins that turn us directly away from God.
SIN IS FAILURE TO LOVE ➢ When we choose something serious with full intent
• In general, sin is failure to live the Great and freedom in place of God as our highest and best
Commandment to love God, others, and self. good.
• The Confiteor, which we pray at the beginning of the ➢ Takes away the very principle of order
Mass, offers us a good description of sin: ➢ Destroys/cuts off our relationship with God
➢ “I confess to Almighty God and to you, my brothers ➢ Brings about the death of the soul
and sisters (a recognition that sin is not only an offense
against God but it also wounds the Body of Christ and Three Conditions for a Sin to be Mortal:
our church community), that I have sinned through my • Grave matter:
own fault (I take responsibility for the wrong I have = As specified by the Ten Commandments, “Do not kill,
done), in my thoughts and in my words, in what I have do not commit adultery, do not steal, do not bear false
done (sins of commission), and in what I have failed to
witness, do not defraud, Honor your father and your
do (sins of omission).”
mother” CCC 1858
• Sin is an evil human act, wanting in the perfection it
should have, because it is out of conformity with its
Full knowledge:
proper norm or standard, which is human rational
= It presupposes knowledge of the sinful character of
nature and man as image of God.
the act, of its opposition to God’s law.
• Sin is an act directed to some lesser or merely
apparent good, falling short of the real good which is
Complete consent
integral human fulfillment, that is, fulfillment in respect
= It implies a consent sufficiently deliberate to be a
to all the goods in an ideal human community
choice, i.e., we freely and under no duress choose to do
the evil.
2. DIMENSIONS OF SIN
PERSONAL- Sin that destroys one’s inner wholeness
Venial Sins
SOCIAL- Sin that affects and causes harm to one’s
• One commits venial sin when:
neighbor
REJECTION OF GOD- Sin that rejects and Ignores the ➢ In a less serious matter, he does not observe the
structures established by God “religious dimension of standard prescribed by the moral law.
sin” ➢ He disobeys the moral law in a grave matter but
without full knowledge or without complete consent.
Distinctions in the ways that we Sin
• We can sin against God, our neighbor, and ourselves. • We are not turned away from God when we sin
• Some sins are sins of thought, some sins are sins of
venially, but we are just slightly off in some choice that
word, some are sins of deed.
doesn’t keep us away from God but keeps us from going
straightaway to God.

• E.g., for Saint Thomas, every lie that we speak are at


Sins of Commission least venial sins, even if you lie because you are afraid
Sins of action, whether in thought, word, or deed.
to tell the truth or because you are afraid to hurt
someone else’s feelings. You may have a good intention
Sins of Omission
Sins of inaction, whether in thought, word, or deed, e.g. there, but the activity of lying is always wrong for Saint
omitting to care for someone, like a child or against an Thomas.
elderly. Such sins constitute sin against God and against • All sins should be avoided for it weakens our
our neighbor.
relationship with God.
• Ignoring venial sin is like ignoring a minor cancer that Man is often turned away from doing good and urged to
can become a serious one. “Deliberate and unrepented evil by the social environment in which he lives and in
venial sin disposes us little by little to commit mortal which he is immersed since the day of his birth
sin” (CCC 1863)
2. Conversion and Holiness
• We know the truth of this statement as we consider Conversion
how a gradual neglect of a relationship can eventually • In the Synoptics, John the Baptist calls people to
led to divorce. conversion and repentance.
➢ Actual Greek word: Metanoia
THE PROLIFERATION OF SIN
➢ Luke 5:32: Jesus proclaims: “I have come to call not
• Sin creates a proclivity to sin; it engenders vice by
the righteous but sinners.
repetition of the same acts.
Metanoia
Capital Sins
• Total change or turn of heart.
• They are called “capital” because they engender other
• Turning away from sin and turning towards God.
sins, other vices.
• An experience of being in love with God without
• The list comes from the writings of St. John Cassian
reservations.
and St. Gregory.
• Reorientation of one’s life to Christ who is made the
• The seven capital sins are pride, avarice (greed), envy,
center and model of one’s life.
wrath, sloth, lust, gluttony.
Christ Our Model (VS 20)
Sins that Cry to Heaven (CCC, 1867):
• Jesus asks us to follow him and to imitate him along
• The blood of Abel
the path of love, a love which gives itself completely to
• The cry of the oppressed in Egypt
the brethren out of love for God: "This is my
• The sin of the Sodomites
commandment, that you love one another as I have
• The cry of the foreigner, the widow, and the orphan
loved you" (Jn 15:12).
• Injustice to the wage earner
➢ The word "as" requires imitation of Jesus and of his
love, of which the washing of feet is a sign. Jesus' way of
Sin is a Personal Act (CCC, 1868)
acting and his words, his deeds and his precepts
• We have a responsibility for the sins committed by
constitute the moral rule of Christian life
others when we cooperate in them:
➢ The word "as" also indicates the degree of Jesus'
➢ By participating directly and voluntarily in them.
love, and of the love with which his disciples are called
➢ By ordering, advising, praising, or approving them.
to love one another.
➢ By not disclosing or hindering them when we have an • After saying: "This is my commandment, that you love
obligation to do so. one another as I have loved you" (Jn 15:12), Jesus
➢ By protecting evil doers. continues with words which indicate the sacrificial gift
of his life on the Cross, as the witness to a love "to the
Structures of Sin (CCC, 1869) end" (Jn 13:1): "Greater love has no man than this, that
• Sin gives rise to social situations and institutions that a man lay down his life for his friends" (Jn 15:13).
are contrary to the divine goodness.
• Structures of sin are the expression and effect of This is what Jesus asks of everyone who wishes to
personal sins. follow him: "If any man would come after me, let him
• They lead their victims to do evil in their turn. deny himself and take up his cross and follow me" (Mt
• In an analogous sense, they constitute a social sin. 16:24).

EFFECTS OF SIN
= IT INJURES HUMAN SOLIDARITY Call to Holiness
= IT WOUNDS THE NATURE OF MAN • By asking us to follow him, Jesus is inviting all of us to
= MAN IS DEPRIVED OF THE GLORY OF IMAGE OF GOD become saints, no less.
• Holiness or Sanctity can be achieved by following
IMPACT OF A SINFULLY DISTORTED WORLD Jesus faithfully in our daily life, in all its trials and
challenges “taking up our crosses daily”
• Holiness is loving God and loving our neighbor. Temperance: Regulates bodily pains and pleasures.
• Conversion does not happen overnight: Generosity: Helps us give and spend money well.
➢ It is a particular act
➢ A lifelong process • Virtue is characterized by what is Mean or
➢ A daily event Intermediate.
• Mean depends on agents and circumstances.
The Holy Spirit and Grace • Some actions and feelings have no mean; they are
• Conversion is God’s gift. always wrong. E.g., the act of murder and the emotion
of spite.
➢It happens through help of the Holy Spirit.
• We become virtuous through the constant repetition
➢However, God also needs our cooperation: “God Who
or practice of good actions.
created us without us will not save us without us.”
• A truly virtuous person finds the practice of virtue
- St. Augustine of Hippo
pleasant and natural. Hence, it is a character that is
both external and internal.
Conversion and Prayer
• We need moral guides to help who would help us
• For us to grow in grace, we need to pray always
attain an excellent life.
especially to the Holy Spirit.
• We need to train ourselves to listen to his promptings
1. The Holy Spirit and the Virtues
in our conscience and to obey his guidance in our life.
The Holy Spirit: Source and Means of Moral Life
• In every moment of life let us say, Come, Holy Spirit!
• God is love and love is his primary gift, containing all
others, through the Holy Spirit.
B. The Spirit Configures Us to Christ through the Virtues
• In Baptism, he restores in us the divine likeness lost
1. The Holy Spirit and the Virtues
due to sin and makes us children of God
2. Theological Virtues
• In our daily life, the Holy Spirit helps us to grow in
3. Cardinal Virtues
holiness and enter more deeply in the life of the Trinity
-CCC 733-736
Malou is in Claire’s send-off party to the married life. All
their friends from way back college days are present. It
Living by the Spirit
is indeed a great time to enjoy friendship and a time
• By this power of the Spirit, God's children can bear
away from work stress. Alcoholic beverages are aplenty,
much fruit.
and Malou finds this as an excellent opportunity to
• He who has grafted us onto the true vine will make us
drink some, just for fun. However, Malou knows that
bear "the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience,
she can only drink a bottle or two, after which she gets
kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-
tipsy and would then be sleepy. She remembered her
control.” CCC 736
previous experience waking up in the morning after
drinking beyond her limits. It was the worst hangover
"We live by the Spirit"; the more we renounce
for her, and the discomfort bothered her for two days.
ourselves, the more we "walk by the Spirit."
Learning from this untoward experience, she resolved
to consume only what her body can take. When the
The Holy Spirit and the Virtues
party was over, Malou had such a great time with
• Christ's gift of salvation offers us the grace necessary
friends, and the relaxation energized her. Not only that,
to persevere in the pursuit of the virtues.
she was happy that she was able to control herself
• Everyone should always ask for this grace of light and
during the party.
strength, frequent the sacraments, cooperate with the
Holy Spirit, and follow his calls to love what is good and
For Aristotle, “virtue is a state of character which makes
shun evil. (CCC 1811)
a man good and makes him do his work well.”
2. Theological Virtues
Moral virtues allow us to feel emotions:
Moral Virtues According to St. Thomas
• At the right times
-Moral virtue disposes us to act well and it requires
• Towards the right objects
more than simply knowing what the right thing and
• With the right motives
good thing to know is.
• In the right way
-For instance, we need to have our passions in line. If
we know the right thing to do but we are scared to do
Courage: Regulates fear and confidence.
it, we won’t do it. if we know the right thing to do but - Those truths about God himself that he has revealed
do it with excessive anger, we won’t do it morally to us

Moral virtue moderates our passions so that we can act • The object of faith, therefore, is the true God and the
according to reason for the true good. Moral virtues do truths of God (collected and summarized by the church
not subdue our passions. in the articles of faith.
Passions are good for St Thomas. The more virtuous a • By assenting to the articles of faith, the believer
person is, the more they feel, and the more they feel comes to possess God’s truth and thus, God himself.
rightly. Because the virtuous person is not afraid of his
or her feelings. The more perfect the virtue is the more Various ways in which the act of faith ends and rests in
passionate the person becomes. God.
Threefold dynamic of faith:
Definition of Virtue • Believing in a God (Credere Deum)- We believe that
• Virtue is a good quality of the mind by which we live there is a God.
righteously of which no one can make bad use, which • Believing God (Credere Deo)- We believe in God as the
God works in us and without us. trustworthy
-St. Thomas Aquinas (from Saint Augustine) ST, IlaIIae, witness of his truth.
Q. 55, a.4 • Believing unto God (Credere in Deum) - We believe in
faith in God, unto union with him in the knowledge that
• Virtue lives in the human soul, it lives in the mind and he establishes with us
the will, in our thinking, and in our choosing.
• Virtue confers on us, when we have it, the ability to Subject of Faith (where the virtue is infused in us)
think rightly on what we should do but the ability to do • Faith is infused in and perfects that human power
it. concerned with truth: the intellect.
• It is one thing to know the right thing to do, it is • Faith elevates and perfects the functioning of human
another thing to do it, and to do it well. That is what reason so that the human agent, without seeing or
virtue gives. proving their reality, can apprehend, understand, and
judge to be true, the articles of faith.
The Theological virtues • Choosing to assent to the articles of faith as true,
• The theological virtues are infused in us by God. involves a graced active belief, which brings us to
• These virtues elevate our powers of intellect and will Aquinas’ description of the act of faith.
so that by acts of these virtues: believing, hoping, and
loving, we can, by grace, reach beyond our natural The Act of Faith
goods, to possess our final and supernatural good, our • Belief is the act that is proper to faith.
theological good, God himself. • By believing, we affirm the truth of a proposition
without seeing or demonstrating its truth.
Aquinas’ Method of inquiry of Theological virtues: • Belief holds confidently and firmly to the truth of the
• In terms of their subject, object, proper act. proposition.
• This confidence arises from the testimony of another
VIRTUE OF FAITH or an expert in the matter
Definition of Faith (Heb 11:1). The assurance of things • By believing God and what he says, the believer
hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. shares intimately in the knowledge of God.
• In the light of faith, seeing is not believing but
Aquinas. Faith is a habit of the mind, whereby eternal believing is seeing, i.e., seeing God and what he sees,
life is begun in us, making the intellect assent to what is because he tells us what he sees.
not apparent. ST, IlaIIae Q, 4, a. 1 • In faith, therefore, the believer comes to know what
I believe whatever the son of God has said, Adoro Te God knows. Thus, faith marks the beginning of eternal
Devote life in us. By participating in God’s eternal knowing.
• Faith is only for this world, once the believer enters
Object of Faith heaven belief in God’s truth gives way to vision of God’s
• Material Object of Faith - God himself. truth. That which was once merely believed is now
• Formal object of faith known face to face.
- God as first truth revealing himself to the world.
Interior act of faith: Belief
Exterior act of faith: Confession or profession • As with faith, there is an inherent imperfection with
Sins against belief (interiorly) unbelief, heresy, apostasy hope since it approaches God from a distance and
Sins against belief (exteriorly): Blasphemy cannot yet lay hold of its object.
• And so, hope will not endure as does charity. In
Two Gifts of the Holy Spirit that Perfect the Act of Faith: heaven, there will simply be no need for hope as the
The gift of understanding souls of the just will possess God without fear of loss or
• Gives the believer a spirit taught insight into the diminishment.
essence of the articles of faith.
• Allows the believer to develop a vision of God in faith Sins against Hope
purified of unnecessary earthly imagery and analogies. Presumption
• The cavalier assurance that God will save me
The gift of knowledge
regardless of whether or not I consent and cooperate
• Gives the believer a spirit taught judgment regarding
with his grace.
the truth of created things in view of God
• The presumptuous man refuses to make use of the
means that God appoints for salvation. E.g., persevering
VIRTUE OF HOPE
prayer or sacramental confession.
• Hope is a graced confidence that God will give eternal
Despair
life to me and to those whom I love because he is
• the denial that God’s promises apply to me or a fear
omnipotent and merciful.
that he will deny pardon event to the repentant.
• Hope leans on God’s help amidst the experience of
• Sets aside the uncertainty of the way in favor of the
human inability and insufficiency.
certainty of the damned.
• We believe and trust that eternal life is made
available to us because Christ has undone the
“One must cultivate a hope that is humble enough,
primordial sin and unlocked the gates of heaven for us.
ready to pray and, at the same time, magnanimous
• The virtue of hope builds on the passion of hope: by
enough to wait cooperatively for the fulfillment of its
hope we are moved to pursue an arduous good which
prayer.” Josef Pieper
we apprehend as possible to obtain.
• Hope in this sense is just a movement of the irascible
Gift of the Holy Spirit with Hope: The Fear of the Lord
power. That power which supplies the appetitive energy
• Aquinas distinguishes what is meant by fear. The fear
for difficult goods.
under consideration is a disposition that in its initial
• But beyond a mere bodily response hope has spiritual
stages (servile fear) fears God’s punishment and in its
dimension and so it is appropriate to locate it in the will.
mature stages fears to offend God in any way (filial or
• Hope, understood as a theological virtue, concerns
chaste fear).
our ultimate end, eternal life with God.
• This fear perfects hope by imparting to the soul a
• Here the moral virtues are insufficient. We do not, of
supernatural sensitivity for what aids us and what
our own power, have the wherewithal to conceive of
hinders us in our pursuit of the vision of God.
this good, much less to pursue it well.
• As we ascend by many movements to the vision of
• So, God has infused the theological virtue of hope,
God, we must be encouraged lest we lose heart in
raising our minds and hearts to him so that we can
pursuit of this great and arduous good. For there is
respond generously to his offer of beatitude.
nothing so difficult to attain nor anything so worthy of
• Thus, hope is first the work of God and it principally
the effort as the unfailing vision of God. For our help is
concerns the end.
in the name of the lord.
Hope is the virtue of the “Already but Not Yet”
“Submit to God” 1Peter 2:21
Already
Hope has an orientation to fulfillment won for us in
VIRTUE OF CHARITY
Christ. It is rooted in the revelation of God and the
• The seat of charity in the human person: the will.
promise of salvation. It imparts a kind of certitude
• Charity Perfects the human power concerned with
flowing from the certitude of faith
loving: the will.
Not Yet
It is given during the time of non-fulfillment. Hope
Two-Fold Dynamic of Love
steels our nerves to withstand temptations against the
Love of Concupiscence.
vigilance and perseverance…
We love some good for their own sake. The love with That is why, unlike faith and hope which passes away
which we love the goods that keep us alive and help us when one reaches heaven, charity endures in beatitude.
to grow in virtue. We love these goods for the benefit
that they offer us. The Duration of the Theological Virtues.
Faith Gives way to vision
Love of Benevolence (friendship). Hope Gives way to possession
We love some good not for our sake but for another Charity Abides in perfection.
sake. This is the love that constitutes friendship. It
regards the other as another self. Wills the good of the The Exercise of the Virtue of Charity
other for his sake. Internal effects of charity Joy, peace, and mercy
External effects of charity Beneficence, almsgiving,
Grace elevates both love towards God fraternal correction
• Hope elevates the love of concupiscence such that we
can love God himself as final end and good for me. Sins against Charity
• Charity elevates the love of benevolence such that we In general Hatred
love God himself for his own sake as a friend, not for Against joy Sloth, envy
our sake. Against peace Discord, contention, schism, war, strife,
sedition.
Aquinas sees the whole reality and work of the virtue of Against beneficence: Scandal
charity through the lens of friendship.
Aquinas produces a theology of charity that reflects Wisdom is the gift of virtue that perfects charity.
deeply on Christ’s words to his disciples at the last • Peacemaking is the work of charity perfected by
supper: no, longer do I call you servants…I have called wisdom.
you friends (john 15:15). • With wise charity, the Christian orders himself toward
peace from which inner charitable peace, he can work
Object of Charity, Materially and Formally for peace with others and among others.
God as our best friend befriending us. Charity is nothing
other than our loving response to the friendship offered 3. Cardinal Virtues
to us by God. THE CARDINAL VIRTUES
Every other good thing that can be loved for God’s sake. Borrowed by St. Thomas from Cicero
In charity we love God as well as what he loves, which is Prudence
everything that he has made, especially other persons. • An intellectual virtue that that perfects the practical
Thus, in charity, we love God for God’s sake and we love reason. It is right reason about things to be done (recta
neighbor for God’s sake. ratio agibilium).
• The most important moral virtue, it’s the charioteer of
The Act of Charity virtue. It directs all the virtues. E.g. Prudence
The act produced by the virtue charity is the love of God determines the courageous thing to do in this moment
for his sake above all things. is or what the temperate thing to do is and to enjoy at
Charity does not introduce the preferential love of God this moment. It says what is the just thing to do at this
into the world but rather it elevates this preferential moment.
love written into the very fabric of creation and into the • It is prudence which tells the virtues how to be
very heart of men unto a union of real friendship with themselves.
God.
• We become prudent by learning from our elders, from
Therefore, because everything naturally inclines to those who have lived long enough to learn from their
higher good more than lower goods…every creature, mistakes and so more time to grow in prudence.
including the human creature, naturally loves God more • We become prudent by experience, by living life, by
than itself. being self-reflective, by making choices and seeing how
they turn out and looking back and trying to figure out
In man, therefore, charity rescues this love from the how we could have done that differently…
perversion of sin and divinizes it unto a real union of • The moral life is not something that we engage alone,
love with God. Not only as he is our highest good in it is something we engage in the community.
cause but because he is our best friend.
Justice
• The perpetual and constant perpetual will to render
each one his due.
• Giving what is due to God (religion) and to fellowman.
• Justice and mercy always go together: “The Lord is
merciful and just” (Ps 116: 5)

Temperance
• The virtuous moderation of sense pleasure: pleasures
of the flesh, food, drink, all of which can be good when
experienced in accord with reason.
• The virtue of temperance is in between intemperance,
which is simply a pursuit of pleasure, one after another,
and insensibility or frigidity or unwillingness to
experience pleasure.

Fortitude
The stable disposition to do the right thing in the face of
fear.
• That virtue which you need to get the good things in
your life.
• Keeps us shrinking away from great difficulties but
also keeps us from rushing in in foolishness.
• It is Right between being a coward and being a fool on
the other.

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