The Nature of the Infused Moral Virtues
Brother C. Luke Salm, F.S.C.
De La Salle College, Washington, D. C.
I.
Definitions
A. Habit
To
launch a discussion on the nature of the infused moral virtues it is necessary
to define terms which will be used throughout. The first notion is habit. Habit
is a species of quality. It is a quality difficult to change which disposes a
subject well or badly either in regard to itself or in regard to its actions. A
habit has the note of permanency in contrast to a disposition which is easily
changeable. One who has studied Theology for years may be said to have a
disposition to investigate certain interesting questions. Through repetition
the disposition may become a habit.
Now
habits are either entitative or operative. Entitative modify the being of the
subject. One is said to have a habit of health. An operative habit however,
does not modify the whole being as such, but one particular faculty of the
being. A person is said to have the habit of justice in his business dealings.
Another is said to have a habit of politeness in his daily contacts. And so on.1
A
habit is something had. Moreover, it is something had by way of addition, of
further determination and modification. . . . Because a man has a will, he has
the ability to love; by the habit of charity that ability is disposed to love
God and neighbor. There is in the notion of habit an element by which what is
already perfected and determined in one sense is considered in its aptitude
toward still more perfection and determination.2
As
a way of being or of acting, habit is a quality. It gives further determination
to a thing's nature or operation in a way that is either suitable to that
nature or not. It always disposes, but either well or badly. As something had,
it possesses a certain stability.
"Habit,"
says St. Thomas, "differs from potency in this, that by potency we have
the power to do something, but by habit we are not only rendered able to do
something, but disposed or indisposed to do what we have the power to do well
or badly. By habit, therefore, there is not given or taken away from us the
power to do something (aliquid posse)—but this we acquire by habit, that we do
it well or badly."3
Habit,
then, presupposes a potency, which it will further determine. The subject of
habits must be in potentiality to being or to operation. Since our concern is
operative habits, I shall concentrate upon the subject of operative habits.
Habits can be developed in those parts or faculties, which are capable of being
determined to act in a certain way. This means that there will be habits in the
faculties of both soul and body. The soul is disposed to activity by its
potencies or faculties. Operative habits will be in these faculties rather than
in the soul itself. They will be found in the intellect, will, memory,
imagination and all the other faculties of men. They will determine certain
faculties to act constantly, easily, and pleasurably in a certain direction.
They will become ready principles of action. That is why we say that habits
are, as it were, a second nature.
It
is common experience that good habits of various sort enable one to perfect
himself in countless ways by producing a certain facility, and that bad habits
impede an individual in the attainment of whatever type of perfection he may be
seeking by the privation of their opposites. If facility be the most important
characteristic of natural good habits, a sort of enslaving necessity is the
chief mark of bad habits. Good habits increase our potentialities for good,
whereas bad habits enchain the same powers.
B. Virtue
St.
Thomas defines virtue as a good operative habit.4 Virtue perfects
some human power of man according to the mode of habit. Virtue is a permanent
quality of some faculty of the soul enabling it to place good acts. It is the
note of stability which differentiates virtue from the mere inclination or
disposition to place good acts. St. Francis de Sales explains this distinction:
There
are certain inclinations which are esteemed virtues and are not so, but favors
and advantages of nature. How many there are who are naturally sober, mild,
chaste and modest! Now all these seem to be virtues, and yet have no more the
merit thereof than bad inclinations are blameworthy before we have given free
and voluntary consent to such natural dispositions. . . . It is no virtue to be
silent by nature, although it is a virtue to bridle one's tongue by reason.. .
. Some think they have virtue who have only good inclinations. . . .5
Because
St. Thomas' notion of virtue can be applied to both natural and supernatural
virtues, it is preferable to the classical definition of St. Augustine, which
applies only to infused virtues. Dropping the last clause from St. Augustine's
definition, namely, "which God produces in us without us" gives us a
definition of virtue equivalent to that of St. Thomas: "a good quality of
the mind, by which we live rightly, and which cannot be put to evil use."6
Division
of Virtue
Usually the virtues
are divided:
(a) by reason of their object into
theological and moral. The theological virtues have God, as He is in Himself,
as their immediate material and formal object. The moral virtues are concerned
immediately with the means whereby we tend to God, and have as their immediate
object some created good.
(b) by reason of origin, into acquired and
infused. Acquired are formed by the repetition of natural acts, and infused are
placed immediately in the soul by God.
(c) by reason of end, into natural and
supernatural. Natural virtues tend to God as the Author of nature. These arise
from nature and dispose the faculties of the soul to exercise their connatural
operations with a certain constancy and facility. Supernatural virtues tend to
God as the Author of Grace. Their power goes beyond the powers of human nature,
as such, and enables the faculties of the soul to elicit acts which would be
otherwise impossible.
(d) by reason of subject, into intellectual
and appetitive. The intellectual reside in and perfect the intellect; the
appetitive reside in and perfect the appetitive faculties. With the exception
of faith and prudence, the other virtues which are the subject of our
discussion are in the appetitive faculties.
Virtue
Is an Analogous Term
One
may possess an intellectual virtue, a perfecting power in some form of art, and
yet not be morally good, and in this case it is said that he possesses virtue
only in a restricted sense (secundum quid) and not in the popular sense of
possessing a habit which tends to make him a good man. In general, when virtue
is discussed, however, that type of virtue is meant which perfects the whole
man with regard to his end, and this is the sense in which the word will be
used henceforth in this discussion. Again, the acquired virtues, as such, do
not perfect man with reference to his de facto supernatural end; and for this
reason it is held that only the infused virtues fulfill completely the notion
of virtue. They alone perfect the faculties of the soul in the effort to reach
the supernatural goal of man. As I shall discuss later, it is the supernatural
virtue of charity which gives to all the other virtues, both natural and
supernatural, the species of perfect virtues.7
II.
The
Thomistic Argument for the Existence of the Infused Moral Virtues
It
should be noted that the very existence of the infused moral virtues is
controverted by the followers of Duns Scotus. All theologians agree that the
theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity must be infused, since in no
way can they be attained by acts of man's natural powers. But are the moral
virtues also infused? Nothing is defined by the church. Still, in stating the
Thomist position on this question, A. Michel finds both their arguments and the
numbers of their followers so indicative of the mind of the Church that he terms
their thesis "communissima."8 All the Thomists, St. Bonaventure, and
Suarez, and many of his followers, adhere to the doctrine of the Angelic
Doctor.9
It
is not to our purpose to give in detail the arguments from Sacred Scripture,
St. Augustine, and statements of Popes Innocent III and Clement V, which seem
to confirm the Thomistic position.10 Suffice it to give what seems to be
the best of St. Thomas' arguments for the existence of the infused moral
virtues. Using the axiom that the order of means must correspond to the order
of end, St. Thomas argues:
The
effect is proportioned to its causes and principles. All the intellectual and
moral virtues, which are acquired by our acts, proceed from natural principles,
preexisting jn us. In the place of these natural principles, the theological
virtues are given to us by God by which we are ordinated to the supernatural
order. Whence, it is fitting that there should be other habits, divinely caused
in us, which proportionately correspond to the theological virtues, as the
intellectual and moral virtues are related to their natural principles.11
St.
Thomas draws another similar argument from the scholastic dictum that God does
not provide less in the supernatural order than He does in the natural order.
In the natural order God has given us a principle of life, the soul, and has
attached to this principle permanent faculties of intellect and will, whereby
we can place acts habitually toward a purely natural end. But it is not fitting
that God should be less generous toward those whom He chooses to possess a
supernatural end than He is toward those whom He destines for a purely natural
end. He provides creatures with principles of selfactivity, so as to enable
them to move to their natural end. All the more reason, then, should He implant
in the souls whom He draws to a supernatural goal certain permanent qualities,
by which they may move smoothly and easily to their eternal goal.12
While
it is true, moreover, that the infused virtues are designated by the same names
as the natural virtues and are classified in the same manner, yet they are
entirely distinct from their natural counterparts, for, although they have the
same material objects as the natural, they differ in their formal objects. The formal
object or motive of a natural virtue is made known by reason, while that of the
supernatural virtues is made known by faith.
In
short, God provides the soul in the state of sanctifying grace with
corresponding permanent quasi faculties of operation which are as proportionate
to man's supernatural end, as his natural faculties and habits are to his
natural end.
These
permanent quasi faculties should include the moral infused as well as the
theological virtues; otherwise, God would seem to confer something to nature,
which He has not conferred to our supernature, namely, proximate and immediate
principles of operation relative to the use of created things.13
Such
are the main arguments for the common opinion, which I shall use as a basis for
discussion of the nature of the infused moral virtues. It is only fair,
however, to outline without comment the opposing Scotist position.
A. The Scotist Position
Moral
infused virtues are not needed either on the part of the end or on the part of
the means. From the point of view of man's supernatural end the moral infused
virtues are not necessary, because of the presence of charity in the soul.
Charity orientates the acquired virtues to the end of charity and so renders
superfluous the existence of infused moral virtues. Again, such virtues are not
necessary by reason of mode or means. The theological virtue of faith
communicates to the inferior virtues the mode and means of operating on the
supernatural level. Coerver illustrates this position with an example.14
Suppose a pagan possesses the acquired virtue of temperance in an eminent
degree, for he has practiced this virtue for a long time. Finally, moved by
God's grace, this man is baptized into the Church, and thereby receives
sanctifying grace and the supernatural virtues and gifts.
What
would happen to the acquired virtue of temperance? The Scotist would say that
it would be revitalized and supernaturalized entirely by the infused
theological virtues without any need of the infused moral virtue of temperance.
Its supernatural mode of operation would come from the infused virtue of faith,
and it would be directed to a supernatural end by infused charity. In the same
way, all the natural virtues are supernaturalized by their conjunction with the
infused theological virtues. Hence there is no necessity for the infused moral
virtues.15
As
was indicated already, the congruity of the infused moral virtues is urged, not
merely for the purpose of ordinating our actions toward our supernatural end as
an extrinsic cause, but in order that the faculties may perform intrinsically
supernatural actions in the use of the MEANS to the end. While it is true that
charity could order the acquired moral virtues to its end, they would remain,
as it were, alien ministers of an inferior order. It is fitting that the
virtues which charity informs to draw man to God should be of the same
supernatural order as charity, and these virtues, like charity itself, should
arise from supernatural grace.16
III.
The
Nature of the Infused Moral Virtues
It
seems that a valid approach to the nature of the infused moral virtues is found
by instituting a twofold comparison, namely, their relationships to the
theological and to the acquired moral virtues. First, the infused moral virtues
are connected very closely with the theological virtues, especially charity,
and this relationship shall be considered in the next section; then, the points
of comparison between the infused moral and the acquired moral shall be studied
in the following part.
A. The Distinction Between the Theological
and the Infused Moral:
For
the performance of actions on the supernatural level, three distinct principles
are necessary:
(1) principles ordinating the soul to its
supernatural end directly, and these are the theological virtues.
(2) principles ordinating the soul with
regard to the media to its supernatural end, and these are the infused moral
virtues.
(3) principles moving the soul to follow
the intimate guidance of the Holy Ghost, and these are the gifts of the Holy
Spirit.17
1. Distinct by Reason of Object
Both
the theological and the moral virtues are infused by God, but for different
reasons. The theological are meant to attain the supernatural end itself, the
God of Revelation, directly and immediately. Both the material and the formal
objects of the theological virtues are given to us by Revelation, and they are
attained only by faculties which have been elevated to the intrinsically
supernatural level. Since God has destined us for a supernatural end, He must
give us supernatural principles of activity, by which we may be inclined
habitually toward that end. Rooted in the entitative habit of sanctifying
grace, then, are the three operative habits of faith, hope, and charity. Faith
attains unto God, as our supernatural end, and also unto a knowledge of
supernatural mysteries necessary for salvation. Hope directs the will to seek
God as our final happiness in spite of recognized weakness in ourselves and
obstacles to this goal in worldly attractions. Charity inclines the will to
seek the God of Revelation as all lovable in Himself.18 All three
theological virtues attain their supernatural end directly and immediately; the
infused moral virtues attain the same end indirectly and mediately.
It
is a fact of experience that there is a difference between the willing of an
end, and the choosing of the means to that end. The theological virtues are
concerned with the end, and the infused moral are concerned directly and
immediately with the means to the end, and only indirectly and mediately with
the end itself. In Thomistic teaching, the argument for which I have set down
already, the infused moral virtues are intrinsically supernatural means,
supplying immediate and proximate principles of operation.19 Since these
virtues are concerned with directing all our human acts to our supernatural
end, they are called moral. There are, therefore, as many infused moral virtues
as there are diverse human acts; but they are reduced by the theologians to the
four cardinal virtues: Prudence, Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance,
corresponding to the four acquired virtues of the same names.
The
infused cardinal virtues are means on the supernatural level to help man attain
to his supernatural end. Taken in the general sense, with all their subjective
and potential parts, these four virtues cover the range of human activity
adequately. In the natural order prudence is based upon practical principles of
reason known by synderesis; in the supernatural order infused prudence is based
upon principles of Revelation known by faith. What synderesis and acquired
prudence are in the natural order, faith and infused prudence are in the
supernatural with this difference.
While
superior to the other infused cardinal virtues, as their norm, infused prudence
is, in turn, subordinate to charity, the form of all the other virtues.20
In short, both natural and supernatural prudence, under charity, orientate the
other cardinal virtues in their respective orders to their respective ends. By
means of a beautiful comparison St. Francis de Sales concretized this abstract
notion in his treatise on charity.21
The
natural light of reason is like the river watering Paradise (Gen. 2:10), which
was divided into four heads. These four streams are symbolic of the four
regions of the soul.
Over
what is called the practical understanding, i. e., the part of the intelligence
which discerns the actions which we should do or avoid, natural reason spreads
prudence, which inclines our minds wisely to judge of the evil which we are to
avoid and drive away, and of the good which we are to do and pursue.
Over
the will it makes justice stream, which is a constant and firm will to render
to everyone his own. Over the concupiscible appetite it makes temperance flow,
moderating the passions which are therein. Over the irascible appetite, or
anger, it sends out fortitude, which stays or controls all the motions of
anger.22
It
is interesting to note, in passing, that St. Francis views fortitude in its
relationship to anger rather than in its relationship to fear, as most authors
do. In either case, it is a question of a special virtue needed to control
strong emotions.23
"Charity,"
continues St. Francis, "gives the understanding a celestial prudence, the
will, a holy justice, the concupiscible appetite, a sacred temperance, and the
irascible appetite, a devout fortitude, to the end that man's whole heart may
tend to the supernatural honesty and felicity, which consist in union with
God." 24
Whether
one divide the infused cardinal virtues from the point of view of the faculty
in which they reside, or of the principle matter with which they treat, he is
concerned with operative habits that enable man to use created goods in such a
way as to move toward his supernatural goal of the beatific vision. Directly
and immediately, then, the infused moral virtues are concerned with the means
to the end, and the theological virtues are concerned with the end itself. The
next point of difference between the theological and the infused moral virtues
is found in the relationship which exists among the virtues within their own
order; that is to say, the theological virtues are not so interrelated that the
loss of one means the loss of all, but the infused moral are dependent upon
charity for both their existence and growth.
2. Distinct by Reason of Relationships
Within Their Own Orders
The
virtues of faith and hope, as such, can exist without charity, as de facto they
do exist in the soul of the sinner who clings to both virtues.25
Nevertheless, without charity they are not perfect virtues, or virtutes
formatae, because they are not directed toward man's ultimate end in an
efficacious manner. To believe in God and in His Revelation will not bring a
man to salvation unless faith is accompanied by supernatural good works
performed by someone possessing charity. The same is true of hope when it is
separated from charity. It is a virtue, but not a perfect virtue, because it
does not by its own power advance a man nearer to his supernatural goal. It
becomes a perfect virtue, however, when it is informed by charity. In the
strict sense, then, concludes St. Thomas, faith and hope without charity are
not virtues.26
By
the strict sense in this reference St. Thomas means that faith and hope do not
fulfill the concept of a perfect virtue, although they possess the essence of
virtues. He develops the contract between faith as an imperfect virtue, i. e.,
faith without charity, and faith as a perfect virtue, i. e., faith informed by
charity, in a later passage. For the act of faith to be perfect two things are
necessary: The first is that the intellect must tend infallibly toward its
object, which is Divine Truth; and second, the will must be directed infallibly
toward its ultimate end, on account of which it assents to the truth. Now both
these qualities are found in the act of fides formata. Charity adds to the
perfection which faith brings to the intellect the perfection of the will
toward the goal set up by faith, namely, union with God.27 In brief, faith
without charity gives a certain perfection to the intellect, but that
perfection will not achieve the purpose for which it has been given by God
unless it is informed by charity moving the will to seek the goal known by
faith. As the relationship of charity toward the other supernatural virtues is
developed, it will become clear that a supernatural virtue is considered
perfect when it achieves the purpose for which it has been infused by God,
namely, union with Himself, whereas a natural moral virtue is considered
perfect when it achieves some limited and particular perfection of one or other
moral activity within the framework of the whole man.
It
is understood, of course, that charity cannot exist in a soul devoid of the
virtues of faith and hope. In summary, then, it may be said that the
theological virtues are connected only when faith and hope are informed by
charity. Faith and hope can exist without charity, but none of the infused
moral virtues can exist without charity. This relationship of charity to the
infused moral virtues shall be considered in two questions:
(1) Can the infused moral virtues exist
without charity?
(2) Can charity exist without the infused
moral virtues?
(1)
Can the infused moral virtues exist without charity? Before discussing this
question, I should like to say a few words about the relationship of prudence
to the other moral virtues in both the natural and supernatural orders. In the
natural order prudence is the form of the other moral virtues, that is to say,
it sets up the medium and regulates the practice of these in accordance with
the dictates of right reason. While it is true that the medium of justice is
objective, nevertheless, the practice of this virtue must not run contrary to
the norms of prudence. A man bound to restitution, for example, must not
fulfill this duty in such a way as to destroy his own reputation, and perhaps
that of his family. He must follow the norms of prudence in the exercise of
justice. The same truth applies with still greater force to the practice of
temperance and fortitude, both of whose media are subjective. Obviously,
prudence will enter more into the practice of these two virtues than it will
into that of justice. In short, prudence directs the other moral virtues to the
perfection of the whole man. It weighs the factors which enter into human
actions; it makes a choice; it acts.
In
the natural order prudence is preeminent. Not so in the supernatural hierarchy
of virtues. Here charity is the extrinsic form of the other virtues, giving
them efficacious direction to the end of charity, which is God in His Intimate
Life. This does not mean, however, that infused prudence is rendered
unnecessary:
The
more deeply rooted the other virtues are in the soul, the greater the need for
prudence. The faster the horse runs, the greater the danger of injury, even if
he is running in the right direction. The horse needs a rider to guide him. And
this is precisely the function which prudence serves in relation to the other
virtues. In fact, the Fathers refer to it as auriga virtutum.28
Prudence,
then, continues to hold a preeminent function of service to charity by
subordinating the other infused moral virtues to its own norms. Infused
prudence bears to the other infused cardinal virtues a relationship similar to
that of natural prudence. The hierarchical order is: charity, infused prudence,
other infused moral virtues.
St.
Thomas proves that the infused moral virtues are dependent upon charity:
Now for prudence to proceed aright, it
is much more necessary that man be well disposed towards his ultimate end,
which is the effect of charity, than that he be well disposed toward other
ends, which is the effect of moral virtue; just as in speculative matters right
reason has greatest need of the first indemonstrable principle, that
contradictories cannot both be true at the same time.
It
is therefore evident that neither can infused prudence be without charity; nor,
consequently, the other moral virtues, since they cannot be without prudence.29
As
one considers the relationship of infused prudence to charity, it becomes clear
that it is different from that of faith. Faith indicates in an obscure manner
the object of our hope and charity; infused prudence moderates and directs the
other infused moral virtues to the end of charity, which urges prudence to
exercise the virtues under its direction, so that the soul may reach the object
of its love.30
The
threefold relationship of charity to faith and infused prudence is used by
Cajetan in his argument against the Scotist position concerning the function of
faith. The Scotists hold that the infused virtue of faith communicates a mode
of supernatural operation to the acquired virtues. Cajetan answers that faith
might grant a remote mode of operation, but not a proximate and immediate mode
of supernatural operation. Faith sets up the supernatural end, but it makes use
of infused prudence as a medium for the infused moral virtues, that is to say,
it is infused prudence which furnishes the proximate medium for the exercise of
the other infused moral virtues.31
In
summary, just as in the natural order acquired prudence is the form of the
acquired moral virtues, because it sets up an order toward a particular end in
accordance with right reason; so in the supernatural order, charity is the form
of the theological virtues, of prudence, and of all the other moral virtues,
because it sets up a perfect order to the ultimate end of man. The precise
meaning of charity as form will be considered later. The point made at present
is that charity is the basis for the existence and growth of all the infused
moral virtues. Charity, in turn, is rooted in the life of sanctifying grace.32
As
has been seen already, the infused moral virtues cannot exist without infused
prudence, by which they are directed and regulated; and infused prudence is
dependent upon charity. One cannot have perfect rectitude concerning the means
to the end (infused prudence) unless one has perfect rectitude with regard to
the end itself (charity). Only charity perfectly rectifies the appetite in its
movement toward the supernatural end of man, toward which all the moral virtues
must be orientated. Therefore, the infused moral virtues and prudence cannot
exist without charity.
On
the other hand, charity cannot exist without the infused moral virtues.
Sanctifying grace and charity constitute one remote principle of supernatural
operations. But he who has supernatural life ought to have proximate principles
of operation, so as to perform supernatural acts. The infused moral virtues are
such proximate principles. They give one the power of choosing the necessary
means of reaching the supernatural end and of perfecting the different kinds of
supernatural good works. This is the very argument advanced earlier for the
existence of the infused moral virtues.33 It is seen, then, that the infused
moral virtues and charity are mutually interdependent as different potencies of
the state of sanctifying grace. Charity, however, remains the queen of all
virtues, moral and theological alike. This regal position of charity is
described technically by calling charity the extrinsic form of all the other
virtues, and this term will be given brief analysis.
a. Charity is the extrinsic form of all
the other virtues.
The
term extrinsic form means, not the intrinsic and essential form, by which the
virtue is set off in its species, but an accidental and extrinsic one. Since
charity perfects the other virtues by directing them to her own end, it is said
to be their form. It gives them their ultimate perfection as actions meriting
eternal life. As St. Thomas expresses the idea, that which gives to an act its
ordination to an end gives to it a form, and charity gives to all the acts of
all the other virtues their ordination to their ultimate end; hence, charity is
the form of all the other virtues.34 Without charity they would not be
perfect virtues. Nevertheless, the acquired moral virtues can exist in the soul
which does not possess charity. The person who commits a mortal sin still
retains natural moral virtues, and, on the other hand, the person who is
lacking in natural virtues can possess the state of grace, charity, and the
infused moral virtues.35
Since
later the relationship of charity to the natural virtues will be considered
again, it suffices here to say that charity is an extrinsic form in the sense
that she is the universal perfecting motive. She adds to the perfection of any
virtue her own crowning perfection. A heart at friends with God transmutes all
its actions into acts of love of God.
All
the virtuous acts of a heart at friends with God are dedicated to God, for the
heart which has given itself, how has it not given all that depends upon
itself? He that gives the tree without reserve, gives he not also the leaves,
flowers, and fruit?36
That
charity is the extrinsic form of the other virtues is common teaching. What is
controverted is the foundation of the relationship of dependence of the infused
moral virtues upon charity. Four opinions are held on this point. Brevity
demands that they be stated, and one chosen.
The
first opinion is that the connection between charity and the infused moral
virtues is of such a nature that once grace and charity are removed, these
virtues could not be conserved even by the absolute power of God. The second
view holds that the connection between charity and the infused moral virtues is
extrinsic, a law established by God determining their connection. The third
opinion claims that in the very nature of things charity and the infused moral
virtues depend upon grace, but there is not an essential relationship between
sanctifying grace and faith and hope. There is not any need to explain the
conservation of faith and hope in the soul of the man who has lost charity as
coming from a divine privilege. Finally, the fourth opinion states that all the
virtues, not excepting faith and hope, are by their very nature dependent upon
grace. If faith and hope are conserved without charity the sanctifying grace,
it is only because God has established it thus by extrinsic law.37
The
principal argument for the fourth opinion, defended by Mazzella, is that grace
is comparable to nature, and the infused virtues are properties emanating from
supernature. Another argument is from the fact of their connection in infusion
and in development to the conclusion that in their disappearance they will also
be connected, except for a special law of God.
Billot
defends the third opinion by a double argument:
(1) Faith and hope, considered in their
essence, do not depend upon the other virtues. Daily experience suffices to
show this.
(2) Although faith and hope are presupposed
for the act of charity, there is only an indirect relationship between these
virtues and the acts of charity. Faith shows forth the object of love, but
faith does not moderate the movement of love which carries us toward God.38
Billot
points out that only in two ways is it impossible for one virtue to be
conserved in its essence without the other—(a) because in its very notion it
depends upon the other; and (b) because by its nature it flows out of the other
virtue. But the relationships of faith and hope to the other infused virtues
involve neither of these two conditions. Therefore, they can exist separately
from these other virtues, but they cannot be in their perfect state without
charity, as has been discussed already in the previous section. It seems that
Billot has understood the statements of the Council of Trent in its sixth
session as forming a strong persuasion for the probability of his position.39
3. The theological virtues have no proper
medium, whereas the infused moral have a medium similar to that of the acquired
moral virtues.
Before
applying to the question under discussion the notion of medium it is necessary
to define and to distinguish the two types of media, medium rei and medium
rationis. A MEDIUM REI is a measure determined by the very nature of the thing,
so that it is always one, indivisible, and fixed, independently of place, time,
or person. A MEDIUM RATIONIS, on the other hand, is not fixed by the nature of
the thing, but is varied in accordance with the circumstances of time, place,
and person. It is determined by equitable judgment of reason, and not imposed
in a mathematical way by the demands of external reality. The medium of
justice, for example, is a medium rei. If I owe you five dollars, I cannot
change the nature of this medium by any amount of reasoning. If, on the other
hand, I should take an alcoholic beverage, the amount I take will depend upon a
prudent judgment of reason. What is moderate indulgence in alcoholic beverages
for one person may be excess for another. The medium will vary from one person
to another. Indeed for some individuals the medium rationis as far as alcohol
is concerned may dictate that none be taken. In short, the medium rationis is a
variable, and the medium rei is a constant.
Far
from being a merely arbitrary judgment, the medium rationis is a prudent
judgment which takes into consideration all the circumstances under which one
must make a decision. From experience it is known that human passions vary from
person to person, and so also will the medium rationis governing the exercise
of the moral virtues which regulate the passions, namely, the virtues of
fortitude and temperance. In both the natural and supernatural orders prudence
sets up the medium rationis in these areas, so that all the acts of temperance
and of fortitude may be directed toward the ends of charity, and will not
deviate from the medium rationis, either by defect or by excess.
It
is then by an interpretation less exact that one considers virtue itself in its
very essence to be a medium between two opposite vices. Such a notion can be
correct in regard to those virtues which have a medium rationis. Temperance,
for example, will lie midway between the excess of impurity and the defect of
insensibility, and fortitude will find a happy medium between timidity and
rashness. But one must not push this conception of the midpoint too far. There
are certain virtues which are not found midway between two vices, such as
commutative justice and magnanimity. As St. Thomas says of this latter virtue,
it is something extreme (extremum et maximum) when considered in itself,
although from its relationship to the circumstances which surround its
practice, it may be said to be in accordance with the medium of right reason.40
This
notion of medium is clarified by Gonet by a distinction. When the virtue itself
lies midway between two vices, as temperance does, the virtue is said to
constitute an essential medium between insensibility and impurity. But when the
virtue itself tends to a lawful extreme, as in the cases of magnanimity,
virginity, and poverty, then the medium is drawn from a consideration of the
object of the virtue and the acts of the virtue, and this medium is called a
causal medium.41 The acts of magnanimity must be in
accordance with the norms of prudence and charity to remain virtuous. Reason
sets up the time and the proper place for such acts, and charity motivates
them. If, on the other hand, the hilarity of intoxication is the circumstance
of a man's generosity, it is no longer a virtue, but the vice of prodigality;
again, if his sole motivation is to win votes for the coming election, his
apparent generosity is a species of social bribe. The same principles hold for
the virtues of virginity and poverty, which by their very nature tend toward
legitimate extremes in accordance with counsels found in Divine Revelation.
But
if these two virtues are motivated by some illicit superstition or by vain
glory, they will be excesses; or if their acts are omitted when they ought to
be placed, they will be defects. The religious, for example, who fails to take
proper care of his clothes, fails against the virtue of poverty by defect. And
so on. In short, whenever we say that all moral virtues consist in a medium, we
mean a causal medium.
In
regard to the application of the notion of medium to the virtue of justice,
several points may be made. As already stated, the medium of justice is a
medium rei. It is determined by the nature of the debt which is due to another,
and not by the circumstances of personality variations, as in the case of
temperance with its medium rationis. Still, the acts of justice involve to some
extent a medium rationis; for, just like the acts of the other moral virtues,
the acts of justice should be regulated by right reason. An individual could
fulfill the obligation of restitution and satisfy the precept of justice, and
yet fail to perform an act of justice because of the peculiar circumstances
under which he paid the debt; for example, if his payment of the debt deprived
his own children of things which they needed very badly at the moment while
giving no great benefit to the creditor, or if his indiscretion caused him to
lose his own reputation for honesty. From this it is clear that justice differs
from the other virtues in possessing both a medium rei and a medium rationis.
The
other point concerning justice is that its just mean is not midway between two
vices. If I owe someone one hundred dollars, and I pay him one hundred fifty
dollars, that is not excess; it is better called generosity. Again, the virtue
of social justice has the common good for its object, consisting in group
activity to effect necessary economic and social reforms in the community. It
is difficult to see how social justice can have an excess, yet easy to
understand how many actions would be defective when judged by its norms, as
enunciated in the papal encyclicals of Leo XIII, Pius XI, and Pius XII.42
The
theological virtues do not admit any medium from the point of view of their
object, which is the God of Revelation. While one may sin by defect, one cannot
sin by excess concerning the object of the theological virtues. One cannot
really believe in God, hope in God, or love God to excess. The measure of our
love for God is to love Him without measure, says St. Bernard. Far from seeking
a medium in the object, the theological virtues tend toward the summit. But
from the viewpoint of the subject who practices the virtue, these virtues do
admit of a medium, and of reprehensible excesses. In the language of St.
Thomas, these virtues ought to be exercised according "to the measure of
our condition."43
On
the basis of this distinction the Angelic Doctor solves the problems which hope
presents, standing as it does between the opposite sins of presumption and
despair, as well as the problems concerning points of Divine Faith, which are
found very often to lie midway between two heresies. While it is true that one cannot
hope too much in God, he may expect from God a good which exceeds his
condition, as, for example, to possess the special graces given to the Blessed
Virgin Mary; or he may despair of obtaining the graces of repentance, for which
he could hope in accordance with his condition. Similarly, faith is a medium
between contrary heresies, not because of its relationship to Infinite Revealed
Truth, which is its object, but simply because a true human judgment holds the
middle position between contrary fallacies.44
At
times, also, one may be required to refrain from the external act of
supernatural charity because infused prudence dictates that the time is not
opportune. Here infused prudence sets up a just medium for the external act of
charity, not because of the object of charity, but because of the subject who
should exercise the highest of the virtues in accordance with the norms of
infused prudence. In conclusion, the notion of a medium applies only in a very
analogical way to the theological virtues. It applies most completely to those
virtues which regulate human passions, so that man may act in a human way; and,
consequently, it is very important in all the species of temperance and
fortitude.
The
fact that the number of the theological virtues is determined and the number of
the infused is indefinite is a point of no particular importance for the investigation of the infused moral
virtues. From the comparison with the theological virtues one notes that the
in-fused moral have this in common with the theological: Both types of virtue
are infused directly by God, and both have the species of perfect
virtue only when charity is their extrinsic form. They differ from each other
as regards their immediate objects, the theological having
God in His intimate life, and the infused moral, creatures, insofar as they
lead the soul to God. Likewise, they differ from each other in their dependence
upon charity. Faith and hope can exist without charity, but the infused moral
virtues are inseparable from charity. Finally, they differ from each other
because the theological have no proper medium, and the infused moral virtues
usually do.
B.
Relationship to Acquired Moral Virtues
While
the comparison between the theological and infused moral virtues aids the mind
to discern more clearly the nature of the infused moral, it seems that the
additional comparative analysis of the acquired moral virtues and the infused
moral virtues will prove more fruitful to our purpose. First, it is necessary
to understand how these two different types of virtues fulfill the notion of
habit in the strict sense, and then to discern how both sets fulfill the notion
of virtue, precisely as virtue.
1.
Basic Difference between Acquired and Infused Moral Rests in Notion of Habit.
The
acquired moral habits are habits in the strict sense, whereas the infused moral
virtues are habits only in an analogous sense. Acquired moral virtues come by
way of repetition of good acts; and the very repetition of such good acts
produces facility in the performance of the same. This is not true of the
infused moral virtues which are infused directly into the soul of God, and,
hence, of themselves, do not produce any facility for their continued
operation. The point of difference between the two kinds of virtues is so
important that it will be well to consider in some detail the notion of
facility.
In
his treatment of facility in the moral virtues, Coerver defines this quality as
"a readiness or promptitude of action, a tendency to repeat the same
action constantly, easily, and almost unconsciously. It is in this sense that
we say a certain individual has 'facility in speech,' 'facility in writing,'
and so on."45
The
trained athlete, for example, performs his feats with an ease and smoothness
that makes the action look easy. But whence comes this facility? Is it purely
from nature, or does it come from the constant repetition of similar acts?
Skilled habits of speech, sport, or music may be rooted in nature, but they are
perfected by the repetition of similar acts. The same thing is true of acquired
moral virtues, according to St. Thomas.46 Facility comes primarily from
practice and not from nature, although nature might confer more fitness toward
one natural habit than toward another. Indeed, in cases where no native ability
seemed to be present, habits have been formed by much repetition; and this
tends to prove that natural habits spring more from the exercise of certain
similar acts than from nature.
It
is common experience to meet with difficulties in the formation of some habit,
such as driving a car, learning to play golf, or reading a foreign language;
but with practice it becomes easier, and with more practice, it becomes easy.
Can it be said then that the acquired moral virtues confer the same sort of
ease and readiness of action which is afforded by natural physical habits?
Since the acquired moral virtues are habits in the strict sense, then they are
governed by the same psychological laws. The practice of the acquired virtues
will follow the principles of natural habits. By frequent repetition the acquired
virtues dispose the person to perform their acts easily and readily.
"Operations proceeding from habit are pleasurable, and they are used promptly,
and exercised easily."47
But
there is one difference between the acquired moral virtues and natural physical
habits. Because of the effects of original sin, one may encounter more
difficulty in acquiring a moral virtue than in acquiring some natural physical
habit more in agreement with man's natural dispositions. Nevertheless, despite
the difficulties which often are found in the formation of habits of natural
virtue, many practice these virtues to an eminent degree with readiness and
ease. In short, it is readily observable that acquired virtues confer a certain
facility of action. Can the same truth be affirmed of the infused moral
virtues?
The
theologians who affirm the existence of the infused moral virtues teach that
these virtues dispose the faculties of the soul to a new and supernatural mode
of operation. Technically, it is said that the infused virtues confer the
"posse" of supernatural action. But besides the "posse" of
supernatural action, do the infused moral virtues confer a facility of action
as well? In line with our definition of facility, do the infused moral virtues,
when once received, make it easy for the person to perform the acts of these
virtues promptly and readily?
The
theologians commonly assert that the infused moral virtues per se confer no
facility of action in the sense defined. If the infused moral virtues confer a
facility of action, there should be greater facility in those persons who have
these virtues in a more intense degree than in those who either do not have
them or who possess them in a less intense degree. Experience does not seem to
confirm this. One meets individuals who are daily communicants and yet do not
seem to possess the virtue of fortitude in any high degree; at least, it is not
apparent in their very timid approach to daily problems. Granted, each time
they receive an increase of sanctifying grace, they grow in sanctifying grace,
charity, and all the other infused virtues, including the infused virtue of
fortitude. But they may act like veritable neurasthenics when confronted with
problems of ordinary difficulty in daily life, while others who do not possess
such a fund of the infused virtues manifest the natural virtue of fortitude in
a higher degree when faced with still greater problems. Examples can be
multiplied to show that mere possession of the infused moral virtues does not
mean facility in the practice thereof.
A
comparison between seminarians who have ready access to the sacraments, the
most powerful means of increasing the infused moral virtues, and people in the
world who lack such opportunity, tends to show that practice of virtue makes
virtue itself much stronger. This observation seems to extend not only to the
natural moral virtues, but also to their supernatural counterparts, and most
particularly to the various forms of fortitude. If facility is present, it
seems that it is due to the per accidens formation of the corresponding natural
virtue.
Mazzella
illustrates this position with an example of a man in the state of grace who
performs heroic acts of virtue and gains supernatural merit for himself. This means
an intensification in the degree of the infused moral virtues. Suppose now this
same man falls into the state of mortal sin, and remains in this state for a
long time. He practices vice so assiduously that he loses all his acquired
virtues. By a miracle of grace he returns to confession and to the state of
sanctifying grace. According to the doctrine of revival of merit, he recovers
the same degree of grace and of the infused virtues which he had before his
fall from grace. But, as experience testifies, he feels the same difficulty in
practicing virtue after justification as he had suffered before he came back to
confession. The psychological effects of sin are still tugging at him.48
He possesses the infused virtues, to be sure, but he does not possess facility
in their natural counterparts. The reformed alcoholic will attest that the
possession of the infused virtue of temperance does not make the practice of
the natural virtue of sobriety easy immediately after reform, or, for that
matter, at any time later. And even if the practice of total temperance does
become slightly easier with the years, one may question the source of this
limited facility. Is it the direct result of the infused virtue of temperance,
or of its natural counterpart, gradually formed by constant abstention?
Again,
if the infused moral virtues gave one a greater facility in action, then with
every increase in sanctifying grace, one would acquire in equal measure a
greater facility in the practice of all the moral virtues. Experience does not
seem to bear this out. From these considerations Mazzella draws the conclusion
that the infused moral virtues do not confer facility of action.49
To
these arguments Coerver adds another argument based upon experience. Hardly can
the infused moral virtues confer facility in action, because many individuals
find themselves confessing the same venial sins week after week, month after
month, with apparently no progress. They have increased in the infused moral
virtues, but they have not increased in the ease with which they practice some
of them.50
In short, an experimental comparison of the effects of the acquired moral
virtues with the infused virtues will indicate that the acquired moral virtues
bestow upon the person a certain ease and readiness in repeating the acts of
the virtue. The same cannot be said of the infused moral virtues.
Gregory
of Valencia seems to deviate from this opinion, because he makes a distinction
between the kind of facility conferred by the acquired and infused virtues. He
seems to be the only theologian who attributes a strict facility of action to
the infused moral virtues.51
While
the theologians agree that the infused moral virtues do not confer facility in
action, they are not in agreement as to whether the infused moral virtues
confer any kind of facility. Some theologians answer this question by
establishing a distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic facility. By
intrinsic facility they mean that the infused virtues produce a certain
intrinsic strengthening of the faculties and the intrinsic inclination to acts
of virtue. But these same theologians do not admit that the infused moral
virtues confer extrinsic facility in the sense of actual ease and readiness in
the extrinsic acts of virtue. They point out that extrinsic facility is
produced only by the removal of impediments, and the discipline of the
faculties through repeated acts of virtue; and, consequently, extrinsic facility
is achieved only through the acquired virtues. Already in Suarez this
distinction is found.52
In
his explanation of the difference between extrinsic and intrinsic facility,
Suarez points out that intrinsic facility inclines the virtue in which it
resides to place its act. The virtues are as certain weights inclining their
potencies to their acts. In this way they give intrinsic facility, as we have
said concerning the theological virtues. But they do not give an extrinsic
facility, because the contrary difficulties come either from natural ignorance,
or inconsideration, or from concupiscence or the corruptibility of the body;
these impediments are not removed by the infused virtues.53
This
viewpoint of Suarez is accepted substantially by both the Salmanticenses and
Gonet.54
According to Mazzella, however, the distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic
facility is useless, because it identifies intrinsic facility with the
supernatural "posse" which the infused virtues confer upon the
faculties for placing acts on the supernatural level. Since all the theologians
admit that the infused virtues bestow "posse," then the use of the
term intrinsic facility is but a new name for an old idea.55
It
would seem, however, that there is a basis for the distinction between
intrinsic and extrinsic facility. The very fact that each increase in
sanctifying grace, and consequent growth in the infused virtues, must
strengthen the will to seek the good of virtue in a general way, means that the
subject would receive some increase in his disposition towards acts of virtue
as well. Perhaps the opposition of lower nature and various impediments may
prevent this facility from becoming extrinsic, but it does not mean that it is
nonexistent. A virtue may have grown within the soul without the mind being
aware of it, because the virtue may seem to be in practice just as difficult as
ever. A person who is waging a successful battle against the recurrence of an
impure habit may not be aware of any growth in the infused habit of chastity,
but growth there has been just the same. And this growth is more than mere
potency. It amounts to a positive inclination toward chastity that was not
previously present but without the added quality of ease that is characteristic
of extrinsic facility. As previously quoted from Suarez, the infused virtues
are as weights which incline the potencies to their acts.56
While
the infused moral virtues may be said to confer intrinsic facility, the work of
the acquired moral virtues is necessary to render this facility extrinsic, and,
as it were, operative. The acquired moral virtues remove impediments and
overcome the resistance of the passions. Both orders of virtue are necessary.
Without the practice of the acquired moral virtues, the intrinsic facility of
the infused moral virtues remain imperceptible as far as practice goes.
The
contribution of the acquired moral virtues to the infused moral virtues is to
render the infused more operative and more secure. This point is developed
further by Cardinal Billot, who goes to the heart of the problem with his
analysis of the nature of the infused moral virtues. He teaches that the
infused virtues are habits, not in an univocal, but in an analogous sense. They
share in both the nature of potency and of habit. They are potentiae, because
they enable man to act according to that superior nature of which he is made a
partaker of grace. Before man receives the infused virtues, he can act
supernaturally only by the transient motion of actual grace, but after the
infusion of the virtues he has an operative and permanent faculty of placing
supernatural acts. In this sense the infused virtues confer a posse of
supernatural action. In addition, the infused virtues participate of the nature
of habits, inasmuch as they are qualities modifying already existing potencies.
From these premises Billot concludes that the proximate principle of a super natural
act is not the infused virtue, but the natural faculty as informed by the
infused virtue.57
On
the question of facility Billot teaches that such is more than a simple posse;
it is a positive inclination of the faculty to those things which pertain to
the virtue. He explains how this inclination may take two diverse forms:
(1) an adherence to the good, which is the
object of virtue;
(2) an inclination to the ACTS of the
virtue.
These
two inclinations are so distinct that the first can be had without the second,
and the second is not always in proportion to the first. In short, facility can
be directed toward the object itself, namely, virtue, or facility can be
directed to the ACTS, which lead to that object.68 Billot clarifies his meaning
by an example.59 Suppose two men were in poor health.
One man has a very strong desire to be healthy, but he has an aversion for the
medicines which are conducive to his wellbeing. The second man has no special
desire to regain health, but at the same time he experiences no particular
difficulty in taking medicines, because he has acquired a ready disposition in
their use. From one point of view, the first man is better disposed than the
second, because his very great desire for health will prompt him to take
medicines in spite of his natural aversion toward them; but from another point
of view the second man is better disposed, because he finds it easy to accept
the means which lead to health.
From
the application of this analogy we arrive at Billot's notions about facility.
The infused moral virtues confer the first kind of facility, because they
impart a strong inclination and tendency toward a life of virtue in general.
But they do not bestow the second kind of facility, because they do not destroy
evil inclinations and they do not incline their recipient to the prompt and
ready practice of virtue. Only by the practice of the acquired moral virtues
are passions brought under control and a prompt and ready exercise of difficult
duties achieved. Still, it cannot be denied that the infused moral virtues
confer a special inclination to the good which is their object; and this
inclination is facility in the broad sense, or intrinsic facility. It should be
noted, however, that Billot himself does not use the terms intrinsic and
extrinsic facility. Yet the writer feels that Billot's facility in the broad
sense is equivalent to intrinsic facility.
Another
approach to the probability of intrinsic facility is found in the following
consideration. If the infused moral virtues did not confer any facility at all,
then one would be forced to admit also that a person who lived continually in
the state of grace would fall a victim to sin just as readily as the
unregenerate man, presupposing both to have the same degree of acquired virtue
and to be subject to the same temptation. Are we willing to hold that the
regenerate man possesses no more facility for the practice of virtue than the
unregenerate man, all other things being equal?
Two
points stand out clearly in the discussion so far: (1) Per se, the infused
moral virtues do not confer facility in the ordinary sense, i.e., a promptness
and readiness to acts of virtue; and (2) the infused moral virtues do confer
some sort of intrinsic facility, however imperceptible this may be. It may be
that in some individual cases God does bestow facility of action along with the
infused moral virtue; but in His ordinary Providence, which is our ordinary
experience, He does not give by infusion what man can acquire by his own
natural activity. It seems that human diligence plays an important role in the development
of the life of virtue, and that facility in the practice of virtue will come
only in proportion to personal striving. This raises the next question of the
theologians: May not facility in action be attached accidentally to the infused
moral virtues?
Suarez
points to two possible sources to account for such facility:
(1) By the repetition of supernatural acts
of the infused virtues other habits are acquired: and
(2) By the repetition of natural habits of
virtue which are elicited in regard to the same matter as infused habits,
natural habits result.60
There
is a clear distinction between these two kinds of acquired habits. The first
type proceeds directly from repeated acts of the infused virtues, while the
second type proceeds directly from repeated acts of natural virtue, which are
connected with the infused virtues only inasmuch as both have the same material
object. According to the first theory, an acquired habit of justice would
result directly from repeated acts of the infused virtue of justice; according
to the second theory, an acquired habit of justice would result from repeated
acts of natural justice, and the acquired habit would be connected with the
infused habit only insofar as it had the same material object. Both these
possibilities must be investigated to arrive at some theory concerning the
source of facility in the infused moral virtues.
Perhaps
some light might be thrown on the discussion were we to consider first the following
question: "Can the repetition of purely natural acts, elicited in regard
to the same matter as that of the infused virtues, effect a natural habit which
will in some measure facilitate the practice of the infused virtues?"61
In the concrete, will the newly baptized pagan who has practiced the natural
habit of temperance for purely natural motives find easier the practice of his
infused habit of the same virtue precisely because he has acquired already the
natural virtue?
Suarez
comments on this question by affirming that such acquired habits do not aid per
se in the placing of infused acts; still, they do aid per accidens by inclining
the faculty to similar acts of the same general type, by removing impediments,
by moderating the affections, and by excluding habits, which are repugnant to
virtue.62
Agreeing with Suarez, Ripalda makes the point that a will which easily and
promptly exercises natural acts of love brings this same facility to operation
in making supernatural acts of love.63 Although elevated to the supernatural
order, the faculty retains its natural dispositions and aptitudes; and, since
in this case the will already has an aptitude for acts of love, this facility
is retained in the supernatural order. Grace perfects but does not change
nature, and the natural inclination to love is now directed toward a more
exalted object.
Most
theologians, moreover, seem to concede some communication of facility from the
acquired to the infused virtues. Cajetan, Mazzella, and Billot all favor this
view.64
Reason and experience seem to confirm this view. The pagan, for example, who
has practiced certain natural virtues over a long period of time will find the
practice of the supernatural virtues which correspond to his acquired virtues
to be easier; and it seems that this facility is a sort of transference from
his previously acquired facility in the natural virtues. The greater the degree
of natural virtue, the greater his facility in the practice of the infused
virtues. On the other hand, the lesser the degree of natural virtue possessed,
the more difficulty he will face in the practice of the infused virtues. From
this it follows that the development of the acquired virtues is very conducive
to facility in the practice of the infused moral virtues.
Of
course, the natural virtues cannot positively dispose one to the positing of a
supernatural act; and the infused virtues remain more noble than the natural
virtues, as shall be explained later. Still, the acquired virtues contribute to
the practice of the corresponding infused virtues a certain facility. This
brings us to the next question: Do repeated acts of the infused virtues produce
facility in the practice of the same virtues? Another way of expressing the
same question would be to ask: Can the facility which is experienced in the
infused virtues be entirely accounted for simply by having recourse to the
concomitance of natural acts of the acquired virtues? Theologians like Suarez,
John of St. Thomas, Billuart, Ripalda, Mazzella, and Billot think that there is
another kind of facility in the infused virtues which comes properly from the
repetition of supernatural acts of these virtues.65
Let
us take the case of a man who does not have the natural habit of temperance.
Having made a good confession and received absolution, he begins to practice
supernatural acts of infused temperance. He corresponds with the grace of God,
and he repeats many such acts. Thereby he acquires facility of action; and this
facility will increase with the multiplication of acts of the infused virtue of
temperance. Hardly would this facility seem to proceed from the acquired habit
of temperance, because this man never practiced natural acts of temperance, as
such. Hence it would seem that facility in this case can be attributed solely
to repeated supernatural acts of the infused virtues placed after he had
attained to the state of grace. Now a similar situation could be described in
the case of another individual who was given over to the habit of impurity. He
never had the natural virtue of continence; but he received the infused virtue
of chastity when he came into the state of grace; and he repeated acts of the
same virtue, thereby gaining facility.
Such
a history could exist in regard to any of the moral virtues; and, therefore, it
seems that some facility of action seems to arise from repeated acts of the
infused virtues. On this point the theologians are in agreement. The problem,
however, is to account for this facility, and in their explanations the
theologians split up into five different groups. The real point of controversy
seems to be whether or not supernatural acts of the infused virtues produce any
natural acquired habits. If it can be shown that repeated acts of the infused
virtues produce such a habit, then the problem is solved.
Medina
holds that through repeated acts of the infused virtues, no acquired habits are
acquired. But he gives no satisfactory explanation of the facility of the
infused virtues. Suarez develops the same line of argumentation by
distinguishing the objects of natural and supernatural habits. The objects of
supernatural acts are supernatural; the objects of natural acts are natural;
consequently, natural habits have no aptitude for supernatural objects.66
Gregory
Valentia, De Lugo, Mazzella, and Pierse agree in large measure with the
position of Suarez.67 Mazzella draws upon several
quotations from the works of St. Thomas to buttress his position: The source of
facility in the infused virtues may be attributed partially to the grace of
God, but it is to be attributed especially to the disposition of the subject
whereby the impediments to virtue are removed. The constant exercise of the
infused virtues serves to moderate the passions, to remove difficulties, and to
expel prejudice and ignorance. This renders the subject prompt in the practice
of the infused virtues.
But
this facility will be supernatural tantum secundum quid, because it presupposes
the existence of supernatural acts.68 The supernatural acts achieve what
natural acts could achieve, that is to say, the supernatural acts produce a
certain bent or facility in the practice of virtue. This means that facility in
the infused virtues comes per se from the grace of God; and per accidens from
the repetition of acts of the infused virtues whereby obstacles are removed and
a certain supernatural bent is established in the faculty.
As
the school of Suarez and Mazzella denies that facility in the infused virtues
comes from any acquired habit, the followers of Louis Molina affirm that
repeated acts of the infused virtues generate a natural habit which is
responsible for the facility which is experienced in the practice of the
infused virtues.69 Since Cardinal Billot is one of the
most vigorous proponents of this opinion, it will be profitable to consider
some of the arguments which he expounds in its favor and against the various
other schools.
Repeated
acts of the infused virtues produce acquired natural habits. This assertion is
proven from universal experience, according to Billot. The Saints, for example,
advanced in the practice of the infused virtues, because they exercised the
acts of the virtues constantly and strenuously. Again, it is known that certain
Saints had a special facility in virtues upon which they concentrated in
practice. There is no way of explaining this fact, unless one is willing to
admit that by the repetition of acts of the infused virtues there is produced
an acquired, natural habit whereby the passions are moderated, and the
faculties are disciplined more and more in the practice of the infused virtues.70
In
attacking the position of Suarez and Mazzella, namely, that facility in the
infused virtues comes per accidens from the moderation of the passions and the
removal of obstacles, Billot points out that such cannot be accomplished
without at the same time producing a positive inclination to acts of virtue. To
hold that repeated acts of the infused virtues effect the moderation of the
passions and the removal of impediments to virtue is tantamount to the
assertion that such repeated acts generate a positive acquired habit inclining
the faculties to acts of infused virtues. Furthermore, Billot answers the
difficulty of Suarez in regard to the manner in which acts of the infused
virtues can produce an acquired natural habit by drawing a distinction between
the substance of a supernatural act and its supernatural mode of operation.
The
substance of the supernatural act entails all those functions which are common
to any act, either natural or supernatural; considered in this way, the
substance of a supernatural act, in itself, is indifferent to a natural or a
supernatural determination. The supernatural mode of operation is that
formality which orientates the act to its entitative supernatural perfection.
This distinction between the substance and the mode of a supernatural act is
found only in those acts whose objects are able to be attained both by the
natural faculty in itself and by the natural faculty elevated to the supernatural
order by the infused virtues.71 Since acts of the moral virtues can
be either natural or supernatural, however, this distinction may be used.
Billot
reasons from this position to the conclusion that the supernatural act quoad
substantiam has the same reason of tendency to its object as a natural act
which is elicited solely from the powers of nature. If, then, by the repetition
of supernatural acts of the infused virtues the faculty is exercised along
exactly the same lines as it would be exercised by natural acts, it follows
that the natural faculty will be stamped by a propensity which inclines it to
similar acts of virtue. This propensity is nothing else but the facility which
flows from an acquired natural habit.72
It
should be noted that Billot follows Molina in two points:
(1) "In the production of a supernatural
act, all those causes concur which produce a natural act." 73
(2) A natural act is virtually contained in
every supernatural act of virtue.74 The second point provokes the
question: How is the natural act virtually contained in the supernatural act?
Billot answers that an act can be virtually contained in another act according
to the manner in which the perfections of animality are said to be contained in
man, because in man, elevated to his superior condition, there is still
contained univocally his formal nature of animal rationale. It is in this way
that the natural act is virtually contained in the supernatural act and tends
toward the same object, even though the supernatural act is raised
ontologically to a higher order, and is elicited from the power of a new
nature, sanctifying grace.75
Natural
acquired habits, then, can be generated by supernatural acts of the infused
virtues, for the natural act is virtually contained in the supernatural act of
virtue. These acquired natural habits which are produced by supernatural acts
follow all the rules for acquired habits produced by natural acts in regard to
their increase, diminution and corruption. They will be increased by an
increase of the infused acts, and diminished by a decrease in the same. But
they will not be destroyed by one contrary act. Although the infused virtues
are lost by mortal sin, the acquired habits produced by acts of these virtues
will remain in the soul, conferring their facility towards natural acts and
also to supernatural acts, presupposing the help of actual grace.76
After
examining the apparently adverse quotations from St. Thomas cited by Mazzella,
Billot goes on to use St. Thomas to confirm his own position.77
Why does St. Thomas affirm that the infused virtues do not afford pleasure in
the beginning, unless he takes it for granted that delectation does follow
later on as a result of repeated acts of the infused virtue? And how can this
pleasure, or exercise of facility, follow from repeated acts, unless it comes
as a result of an acquired habit whereby the faculty is disposed favorably to
prompt and ready placing of acts of the infused virtues? These two questions
should be pondered in considering the quotation from St. Thomas:
It
is to be said that in the beginning the infused virtue does not always remove
the inclination of the passions as does the acquired virtue, and, for this
reason, the infused virtue does not proceed pleasantly in the beginning.78
In
support of the position of Cardinal Billot, Merkelbach affirms that a natural
act is virtually contained in every supernatural act of virtue, and that an
acquired natural habit is generated by repeated acts of the infused virtues.79
Another
opinion explaining the facility of the infused moral virtues is so similar to
that of Billot that it shall be stated without much comment. Developed by John
of St. Thomas, Gonet, Billuart, and Schiffini, this theory holds that repeated
supernatural acts of the infused virtues generate a natural acquired habit, not
formally and directly, but dispositively, that is to say, the repetition of
acts of the infused virtues dispose the potency toward acquiring a natural
habit of the same virtues. Constant exercise of the infused virtues leaves its
traces in the faculties, particularly in memory; and these impressions dispose
the subject to the exercise of virtue.80
The
above opinion, and that of Billot, must answer the objection of Suarez to the
effect that if you grant the assertion that supernatural acts of the infused
virtues generate an acquired habit, then you are forced by logic to the
admission that supernatural habits could elicit natural acts; and this would be
false.81
Billot
answers that there is a difference between the mode in which acts flow from a
habit, and the mode in which a habit is caused by repeated acts. It is conceded
that from a supernatural habit there cannot flow directly any natural act. But
if the act does not flow from the habit, then the act is not caused by the habit,
but by the faculty not using the habit. This is entirely different from the
manner in which a habit is produced by repeated acts. A habit is caused by
repeated acts in the measure that the operative faculty receives the act and
its impression. This is but an application of the general principle: Quidquid
recipitur, secundum modum recipientis recipitur. It is the nature of wax to
receive the impression of a seal, and this it does without regard to whether
the instrument used to impress the seal is of gold, silver, or copper.
Likewise, supernatural acts do not leave the impression of their
supernaturality upon the faculty, because it is not the nature of the faculty
to receive any supernatural disposition, unless according to its obediential
capacity, which can be reduced to act by God alone.82
It
is according to the nature of the faculty to receive impressions according to
its nature; and, since supernatural acts impress the faculty in the same way as
natural acts, they dispose and facilitate the natural faculty toward repeated
similar acts; and in this way supernatural acts generate an acquired natural
habit in the faculty.83 Billot explains also what the
acquired habit contributes to the infused virtue. The proximate principle of a
meritorious act is not only the infused virtue, but also the natural faculty,
insofar as it was informed by the infused virtue. In the beginning of the
supernatural act the infused virtue elevates the faculty simpliciter, for the
faculty is not yet accustomed to the practice of virtue. But after repeated supernatural
acts of the infused virtues, the faculty becomes disciplined and ready for the
practice of virtue by reason of its NATURALLY ACQUIRED HABIT OF FACILITY, so
that now, not only the faculty, but the faculty along with its acquired
facility is elevated to the supernatural order. Hence, the natural acquired
habit does add something to supernatural acts, namely, a mode of facility.
To
the objection that his system confuses the orders of nature and grace, Billot
replies that some divorce the orders because of their fear of Pelagianism. In
reality, nature is the fundament of grace. Billot refers to St. Thomas' dictum
that certain persons are disposed "by a proper disposition of the body to
chastity, meekness, and to other virtues of this kind."84
From this allusion Billot formulates the challenging question: "If such
natural dispositions of the body are helpful to us in the arduous way of the
supernatural virtues, will not the inclinations acquired by the exercise of
these virtues be of similar assistance to us?"85
After
comparing the opinions of Suarez and Billot, the writer is inclined to favor
the position of Billot. There is no need to have recourse to the supernatural
when a satisfactory natural explanation can be found for some particular fact.
Now the fact that a certain facility flows from repeated acts of the infused
virtues is obvious; and it seems that such can be explained in a natural way:
The repetition of the infused acts forms a natural acquired habit. If grace perfects
nature, why should not an acquired habit be developed from repeated acts of the
infused virtues? On the other hand, to attribute facility to the grace of God
seems unnecessary, since a sufficient natural explanation can be worked out. In
short, the infused moral virtues per se make supernatural acts possible, but they
do not make these acts easy. "Ease and readiness in the performance of
such acts will come only in direct proportion to the efforts which we expend in
cooperating with the means provided by nature and grace."86
2.
Other Differences between Acquired and Infused Virtues.
Once
one has pondered the difference between the infused virtues and the natural
virtues from the point of view of facility, other points of distinction are
discerned at the same time. The natural virtues are perfected by repetition, whereas
the infused moral are increased by each influx of sanctifying grace; the
acquired are lost by nonuse, or the acquisition of the contrary vice, while the
infused moral are lost only by mortal sin. Of themselves, the natural virtues
perfect man in the way of natural goodness and happiness; on the other hand,
the supernatural virtues perfect man in the pursuit of his ultimate goal, the
beatific vision of God. It should be noted, however, that the acts of the
natural virtues can be directed by charity to the supernatural end.87
Indeed the natural virtues will not be present in a perfect state without
charity.88
Finally,
the most obvious difference between the infused and the natural virtues is
found in their very nature. The infused virtue is something supernatural,
impossible to acquire by purely human effort, infused directly by God. The
acquired virtue is something natural, per se acquired by repetition, and only
per accidens infused by God. The infused virtue seeks a bonum which is
presented by a human reason enlightened by faith and motivated by charity; the
natural, or acquired, virtue seeks a bonum which is determined by the light of
human reason alone. St. Thomas illustrates this distinction:
Thus,
the object of temperance is a good in respect of the pleasures connected with
the concupiscence of touch. The formal aspect of this object is from reason
which fixes the mean in these concupiscences; while the material element is
something on the part of the concupiscences. Now it is evident that the mean
that is appointed in such like concupiscences according to the rule of human
reason is seen under a different aspect from the mean which is fixed according
to the Divine rule. For instance, in the consumption of food, the mean fixed by
human reason is that food should not harm the health of the body, nor hinder
the use of reason; whereas, according to the Divine rule, it behooves man to
chastise his body and bring it into subjection (1 Cor. 9:27) by abstinence in
food, drink, and the like. It is therefore evident that infused and acquired
temperance differ in species; and the same applies to the other virtues.89
By
way of summary, then, the infused virtues differ from the acquired in the
following respects. They differ in their formal objects and acts; and,
therefore, they differ, not merely quoad modum, but also quoad speciem. They
differ in their efficient causality. Again, the medium of reason illumined by
faith is different from the medium of unaided reason. And, from the point of
view of practice, most significantly they differ in the manner in which they
fulfill the cognate notions of habit and facility.
I V. Application of
Previous Discussion to Practical Problems
A. Temperance
It
is meaningful that, despite the differences between the infused and the
acquired virtues, St. Thomas always presents these virtues, "not as
opposed, but as complementary to one another."90 The above
quotation from St. Thomas on the virtue of temperance bears Out this truth. The
motive proposed for natural temperance is the health of the body, while the
incentive for the supernatural virtue is the fuller life of grace through the
mortification of the body. The two motives complement one another, and they
should be presented together to individuals who have difficulties practicing
the various species of temperance, especially sobriety, and chastity.
The
member of Alcoholics Anonymous, for example, who adds to the practice of the
twelve points the frequent reception of the sacraments increases not only in
the natural virtue of sobriety, but also in the supernatural virtues of
temperance and charity. While he gains greater facility in the practice of
certain forms of mortification conducive to sobriety, he deepens his motivation
for the practice of infused temperance. Charity is the universal motive for all
the virtues, and with each increase of sanctifying grace through the reception
of the sacraments there is an increase of charity, and this growing charity
makes him more desirous to remain sober and more diligent in the practice of
the natural acts of sobriety. Considering the chronic failures of the past, it
is not too much to say that, unless the infused virtues of charity and
temperance are present in the soul of the reformed alcoholic, the dangers of
relapse are great.
From the
psychological point of view the life of grace and the infused virtues supplies
in the soul of the A.A. member a powerful motivation for all the practices
which help to keep the member free of his former enslavement. Grace complements
nature.
In
regard to the virtue of chastity, moreover, the question may be posed: What
elements make chastity stronger? Is it the mere repetition of natural acts of
modesty, and of emotional selfcontrol? Or is it a dynamically growing
motivation of supernatural charity? Granted that both factors are important,
which is basic? The positive motivation of charity is more basic to the
practice of chastity than the practice of various natural safeguards; indeed,
charity is the best incentive for the repetition of acts of modesty, of
moderation in the use of food and drink, and of the various other practices
necessary for the preservation and growth of chastity.
A
certain facility may be acquired in the practice of these auxiliary virtues,
and it may render the practice of chastity itself facile. On the other hand,
failure to practice the mortification of the senses and imagination usually
renders the practice of chastity difficult. The infused virtue is endangered,
because the individual fails to acquire facility in the practice of what may be
termed natural preservatives of chastity.
Chastity
grows, not so much with repetition of similar acts of restraint, as with
supernatural acts of love of God. The point which Pius XII makes concerning
supernatural virginity applies, mutatis mutandis, to all the species of
chastity:
It
is nothing else but love of Him that sweetly constrains the virgin to
consecrate her body and soul entirely to her Divine Redeemer. . . . Certainly
it is the love of Christ that urges a virgin to retire behind convent walls and
remain there all her life, in order to contemplate and love the heavenly Spouse
more easily and without hindrance; certainly it is the same love that strongly
inspires her to spend her life and strength in works of mercy for the sake of
her neighbor.91
Notice
that the practice of such virginity is rendered more facile either by the
contemplative life of the cloister or the apostolate of works of charity. Those
practicing other forms of chastity can make it easier by similar works
adaptable to their condition. The infused virtue of chastity, however, differs
from the other infused moral virtues as far as facility is concerned. A
baptized child who has practiced supernatural justice constantly through his
formative years will acquire an acquired habit of justice which will render the
fulfillment of adult duties of justice easy. But can the same truth be affirmed
of the child who has remained chaste through the latency period of life up to
the time of adolescence? Can he be said to have acquired a natural habit of
chastity which will render the practice of the supernatural virtue facile? Hardly.
With the sexual instinct just awakening, his chastity is still untried; and,
although by the practice of natural and supernatural virtues he keeps the
rebellious movements of the flesh under control, he does not acquire facility
in the practice of chastity in the same way that he acquired facility in the
practice of prudence or justice. At best, facility in the practice of chastity
comes slowly.
It
may be said that infused chastity is the supernatural counterbalance for the
worst wound of original sin inflicted upon the sense of touch. It grows with
the growth in charity and with the increase of sanctifying grace. As the
motives for loving God take deeper root in the heart, so also do the motives
for practicing chastity pervade the soul more deeply. Chastity grows, not so
much from the repeated suppressions of the inordinate movements of the flesh,
as from the endeepened determination of the will to prove the person's love for
God. Chastity grows more in internal depth than in external facility. The
movements of the flesh may remain strong; and that is why chastity may not
become easier in the same sense as the practice of justice become easier.
Under
the influx of charity chastity increases more in intrinsic facility than in
extrinsic facility. To some extent, repeated acts of mortification of the
senses and of the imagination render the practice of chastity easier, but not
easy. To a greater extent, chastity draws strength from frequent acts of love
of God. The extrinsic form of charity is most apparent in infused chastity. In
short, meditation on the motives for chastity, joined to the practice of
mortification, render the virtue doubly strong.
In
stressing the supernatural character of chastity, care must be taken not to
neglect all the natural means at our disposal for the avoidance of impurity.
Growth in the spiritual life demands personal effort and application, demands
the use of natural, as well as supernatural means for the mortification of the
passions and the removal of difficulties. It must not be forgotten that the
natural and the supernatural orders are complementary and essential to one
another. While it is true that no natural act has any positive efficacy to lead
us to salvation, unless it be vitalized by the supernatural, it is also true
that no supernatural act can be done by us except through the operation of
faculties which are in themselves natural.
Neither
the acquired nor the infused virtues are complete in themselves; each needs the
other in order to attain perfection. God could have attached extrinsic facility
to the infused moral virtues; but de facto He does not, because He does not see
fit to grant by infusion that which man can acquire by his own proper activity.92
He requires some cooperation from us. He expects us to acquire natural virtues
that will be joined to His infused virtues. . . .
B. Education
If
acquired habits are important for the practice of supernatural virtues, then it
is of supreme importance that the child be trained in good natural habits from
his earliest formative years both in home and school. Natural motives should be
presented to the students as well as supernatural motives, provided the natural
incentives remain subordinate to the supernatural. The aim must be to integrate
the ideals of faith with those of reason and to present them to the child as a
harmonious whole. The child must be taught that natural values are good, but
they must be made to serve him on his way to his supernatural destiny. He must
be shown that God expects him to practice the natural virtues if he wishes to
make full use of the gifts and virtues which God has infused into his soul at
Baptism.
V. Conclusions
The
infused moral virtues are supernatural entities, inasmuch as they are a
participation in the life of sanctifying grace. Any effort to reduce them to
natural categories demands the use of analogy. They are neither pure habits nor
pure potencies, but they possess some of the characteristics of both, and so
they are classified as qualities and operative habits. They are not habits in
the univocal sense, because they do not give extrinsic facility in action. Yet
they are not mere potencies, because they strengthen the will intrinsically and
incline it to place acts of virtue, that is to say, they produce a certain
intrinsic facility in the faculty.
Repeated
acts of the infused moral virtues confer extrinsic facility by developing
acquired habits. These acquired habits supplement the work of the infused
virtues. Once the soul possesses the infused virtues, she should not allow them
to remain dormant, but she should exercise them by repeated acts:
The
infused virtue does not make a man virtuous but gives him the possibility of
practicing virtue in the supernatural order; he has merely a new operative
principle of supernatural activity in his soul. He must cooperate with Divine
Grace and act in accordance with such infused principles or virtues in order to
acquire solid virtue.93
1. I-II, q. 4950.
2. Smith, E. F., Ryan, L. A., Preface to
Happiness, pp. 118-9.
3. Contra Gentiles, IV, 77 (English
Dominican translation; London, Burns, Oates, and Washbourne, 1929).
4. I-II, q. SS, art. 3.
5. Love of God, Bk. 11, ch. 8 (Mackay
translation, Newman, 1942).
6. De Libero Arbitrio, Bk. 2, ch. 19 (P £
32:1268): Virtus est bona qualitas mentis, qua recte vivitur, et nemo male
utitur, et quam Deus in nobis sine nobis operatur.
7. S. Thomas, IV SENT., d. 14, qu. 2, a.
2, ad 4; III, 65, 2.
8. DTC, 15:2, col. 2779,
"Vertu," Paris, 1950.
9. I-II, q. 63, art. 3 (Thomas); III
Sent., Dist. 33, a. 1. qu. 1 (Bonaventuri); de Gratia, BK. 6, ch. 9, n. 7
(Suarez).
10. Gonet, John Baptist, Clypeus Theologiae
Thomisticae, Paris, Vives, 1876, 4. 1956, Disput. 4, art. 1.
11. S.T., 12, 63, 3, c: Oportet effectus
suis causis et principiis proportionatos: omnes autem virtutes tam intellectuales,
quam morales, quae ex actibus nostris acquiruntur, procedit ex quibusdam
naturalibus principiis in nobis praeexistentibus; loco autem quorum naturalium
principiorum conferuntur nobis a Deo virtutes theologicae quibus ordinamur ad
finem supernaturalem; unde, oportet, quod his etiam virtutibus theologicis
proportionaliter respondeant alii habitus divinitus causati in nobis, qui sic
habent ad virtutes theologicas sicut se habent virtutes morales et
intellectuales ad principia naturalia virtutum.
12. I-II, art. 2; III, q. 62, art. 3, c.
13. Coerver, Robert, The Quality of
Facility in the Moral Virtues, C.U.A., 1946, 89.
14. Coerver, op. tit., 14.
15. Although there is no critical text of
the works of Scotus available at the present moment, one may find Scotus'
argument in the reliable OPUS OXONIENSE: Opus Oxoniense, Vives, Paris, 1894,
Liber 3, Distinction 36, n. 28.
16. Gonet, op. til., 4.19S, Disputatio 4,
art. 1.
17. Merkelbach, H., Summa Theologiae
Moralis, I, 481.
18. I-II, q. 62, art. 3.
19. Garrigou-Lagrange, R., De Revelatione
(Ferrar, Rome, 1918) I, ch. c, art. 2.
20. Gonet, op. cit, Disput. 4, art. 1, 196.
21. St. Francis de Sales, Love of God, Bk.
11, ch. 8 (Newman Press Edition, Westminster, 4856).
22. Loc.
cit.
23. Merkelbach, op. cit., 4667, sect. 599.
The same author explains some of the senses in which the term cardinal virtues
has been used since the time of St. Ambrose.
24. St. Francis de Sales, op. cit., Bk. 11,
ch. 8.
25. For faith this is de fide definita,
Council of Trent, session 6, ch. IS and canon 28; for hope it is theologically
certain.
26. I -II, q. 65, art. 4: "sine
charitate, proprie loquendo, virtutes non sunt."
27. S.T., II-II, q. 4, art. S; 141, q. 71,
art. 4.
28. Connery, John R., "Prudence and
Morality," Theological Studies, 13 (Dec., 1952) 572. See also S.T., I-II,
q. 58, art. 4; IH, q. 57, art. 4 (definition of prudence); IIII, q. 47, art. 4
(prudence as not only an intellectual, but also a moral virtue). In the
Thomistic system prudence plays a part in every virtuous act. It has many
integrating factors, such as education, experience, memory of mistakes, and
docility. St. Thomas calls it the greatest of the moral virtues: Prudentia est
maxima quia est moderatrix aliarum (virtutum) Quaestiones de virtutibus
cardinalibus, II, a. 3.
29. I-II, q. 65, art. 2: Ad rectam autem
rationem prudentiae multo magis requiritur quod homo bene se habeat circa
ultimum finem, quod fit per caritatem, quam circa alios fines, quod fit per
virtutes morales; sicut ratio recta in speculativis máxime indiget primo
principio indemonstrabili, quod est contradictoria non simul esse vers. Unde
manifestum fit quod nec prudentia infusa protest esse sine charitate, nec aliae
virtutes morales consequenter, quae sine prudentia esse non possunt. (Benziger
Translation, 1.863).
30. I-II, q . 73, art. 6, ad. 1.
31. S .T., Cajetan, Summa Sancti Thomae cum
commentariis Thomae De Vio Cajetani, III, q. 63, art. 3 (Lugduni, 1581).
32. Gonet, op. at., Disput. V, art. 3 DB:
410, 800 ff.; St. Francis de Sales, Love of God, Bk. 11, ch. 89.
33. I-II, q. 63, art. 3, c; III, q. 110,
art. 2.
34. II-II, q. 23, art. 8.
35. I-II, q. 63, art. 2, ad 2; St. Francis
de Sales, Love of God, Book 11, ch. 1.
36. St. Francis de Sales, Love of God, Bk.
11, ch. 2, also op. cit. Bk. 11, ch.10. That the virtues "should bear the
name of formed fashioned and accomplished virtues, that depends upon charity
... "
37. DTC, op. tit., col. 2789; Mazzella, C.,
De Virtutibus Infusis, Rome, 1934, n. 196201. The first opinion is quoted by
Suarez, but no author is given; the third opinion is defended in its substance
by Billot; the fourth by Mazzella.
38. Billot, L., De Virtutibus Infusis,
Rome, 1905, 154160.
39. Concilium Tridentiwum, session 6, ch.
IS, canon 28.
40. I-II, q. 64, art. 1, ad 2: Unde nihil
prohibet in aliqua virtute esse extremum secundum unam circumstantiam, quod
tamen est medium secundum alias circumstantias per conformitatem ad rationem,
et sic est in magnificentia et magnanimitate.
41. Gonet, op. cit., Disputatio V, art. 1,
sections 49.
42. Ferree, William, The Act of Social
Justice, 1943. This is a classical treatment of the nature of social justice.
Read 91134 on Pius XI.
43. I-II, q. 64, art. 4: secundum mensuram
nostrae conditionis.
44. I-II, q. 64, art. 4; ad 3.
45. Coerver, Robert, The Quality of
Facility in the Moral Virtues, C.U.A. Press, 1946, 19.
46. I-II, q. 63, art. 1, ad 3:
"Virtutes in nobis sunt a natura secundum aptitudinem et inchoationem;
praeter virtutes theologicas, quae sunt totaliter ab extrínseco." «
Aquinas, De Veritate (FretteMare, Paris, 1895) Dist. 20, 2c, T. 1, n. 493:
Operationes ex habitu procedentes delectabiles sunt, et in promptu habentur, et
faciliter exercentur.
47. Mazzella, Camillus, De Virtutibus
Infusis, Rome, 1934, Disp. I, art. 4, n. 61. For the doctrine of the revival of
merit see Noldin, vol. 3, n. 225; D.B. 2193.
48. Ibid., n. 66.
49. Coerver, op. cit., 24.
50. De Valencia, G., Commentariorum
Theologicorum (Typographia Adami, Ingolstadii, 1603) Tom. 2, Disp. 5, qu. 6, ad
4, quoted by Coerver, p. 25.
51. Suarez, F., Opera Omnia (Apud Ludovicum
Vives, Paris, 18S8) Tom. 9, Bk. 6, ch. 9, n. 9.
52. Loc. cit.: ... Unde cum hae virtutes
intrinsece insint suis potentiis, sunt veluti pondera quaedam ad suos actus
inclinantia potentias. Hoc ergo modo dant intrinsecam facilitatem, sicut supra
etiam de Theologicis virtutibus tetigimus. At vero extrinsecam facilitatem non
praebent, quia contraria dificultas provenit aut ex naturali ignorantia vel
inconsideratione, aut ex fomite concupiscentiae, vel corporis corruptibilitate;
haec autem impedimenta per has virtutes non auferuntur.
53. Salmanticenses, Cursus Theologicus
(Palme, Paris, 1878), Tom. 6, Tract 12, qu. 63; Disp. 3, n. 5, ad 3; Gonet, op.
cit., IV, Disp. 1, qu. 4, ad 3.
54. Ibid. Disp. I, art. 4, n. 65.
55. Cf. ftnte. S3.
56. Billot, L., De Virtutibus Infusis,
Gregoriana, Rome, 1921, Prolegomenon (In, OQ. 4961, para. 2, nn. 12).
57. Ibid., n. 2: Sed sciendum est
inclinationem esse duplicem. Unam quam possumus dicere inhaesionis ad bonum
quod est objectum virtutis. Alteram quam possumus appellare, proclivitas in
exerdtium actus illiusmet. Certe duo ibi sunt non solum formalitate et conceptu
distincta, sed etiam inter se diversa, ut primum possit adesse absque secundo,
et secundum non sit semper in proportione cum primo.
58. Ibid.
59. Suarez, Opera Omnia, IX, Liber 6, chap.
14, n. 12: Primo, quia per eosdem actus supernaturales et infusos, qui ab
habitibus infusis, vel per divinum auxilium eliciuntur, alii habitus
acquiruntur. Secundo, quia per alios actus naturales, qui circa easdem materias
habituum infusorum fieri possunt . . . producuntur habitus talibus
proportionate
60. Coerver, Robert F., op. cit., 37.
61. Suarez, ibid., n. 24.
62. Ripalda, J. M., De Ente Supernaturali
(Vives, Paris, 1871), Tom. 2, Liber 3, Disp. 3, Sectio 4, n. 14: "Ita
eadem potentia naturalis, potens facile in amorem naturalem ejus aequitatis,
elevatur per habitum supernaturalem ad facilem amorem supernaturalem: . . .
63. Coerver, op. at., 389.
64. Ibid., 4163.
65. Suarez, Opera Omnia, IX, Bk. 6, ch. 14,
n. 7.
66. Coerver, op. cit., 4851.
67. Mazzella, op. cit., n. 81. The passages
to which Mazzella refers are found in Quaestiones Disputatae de Virtutibus,
Art. 10, ad 19 and S.T., III, q. 51, art. 4, ad 3.
68. Coerver, op. cit., 5163.
69. Billot, L., De Virtutibus Infusis
(Rome, Gregoriana, 1921), Generate Prolegomenon, Section 3, Commentary on III,
q. 4961. Videmus praeterea . . . eos (sanctos) semper habuisse specialem
exercitii facilitatem in ea virtute in qua speciali quoque modo sese
exercebant. Atqui hujus facti . . . nulla est sufficiens explicatio, nisi
dicatur generari per frequentationem actuum virtutis infusae habitus
acquisitus, quo naturalis potentia eidem infusae virtuti melius subjicitur. . .
.
70. Ibid., n. 3, De Rations Distinctionis
SupematurdHum, sect. 1.
71. Ibid., n. 2, section 3.
72. Molina Concordia Liberi Arbitrii, Qu.
14, art. 13, Disput. 38: Eo quod ad ipsorum productionem (actus supernaturales)
concurrent causae omnes, qua producerent actus illos naturales.
73. Ibid.
74. Op. cit., n. 2, section 3, footnote 1.
75. Ibid., n. 2, sect. 3.
76. Loc. cit. Opponitur primo auctoritas
St. Thomas.
77. Quaestiones Disputatae. Art. 10, ad IS:
Dicendum quod quia a principio virtus infusa non semper ita tollit sensum
passionum sicut virtus acquisita, propter hoc a principio non ita
delectabiliter operatur.
78. Merkelbach, B., Summa Theologiae If
oralis (Paris, Declee, 1938), I, n. 621.
79. Coerver, op. tit., 636.
80. Suarez, Opera Omnia, IX, Bk. 6, ch. 14,
n. 14.
81. Billot, op. tit., Generate
Prolegomenon, III ae, qq. 4961, n. 2, sect. 3, Obj. Tertio.
82. Ibid., sect. 3, Obj. Tertio.
83. III, q. Si, art. 1, c: Sunt quidem enim
dispositi ex propria corporis complexione ad castitatem, vel mansuetudinem, vel
ad alia hujusmodi.
84. Op. cit., sec. 3, Obj. Secundo, in
finem. Si ergo in ardua via supernaturalium tantum juvat, accedente gratia,
indoles naturalis et ipsa corporis complexio, non juvaret acquisita per
ipsissimarum virtutum exercitium inclinatio?
85. Coerver, op. cit., 72.
86. GarrigouLagrange, De Revelatione, 95.
87. II-II, q. 23, art. 8; St. Francis de
Sales, Love of God, Bk. 11, ch. 10.
88. I-II, q. 63, art 4: Sicut temperantiae
objectum est bonum delectabilium in concupiscentiis tact us; cujus quidem
objecti formalis ratio est a ratione, quae instituit modum in his
concupiscentiis; materiale autem est id quod est ex parte concupiscentiarum.
Manifestum est autem quod alterius rationis est motus qui imponitur in
hujusmodi concupiscentiis secundum regulam rationis humanae, et secundum
regulam divinam: puta, in sumptione ciborum ratione humana modus statuitur ut
non noceat valetudini corporis, nec impediat rationis actum; secundum autem
regulam legis divinae requiritur quod "homo castiget corpus suum et in
servitutem redigat" per abstinentiam cibi et potus, et aliorum hujusmodi.
Unde manifestum est quod temperantia infusa et acquisita differunt specie; et
eadem ratio est de aliis virtutibus.
89. Coerver, op. cit., 100.
90. Holy Virginity, March 25, 1954, NCWC
translation, para. 18.
91. Billot, op. cit., Prolegomenon (III ae,
qq. 4961), Pt. 2, n. 2: Deus enim per infusionis viam, praesertim regulariter
et de lege ordinaria, non dat id quod homo per suam propriam activitatem natus
est acquirere.
92. Parente, P., The Ascetical Life
(Herder, St. Louis, 1944), 125.
Bibliography
Billot, L., De
Virtutibus Infusis, III Edition, Rome, 1921.
Coerver, Robert, The
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119 ff., Journal of Religious Instruction, "The Supernatural
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Francis de Sales,
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Gonet, John, Clypeus
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Ente Supernaturali, Vives, Paris, 1871, Tom. 2. Salmanticensis Collegii, Cursus
Theologicus, Paris, 1878, 6. Tractatus XII, praesertim Qu. 63, Disputatio 3.
Scotus, Duns, Opus
Oxoniense, Vives, Paris, 1894, Vol. 3.
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Virtutibus, Qu. 1, Art. 10.
Digest of the Discussion:
After
a brief discussion on the place of social justice in the scheme of the virtues,
it was generally conceded that it would be fruitless to attempt to pursue the
question further because of the many divergent views on the subject.
Father
Augustine Hennessy, C.P., then raised the question of the subject of the
virtues of temperance and fortitude. Are they formally in the will and only
radically in the appetites? How, then, explain that the blessed in heaven do
not have the virtue of temperance? Father Harvey agreed that these virtues
would be in the passions terminatively.
Father
James Griffin, S.J., then widened the scope of the discuscussion by asking how
the moral virtues perdure in heaven and why they should not go as do faith and
hope. Father Harvey proposed discussion as to just what moral virtues remain in
heaven. All agreed that the virtue of religion certainly remains. Others
suggested virtues such as respect and affability as appropriate to the blessed.
In
the quest for a norm to determine what virtues remain in glory, Father Hennessy
proposed that the enrichment of the virtuous personality rather than the need
for the particular virtue be the determining factor. He stressed the
transcendental relation of the soul to the glorified body. The flesh of the
saint would be modified according to the degree of charity attained. The moral
virtues remain even in glory insofar as they are related to charity. Father
Griffin, S.J., thought that compatibility with glory rather than the relation
of the virtue to charity would be the norm. Father Gerald Kelly, S.J., also
stressed the importance of the formality of the virtue itself as determining
whether or not it remains in glory: Temperance, e.g., would not remain as being
incompatible with the life of the blessed. Father Vollert, S.J., indicated the
role of the moral virtues as prerequisites of glory.
Fater
Schwinn, O.S.B., then raised the question of the possibility of performing an
act of purely natural virtue by a supernatural agent possessing the infused
moral virtues. Father Hennessy, C.P., thought that such a natural act would be
possible and that it would be sinful. He suggested as an example the case of a person
who would practice sobriety not for a supernatural motive but rather through a
merely natural disdain for the ugliness of drunkedness. This, he thought, would
be a sinful intrusion of naturalism.
Father
Kelly and Father Vollert objected strenuously to this view. Such a case, they
thought, would involve no violation of a law or failure in an obligation.
Father Hennessy replied that all our preaching against the mentality of the
"good pagan" and all our efforts to exclude naturalism are based on
this principle. Father Kelly pointed out that the solution to the question
would depend on one's theory of the sinfulness of imperfections. Expressions
such as "naturalism" or "worldliness" could refer, he said,
either to real sins or to imperfections. Father Hennessy agreed that his view
involved the sinful character of imperfections.
Father
Carney, O.S.F.S., referred to the teaching of St. Francis of Sales to the
effect that a good act done by a supernatural agent for a less worthy motive,
provided God be not absolutely excluded, merits grace but less grace than would
be had if the motive were better. Father Kelly agreed that it would be
difficult in practice to exclude a supernatural motive positively. He used the
example of a person who would remain sober in order to receive a large
inheritance promised on that condition—a good act certainly, however
imperfectly motivated. Father Harvey remarked that in educational situations a
less worthy motive will often prove more effective in attracting students to
virtue.
Turning
to the situation of a person in the state of mortal sin, Father Griffin, S.J.,
stressed the ascetical importance of the possibility of making negatively dispositive
acts toward conversion by reason of the facility remaining from the earlier
state of virtue. Even after the loss of charity and the infused moral virtues,
natural virtue and acquired facility can remain and can help those who have
fallen into mortal sin to recover charity.
Father
Michael Griffin, O.C.D., wondered if there would be a iustitia informis
analogous to the fides mformts for a person in the state of mortal sin. Father
Harvey felt that there was no need for such a virtue. Father James Griffin,
S.J., noted that charity is the extrinsic form of the infused moral virtues but
not of faith and hope. The causality of charity is both efficient and formal
with regard to the infused moral virtues, but charity is not the efficient
source of faith and hope. Hence there would be no possibility of infused moral
virtues that would be informes.
In
commenting on a point raised by Father Schwinn with regard to growth in the
infused virtues by repetition of acts, Father Brophy, S.J., indicated that in
addition to acquired facility, each good act increased the infused virtues by
way of merit. The proportionate growth through merit in all the infused virtues
was illustrated by Father Harvey who used the analogy of the proportionate
growth of the human hand. This growth would differ from the increase of
acquired facility which is had only in the virtue actually practiced.
The
discussion then took a somewhat different turn, prompted by Father Kelly's observation
that there is often a deplorable tendency among some writers to overstress the
reception of the sacraments to the detriment of exhortations to practice
virtue. The Christian life, he insisted, is a wonderful balance of supernatural
helps and natural equipment. Reference was made to the illustration, cited by
Father Harvey in his paper, of boarding school students who develop habits,
e.g., of frequent Communion while at school but fail to continue in these
habits later on. Father Kelly thought that terms such as "emotional
maturity" were helpful in presenting the ideal of the practice of the
moral virtues. The more traditional terminology seemed to his mind to lessen
interest.
Father
Forrest Macken, C.P., returned to the example of those who easily abandoned
apparently virtuous habits. He thought that such cases would not involve
virtues at all but merely a series of repeated acts without the motivation
necessary to constitute real virtue. Father Harvey concurred in stressing the
need for motivation. This could be accomplished, he said, by the frequent
renewal of intention. The renewal of charity would involve the renewal of
motive for all the virtues.
On
the question of motivation, Father Hennessy suggested that the material object
of the virtues would itself undergo a change once the virtue is informed by
charity. A priest social worker, e.g., would see the whole material object of
social justice differently than a Communist doing the same work. The material
object must thus be seen as illumined by faith under the dynamic of charity.
Father Kelly indicated that supernatural perceptions could come from the gifts
and infused moral virtues themselves as well as from charity and faith. Father
Coyle, C.SS.R. remarked that even natural virtue has motivation or a recta
ratio. Supernatural virtue adds faith to the recta ratio without destroying
reason or eliminating its role. Father Brophy stressed the role of the gifts in
rendering one habilis to the reception of actual graces.
Father
Harvey then turned the discussion to the practical problem of motivation in its
relation to acquired facility in the moral virtues. In the case of a young girl
who acquires a certain facility in modesty but succumbs to unchastity at the
first onslaught of temptation, Father Harvey thought that the lack of proper
motivation might explain such an occurrence. Father Griffin, O.C.D. thought
that the intensity of the one act as over against the earlier and less intense
acts of modesty would be a factor. Father John Fischer, C.P., thought that in
such cases the motive is often faulty. Modesty may have been practiced but not
for a supernatural motive. Father Fischer deplored the tendency to stress
natural rather than supernatural motivation. The discussion came to an end with
general agreement on the great importance of motivation for the development of
the moral virtues.
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