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Recalling
the Virtues during the Season of Lent
John
Kamprath
REMNANT
COLUMNIST,
“The
life of man requires to be regulated by the virtues with regard to
everything.”
--St.
Thomas Aquinas, (Summ. Theo. II-II,
160, 1)
John XXIII described the
primary aim of the Second Vatican Council in his Opening Speech of October 11,
1962, when he said, “The greatest concern of the Ecumenical Council is this:
that the sacred deposit of Christian doctrine should be guarded and taught more
efficaciously. That doctrine embraces the whole of man, composed as he is of
body and soul. And, since he is a pilgrim on earth, it commands him to tend
always toward heaven.” Three things may be noted in this statement of the
originator of the council, (1) the Deposit of Faith must be guarded and
promulgated better, (2) the perfection of man concerns both the spiritual and
physical aspects of his person, and (3) man is called to save his soul. The
successful implementation of the first and third items of this list have been
analyzed and debated in this and other Catholic periodicals for almost
forty-three years.
Interestingly, not that
much attention has been given to the second goal that the pope proposed that
fall morning. Scholarship and critical commentary have largely ignored the
perfection of man, body and soul. Though educational enthusiasts have made much
noise about the formation of the “whole person”, little practical guidance has
been offered to assist this aim. Sure, there have been a few critiques of the
error known as “personalism”. Nevertheless, a whole new anthropology has been
foisted on the Church. What is worse, this has come about by way of the adoption
of a new philosophy that embraces categories hitherto foreign in the Catholic
vocabulary. In particular, “values” and the “inherent dignity” of natural man
have replaced the principles of the good and the perfectibility of the created
order. In sum, the result of this post-conciliar “new man” has been the
invention of a most eccentric “theology of the body” along with the suppression
of the traditional, realistic understanding of man’s actual development in body
and soul.
This development is
properly accomplished by the work of virtue, which is the dismissed handmaid of
the modern era. Indeed, all of the operations of man, both his corporeal actions
and his spiritual powers, are regulated and perfected by way of virtue.
Catholics who take seriously their fidelity to Tradition will do well to
consider that the entire human life can be summed up in the goal of receiving
grace and acquiring virtue in all things. From giving glory to God, to
perfecting himself and saving his soul; from pursuing happiness and beatitude,
to serving the common good of the Church, the social order and his family; all
things depend on the life of grace and the practice of virtue.
If man will
perfect himself in body and soul, as Pope John challenged, he should recall what
it means to be a “man”. It must be remembered that man has a single, complex
nature that is at one and the same time both physical and spiritual. In our age
we have forgotten this. Furthermore, we have forgotten how to live rightly and
perfect our complex nature.
Our
anthropological amnesia is manifest in so many ways. For instance, most
Catholics have attained little to no intellectual virtue. These are the truths
apprehended by the intellect. How many Catholics today know even the simple
answers from the Catechism including “God is spirit infinitely perfect” or “Man
is a creature composed of body and soul, and made to the image and likeness of
God”?
Additionally,
the wills of Catholics are largely unfortified and misdirected with regard to
the higher moral virtues. We see this in spades with the practice of the virtue
of religion, a relative to the cardinal virtue of justice. Ubiquitous is the
impious participation of the faithful at Sunday and daily liturgies where their
manifest ignorance of the sacrifice of the Mass is demonstrated in the mundane,
self-congratulatory motions and songs that dominate modern worship. By and
large, most Catholics today do not will to offer along with the priest the
unblemished, eternal sacrifice of the Incarnate Word of God for their sins and
the sins of the world.
Finally, where
the lower bodily passions and emotions used to be kept in check through reverent
bodily postures in Church, as well as the regular, year-round mortifications of
periodic fasts and the Friday abstinence: now gyrating navels sway to the beat
of the guitar and drum; while overfed adolescents may be seen chewing gum in the
communion line.
More than ever, Catholics today are in need
of developing an understanding of the virtues that regulate the various aspects
of man. In order to do this, we must first form a proper understanding of what
man is. Since man is a rational animal, we can distinguish groups of virtue that
correspond to the parts of his soul and his body.
Very simply, we see three
forms of virtue that perfect three fundamental aspects of
man:
Man’s
intellect,
a spiritual faculty[1],
is perfected by the intellectual
virtues, where truths are attained and reside in the soul as
habits.
Man’s free
will,
another spiritual faculty, is perfected by the higher moral virtues which incline him
to pursue the good in all things.
Man’s body, from whence arise the
emotions or passions, is regulated by the lower moral virtues, which order these
bodily motions according to right reason, and keep man directed toward the
higher spiritual goods in which he will find his true
happiness.
It is important
for all men, and especially clergy, parents and other educators to keep these
three aspects of man and their corresponding virtues in mind in all the work
they do.
Especially in the very
young, but also with adolescents, conquering the passions and emotions (these
are essentially interchangeable terms) is the first priority. For like a
towering building where the lofty heights rest firmly upon the solid foundation
and well-built lower portions, so too, in man can the intellect and free will be
perfected only if the emotions are in order. The intellectual and higher moral
virtues require the peace that can only be attained through the lower moral
virtues.
These building-block moral virtues bring
resilience, strength, proportion and order to the motions of the body known as
the passions. The body is subject to physical local motions of fidgeting,
breathing and walking. It is also subject to the physical motions of passion
like anger, fear, joy and sorrow. The passions are good things bestowed upon the
corporeal nature of man. Like all things of the material world, though, they are
designed to serve the higher, spiritual dimension of creation. Nevertheless,
since the Fall of Man and even despite the work of Redemption today, the
passions tend to rebel against the spirit. They seek to dominate it. Only
through concerted effort might they once again submit themselves to the mind of
man.
Turning to an earlier
pontiff, Pope Pius XI explained all these things brilliantly in his encyclical
letter on Christian education, Divini
illius Magistri. Here the Holy Father defines the human person who is the
subject of education. Paragraph 58 reads,
In fact it must never be
forgotten that the subject of Christian education is man whole and entire, soul
united to body in unity of nature, with all his faculties natural and
supernatural, such as right reason and revelation show him to be; man,
therefore, fallen from his original estate, but redeemed by Christ and restored
to the supernatural condition of adopted son of God, though without the
preternatural privileges of bodily immortality or perfect control of appetite.
There remain therefore, in human nature the effects of original sin, the chief
of which are weakness of will and disorderly inclinations.[2]
Thus in man, and especially
in the young, there is a real battle to get him off the ground, so to speak, to
raise him up beyond the confines of his bodily, emotive and fallen nature.
Without the Fall, the material portion of man, his body and its emotions, would
serve as the right foundation for his actions, all of them ordered to the
perfection of his spirit. After Adam, the body and its passions are still a
foundation for man’s actions, but they now serve as a weighty anchor to restrain
and limit his spirit both prior to and even during his formation at home, school
and church.
In the human body there are
two general forms of passion that arise in different situations, which being
subject to disorder needs tidying. The first is the tendency to desire the
easily obtainable pleasures that arise from what we traditionally call the
concupiscible appetite. The other is the inclination to flee from the arduous
work and threats that come our way, from what we traditionally call the
irascible appetite. Both of these require the training and discipline of the
virtues in order to be mastered. These lower moral virtues will restore the
passions from the present natural state of disorder to their proper place in the
life of man as handmaid to right moral action.
Tempering Concupiscence and
Fortifying the Irascible
Do we not all labor to
overcome the tendency to moral decadence suggested by the manifold pleasures
enticing us in so many ways these days? Think of the education of the young. In
the classroom or the home school, do not many children begin the day ready for
recess and snack-time as well as eager to color another picture and talk with a
neighbor more than they are motivated to focus on fulfilling their morning tasks
and routines, or willing to recollect themselves for the next grammar lesson?
These distracting interests, which appeal to the concupiscible appetite of our
bodies, need to be tamed by the will, through the virtue of temperance and its
various forms. Meanwhile, the work involved in successfully completing a
demanding academic unit requires the strengthening of our body’s irascible
appetite, which ought to pursue and not shirk from the arduous goods in life
such as study, through the virtue of fortitude.
Today, the traditional
Catholic home may be the only safe haven for families seeking to persevere in
the virtues of temperance and fortitude. The traditional family, that has fled
to the seclusion of the hills, fields and farms, is the only contender in the
battle to master the passions, defeat the usurpation of the flesh and attain the
difficult prize which is the crown that does not fade. We need only to recall
the graver temptations of the modern age to see how this is the case. When
optimistic John opened his council in 1962, the world concurrently unleashed the
full forces of the sexual revolution. As we all know, this revolution has become
the institutional culture in
At the same time, a
fortified resolve to face difficult challenges seems to be equally missing.
Today, the emotion of fright and flight dominates man for sure. He suffers from
an anemic irascible passion, which rolls over at the first physical difficulty
presented to him. For instance, how many “pro-life” Catholics today are willing
to brave the elements and face the taunts that await them before the abortuaries
around our country? How many of the faithful are diligent in their practice of
the Friday abstinence, and observe the ember days? How many of us carry our
cross, suffer the white martyrdom and offer all things in reparation for the
sins committed against the Immaculate and Sacred Hearts? Which of us, when the
systematic persecution begins and we face certain, painful imprisonment and
death, will affirm our faith and forsake the comforts of this life and by so
doing merit the martyr’s crown?
Let us begin to
restore our families with simple things, then. The first step is to recall that
virtue is the habit of doing good things well. With repetition and practice,
each virtue becomes easier to perform. As a weightlifter initially struggles to
press 120 pounds, in time, through consistent repetition, even heavier weights
become easy to lift. Now, forming the habit to make good habits is the surest
way of beginning the life of virtue. Do not be afraid to begin with little
things. For instance, young children, as well as adults, need boundaries and
structure to their day. Morning, work-time and evening routines are the surest
way for establishing a habitual pattern of always doing the right thing well.
The laissez-faire method of parenting that allows the young to merely stumble
from one interest to another each day is a recipe for disaster. Instead, a
structured day that follows a certain familiar pattern is insurance for the
moral life. In this way, the passions of the moment are conquered for the duty
of state, minute-by-minute, hour-by-hour, day-by-day. In such wise the Catholic
home becomes virtue’s workshop.
After pursuing the initial
work of restoring virtue in our homes through acquiring little good habits that
structure the day, now let us consider the major virtues that govern the
Christian life. These directly perfect man in both his body and his soul. We
should recall that there are three Theological Virtues and four natural cardinal
virtues that perfect man in this life. These seven great monuments make it
possible for man to act well easily. They allow him to enjoy the life of grace,
and finally enable him to merit eternal rewards that will get him into heaven.
Imagine a ladder reaching
from the earth, past the stars to the heavenly abode. Now imagine the climber
who begins at the bottom rung as an infant and succeeds in climbing through old
age unto the empyrean heights. Along the way there are many rungs. Ever so
often, seven times, in fact, there are platforms upon which to rest. Each
platform is either a cardinal or a theological virtue. The rungs below each
platform are the subordinate virtues belonging to the major platform virtue
above. In ascending order, these platforms are Temperance, Fortitude, Justice,
Prudence, Faith, Hope and Charity.
The first four virtues
here, the cardinal virtues, belong to the perfection of man as man, and are thus the foundation
upon which the supernatural Theological Virtues grow (which in turn perfect man as God’s friend). Since grace builds
on nature, we should first consider the natural life of man. This life, and the
virtues associated with it, do not contradict the supernatural vocation, but
prepare for it and complement it. An analogy to this is the child who first
learns to be quiet, sit still and fold his hands at times of prayer in order to
dispose himself to petition God and hear Him in his heart.
In examining the cardinal
virtues, we will look at their concrete applications to the various particulars
of life. In these particulars we will discover a multitude of simpler virtues
that are applications and related instances of the cardinal ones. These little
virtues are easy to understand. By climbing from one to the next on the ladder
of perfection, we will better grasp the great monuments that are the cardinal
and Theological virtues.
The first virtues that
concern all men are related to one another with respect to Temperance. They are
not, strictly speaking, the subject matter of Temperance. After all, do we not
usually think of Temperance in regard to the moderation of eating and other
pleasures associated with the sense of touch? Humility, studiousness and modesty
in word and dress do not treat of tempering those difficult to overcome bodily
inclinations toward sense pleasure. Instead, they temper the less difficult
emotions to master. That is why they are traditionally grouped together in
reference to Temperance.
The virtue modesty is first
of all a general heading that we do not want to exclusively identify with the
way women clothe themselves. Modesty in dress is but one instance of modesty.
Instead, the class of virtues we call modesty concerns a group of habits. Each
one addresses a particular human activity that needs its own good habit to
perfect it. As we shall see, modesty concerns both habits of mind and of body.
This virtue, modesty, takes
it name from the root word, “mode”. As a virtue, “mode” regards the manner of
doing things in a way that avoids the extremes of excess and deficiency. Often
we hear that “the virtuous way is the mean”, or “all things in moderation.” These easy to remember sayings capture
the essence of all moral virtues, and particularly modesty, which is their
model.
Arguably the most famous mode of this virtue is the mind’s manner
of forming an honest self-assessment as well as his hope and aspiration to
greatness. This virtue is humility. Its opposite is the vice pride.
Many wise men have
demonstrated that humility is the most important of the natural moral virtues,
second only to justice. Great lights like St. Thomas Aquinas are very prudent in
making that conclusion, for humility is the gateway to all of the other virtues.
Humility is based on the realization that “I am not the center of the universe.”
It accepts the greater reality that exists “beyond my own being,” while it
acknowledges that “I am a part, not the whole, of this reality.” Finally, it
sees that in the structure of the world around me, “I am not placed at the top.”
These are the sorts of truths upon which the virtue of humility rests. From such
a vantage, humility concerns the tempering of man’s spirit in its natural
inclination to attain great things.
True humility begins with an honest
assessment of oneself both according to nature and grace. Catholics
traditionally acknowledge that sin is the only thing that man produces all by
himself. All other things in nature and grace are good because they are of God.
The humble man will boast in his blessings from God. He will also confess his
poverty of self. Let us, of course,
not be confused by Luther’s error, that man is sin. Luther held the erroneous
notion contrary to Catholic dogma, that Adam’s sin destroyed man’s nature.
Simply, God gave Adam no such power.
While discussing humility,
St. Thomas Aquinas makes this point when commenting on Philippians ii, 3, “In humility, let each esteem others better
than themselves.” The Common Doctor says, “We may consider two things in
man, namely that which is God’s and that which is man’s. Whatever pertains to
defect is man’s: but whatever pertains to man’s welfare and perfection is
God’s.” He goes on to show that
humility “properly regards the reverence whereby man is subject to God.”
Furthermore, “the humble man, in so far as he is the author of his own defect
and sin, will place himself lower than all other men, in so far as they possess
Godliness within themselves.” (II-II, 161, 3) At the same time, humility does
not entertain falsehoods. Though the humble man takes all the blame, and gives
God all the credit, even for his own merits; he does not lie about the degree of
his ills or blessings.
Thus it would be false
humility for a St. Francis or Padre Pio to esteem their good as worse than that
of a Judas or Cain; as the inverse is wrong for the latter to hold that their
squandered graces were superior to those of the saints. Yet, even the greatest
saint was viler than the worst of the damned in his offenses as compared to the
least grace possessed or good deed performed by any of the sons of perdition
while they otherwise vainly walked this earth.
Speaking very technically,
humility is defined as the regulation of the movement of the emotion hope, which
is, as
Showing us the way to
perfect humility, St. Benedict identified 12 degrees of this virtue in his
famous Rule. Every Catholic ought to own that Rule and meditate on it often. I
merely reproduce his principles of humility here; they are easy to understand
and simple to apply:
1) Fear God, and always be mindful of
everything God has commanded.
2) Do not delight in fulfilling one’s
own desires.
3) Subject oneself to a
superior.
4) Embrace patience by obeying under
difficult and contrary circumstances.
5) Confess one’s
sins.
6) Think oneself worthless and
unprofitable for all purposes.
7) Believe and acknowledge oneself viler
than all.
8) Do nothing but to what one is
exhorted by the common rule of the monastery.
9) Maintain silence until one is
asked.
10) Do not be easily moved and disposed
to laughter.
11) Speak few and sensible
words, and not in a loud voice.
12) Be humble not only in
heart, but also to show it in one’s very person, one’s eyes fixed on the
ground.
Three questions come to
mind in reviewing these ancient precepts: (1) Which of these have become
obsolete for man in the world in this twenty-first century? (2) Which of these
have become obsolete for Catholics in the Church of the third millennium? (3)
Which of these are unnecessary for my state in life, personal sanctity, piety,
good works, salvation and glory given to God? The answer to all of these
questions is “None.”
Another even more
authoritative compilation of teachings on humility is the Beatitudes preached by
Our Lord in the Sermon on the Mount. The Fathers of the Church in their
explanation of these precepts for the New Law almost unanimously point to the
overriding spirit of humility present in these monuments to perfection and
salvation of the New Covenant.
Contrarily, pride is the
indulgence of hope beyond the measure of reason as sketched above. St. Gregory
the Great defined the four forms that pride can take in the acts of an arrogant
sinner. They are: (1) when one thinks that his good is from himself; (2) when he
believes his good to be from above, but possessed on account of his own merits;
(3) when he boasts of having what he has not; or (4) when he despises others and
wishes to appear to be the only possessor of what he has. In every instance
here, pride is most deadly because man claims as his own what is not his; he
attempts to put himself on God’s throne.
Furthermore, pride is the
root of every sin committed that is otherwise not due to mere ignorance or
weakness. Thus, anytime we knowingly and willingly transgress a commandment
under our own full power, we always sin against that precept of the law and we
sin against humility. For instance, if I were to steal a youngster’s sandwich, I
would be depriving him of his good and break the seventh commandment. I would
sin against the child. But by the very act of breaking a precept of the law laid
down by God Himself, I am also offending God. In this case, I am also sinning by
pride in that I prefer my own judgment to that of God’s. I put myself in his
place and disregard his authority.
Adam committed the first
sin against humility when he listened to his wife who had spoken with the
serpent, and ate from the forbidden tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
Adam’s objective was clear; he attempted to become a god. Adam hoped to attain
something greater than he could by right and by nature, and he despised the sole
precept laid upon him in paradise. Adam esteemed himself greater than he should
have. As a result, pride was the original sin. It is also the root of the life
of iniquity for all men who commit actual sins.
Prior to Adam’s original
human violation of the virtue of humility was the sin of pride practiced by the
devil and his cohorts in the beginning. Instead of delving into an analysis of
demonology, which is never a prudent endeavor for theologians, let alone mere
mortals such as you and I, let us instead consider their chief adversary, St.
Michael the
Our Lord, when He came to
save the world, chose to undo in His first Advent the very breaches of humility
practiced by Satan and Adam that violated the perfect order God gave to heaven
and earth. He did this by taking upon Himself the form of the lowest rational
creature, a poor, simple and helpless babe. Did He not also hide Himself in
utter obscurity for 30 years with His mother and father in
We need not ponder long to
understand the imperative for forming a healthy humility in our lives. If we
hope to have any success as faithful children of God, we must begin with a solid
foundation in the humility of the saints who teach us in their contemporary
situations the same Gospel that our Lord gave to us 2000 years ago. We must also
draw attention to the incidents that try our humility on a daily basis and show
how they are occasions for virtue, character building and merit. Above all, we
must pray to have instilled within us a hearty esteem for God, His Church and
the saints. And from that vantage we must learn to test every spirit. What
accords with our welfare and the glory of God is good. What is not, is chaff. A
Catholic does not listen to the moderns who preach self- esteem. Instead he
hearkens to the voice of the Lord who speaks with authority and truth. It is in
the Spirit of the All-good and the Almighty that he learns to pray, “Jesus, I
trust in you!” Through these prayers, and similar practices, we Catholics can
attain a modest self-assessment that places hope where it belongs, namely, in
God.
Now that we have treated of
humility, which is the moderation of the desires both for a good self-evaluation
as well as the hope to attain great things, we turn next to the moderation of
the ambition to pursue knowledge and the intellectual life. When modesty virtuously regulates this
natural human desire for knowledge, we have the special virtue,
studiousness.
The word “study” refers to the keen
application of the mind to something. As a virtue, studiousness primarily
concerns the moderation of the desire for knowledge, which is effected by the
work of study. A secondary sense of this virtue considers the work involved in
keenly applying the mind to difficult subject matter. That special sense of
studiousness is really taken up as an application of the virtue perseverance
when considering the onerous demands upon the scholar.
For our consideration,
studiousness will regard that earlier sense, the moderation of the desire to
know. Now knowledge, in itself, is the intellectual virtue of habitually knowing
something. In so far as something is true, it is good to know, for the purpose
of the intellect is to have the mind in agreement with reality. Since the moral
life is distinct from the intellectual life, the moral life does not apply the
concept of the mean to the possession of these intellectual virtues called
knowledge. After all, truth is not capable of being regulated by categories like
too little or too much. As for instance, either one knows that 1+1=2, or one
does not know that. One cannot know such a truth according to the modes too
little or too much, though one must avoid the temptation to take pride in or
misuse for evil purposes the knowledge attained. The more volatile equation,
E=MC2 comes to mind.
On the other hand, the
desire or purpose for attaining true knowledge is something that is regulated by
the moral virtues. It is subject to the moderation of mean, lest the natural
desire for knowledge be excessive. After discerning that one’s desire for study
is free from prideful or malicious intent, the virtue of studiousness considers
four things in regard to the moderation of the desire for knowledge. Where the
pursuit of study is inordinately undertaken, there is present not virtue, but
the vice of curiosity.
First, one must recollect
himself prior to commencing study to discern that his pursuit corresponds with
the obligations incumbent upon him. Any distraction from the studies proper to
one’s duty of state would constitute a curious inquiry into less profitable
matters. To help us understand this point, we might recall that study refers to
the attempt to find out the truth of anything, not just the subjects found in an
academic curriculum. Reading the newspaper, minding the affairs of others,
heeding gossip, following the latest episode in a popular television show,
keeping up with the fashions that are all the rage, knowing the latest bands, or
clicking to the next curious novelty on the Internet are the very things that
often compete for studious attention by Catholics in
What are the matters for
study required of our duty of state? They are the various obligations entrusted
to us according to the responsibilities of our age and office. Every man has the
duty to study the things of God as revealed by Him, expounded by reason and
entrusted to the Church. All are responsible for learning and retaining the
catechism. All are responsible for daily spiritual reading. St. Alphonsus de
Ligouri, the moral doctor of the Church, counseled that you will not save your
soul if you do not faithfully attended to 15 minutes of spiritual reading each
day. All must study the moral law and the virtues. All must learn the civic code
of their society by which they are required to live. All must learn the customs
and rules of their home. All must learn the curriculum entrusted to them by
their parents, school and Church. All must learn the domestic arts, or a trade,
profession or science by which to make a living. All must recollect the mind and
spirit by tending to noble arts that elevate the intellect and succor the
spirit. All must tend to any other matter necessary for the sustenance of their
temporal and eternal wellbeing.
Secondly, studiousness avoids consultation
from unlawful sources of knowledge. Curious is the sinful man who consults
demons, oracles, witches, fortune-tellers, horoscopes, tarot cards, and all
other superstitious media from the occult. Though no longer a lawfully binding
list, the Index of Forbidden Books is
the resource for the perfidious. Secular and Masonic sources for history and
political theory are to be avoided, as well. They are the deceptive tales and
doctrines of the enemies of goodness, truth and salvation that entice young and
old away from their Christian destiny.
Thirdly, the good student may pursue a
comprehensive study of the truth about creatures if and only if it is done with
reference to the goal of all knowledge, which is God. Animal husbandry and
veterinary medicine are disciplines principally ordered to the good of man, and
by extension the glory of God. Good breeds and healthy stock are necessary
things for the welfare of man. On the other hand, a curious probing into the
biological origin of species, and specious theories of the rights of animals
alongside men, are the concerns of the godless multitude who have squandered
their intellectual inheritance in our generation. SPCA and PETA are not the
abbreviations following the names of the spiritual children of St.
Francis.
Lastly, the studious do not
study above the capacity of their own intelligence. Error and confusion are the
only results when this principle is violated. For instance, men lack the ability
to learn new things about the inner nature of God, the Blessed Trinity, apart
from what has already been revealed by Him and infallibly clarified by
Another instance is the
unjust promotion of every living body automatically on to higher education. The
effects of Original Sin, which all men suffer in different degrees, include the
darkening of the intellect and the weakening of the will. Though no man save
Adam is responsible for this condition that is common to all, those who suffer a
greater diminution of the intellectual light are unfit for rigorous scholastic
studies. I will never forget the poor fellow who was a classmate of mine in a
graduate theology program somewhere in the Midwest, who after two weeks of
rather brilliant yet comprehensible lectures on a recurring topic in philosophy,
blurted out in class, “Duuuh, Dr. Paaaaaul, I jees don’t get this natural law
stuff!” (gesticulation and pronunciation in the original). This poor soul
probably went on to graduate (if he made it through the program) with upwards of
$25,000 to $40,000 in student debt and has no practical way of earning a living
that would suitably remunerate him to be able to pay down that balance and
provide modestly for a family. A social security number and a pulse should not
be the only requirements for admission to higher studies. More to the point,
this fellow ended his academic career frustrated and confused. This is an
offense against studiousness.
Curiosity, then, is the
vice that opposes studiousness. It does so principally by violating one of these
four modes of good study and its proper intention. Briefly, we could mention
that curiosity also considers the “temptation of the eye”, which is the pursuit
of knowledge gained from sights for lustful purposes. Men, who are more easily
prone to lustful abandon must learn to guard their eyes. Women, who are more
prone to attract, must learn to veil their beauty in ways that will be discussed
in the next section.
We come to the last virtues
that comprise the various external forms of modesty. These are modest human
movements, speech and dress.
Modest bodily movements
have the character of virtue when they possess honesty and beauty. Honesty
refers to a thing being worthy of honor. Honor is due to the quality of
excellence present in the thing we revere. Beauty is similar. It is the
comeliness that results from the concurrence of clarity and due proportion. Now
beauty in external things is all the more noble and honorable when it denotes a
corresponding interior ordering and proportion that is the result of the
excellence of virtue in a soul.
There is also the
fittingness of movements as regards externals such as other persons, the
business at hand, or place. Here the rule of “methodicalness”, directs outward
movements. Friendliness and affability are the related virtues that perfect
outward movements that are directed toward others. A sense of decorum directs
our bearing in different physical places and social
environments.
Play and recreation are
another aspect of movements and speech that require the regulation of the virtue
modesty. Just as the body fatigues and needs rest and refreshment, so, too, the
soul fatigues under strenuous mental labor and needs rest and refreshment. This
rest comes about through pleasure. Thus
In this fun, three things
need special moderation. The first is that there are no indecent or injurious
words or deed. Nothing should be discourteous, insolent, scandalous or obscene.
The second caution guards against the excessive relinquishing of the mind over
to the fun. The balance of the mind is carefully attained through the hard work
of study and practice of the virtues. Game play should not upset that balance.
Thus children especially should never be allowed absolute freedom in their
games. The restraint of good behavior should still dominate so that their fun
reflects their upright minds. Thirdly, observance of persons, time and place is
important. Not every possible good game is appropriate at any time, place or
presence of persons. The extremes of excessive play and lack of mirth are to be
avoided in the modest person, lest buffoonery or severity
result.
The outward things that we
use, such as clothing and adornments, are not themselves either virtuous or
vicious. How they are used and esteemed are. Within a sane culture, the ethics
of the virtue of modesty in dress follows the norms laid down by the customs of
the society in which one finds oneself. There, violations of the norm offend
public modesty. However, Americans today live in a revolutionary culture that
favors a perpetual challenge to the prevailing norms of style, modesty, decency
and goodness. To the extent that Catholics in their families, schools and
churches tolerate our era’s successive decadence in morals and modesty, they are
part of the revolution. As other ages were not so dominated by the spirit of the
Eumenides and Bacchus to the extent that ours is, the traditional role of custom
and public habit is no longer a safe guidepost either for fit or coverage of
garments. Let us turn to some other particulars that govern modest adornment and
apparel.
To begin with, we must
neither be too attached nor too pleased with the raiment of the body. This needs
to be observed in three ways. First, we must not seek glory from too excessive
an attention to dress. This form of the virtue of modesty in dress is really a
relative of humility. Second, we must not seek excessive pleasure in the
comforts afforded by clothing. Contentment is the related virtue here that makes
us satisfied with what is suitable, and enables us to determine what is becoming
in this manner of life. Lastly we must not be too picky in selecting the clothes
that we must wear. Simplicity is the rule, for it makes us content with what we
have.
There are also ways by
which we fail to govern our dress with modesty by way of deficiency. One, called
“effeminacy”, is the neglect of giving proper regard to the use of outward
apparel. This vice occasions an offensive shabbiness in appearance. Another is a
shrugging off of all convention and decorum by dressing with abject contempt for
cleanliness, orderliness or decency. The last two are seen everywhere today in
America where misplaced trousers fall below the hips, defectively short blouses
are hemmed above the navel, and pre-faded, pre-worn garments are sold at
exorbitant prices at the boutiques.
One last area in the
consideration of modest dress is its relation to the virtue of purity. Modest
dress elevates the physical personae of the man or woman who wears such
clothing, so that his or her body reflects the virtues striven after and
attained by the soul. Furthermore, it educes the virtues of moderate thoughts
and tempered desires in those who behold them. On the other hand, when such
dress is uncharitably or negligently missing, the scandals of temptation and seduction often
result.
St. Thomas Aquinas, who is
known as the “Angelic Doctor” for his heroic purity, had much to say on this and
the related topics concerning women’s dress. I simply reproduce for you his
wisdom. He begins: “As regards the outward apparel of women, we must bear in
mind the general statements made above concerning outward apparel,” I have
summarized those in the preceding paragraphs.
and also something special,
namely that a women’s apparel may incite men to lust, according to Proverbs vii.
10, Behold a women meeteth him in
harlot’s attire, prepared to deceive souls.
Nevertheless a women may
use means to please her husband, lest through despising her he fall into
adultery. Hence it is written (1 Cor. vii. 34) that the woman that is married thinketh on the things of
the world, how she may please her husband. Wherefore if a married woman
adorn herself in order to please her husband she can do this without sin.
But those women who have no
husband nor wish to have one, or who are in a state of life inconsistent with
marriage, cannot without sin desire to give lustful pleasure to those men who
see them, because this is to incite them to sin. And if indeed they adorn
themselves with this intention of provoking others to lust, they sin mortally;
whereas if they do so from frivolity, or from vanity for the sake of
ostentation, it is not always mortal, but sometimes venial. And the same applies
to men in this respect. Hence Augustine says (Epistle ccxlv. Ad Possid.): I do not wish you to be hasty in forbidding
the wearing of gold or costly attire except in the case of those who being
neither married nor wishful to marry, should think how they may please God:
whereas the others think on the things of the world, either husbands how they
may please their wives, or wives how they may please their husbands, except that
it is unbecoming for women though married to uncover their hair, since the
Apostle commands them to cover the head. Yet in this case some might be
excused from sin, when they do this not through vanity but on account of some
contrary custom: although such a custom is not to be
commended.”
Finally,
The argument for the
practice of American women (and most of the female sex of the western world)
wearing feminized versions of men’s attire as arising from the moral revolution
in which we suffer today is beyond the scope of this study, though all
indications would be that this practice is revolutionary and against good
morals. Nevertheless the principles outlined by the Angelic Doctor are beyond
reproof.
Regarding resources for
both the principles of modesty in dress as well as sources for obtaining
suitable dress for the young, please consult the recently published masterpiece
by the articulate and gracious Catholic woman, Colleen Hammond, entitled Dressing with Dignity. Every home should
own at least one dog-eared copy of this definite book on the subject of modesty
in women’s dress. It is available at both www.colleenhammond.com and
www.valoramedia.com.
Conclusion
We have considered these
various species of Modesty first, namely humility, studiousness and external
actions and coverings, because as we explained earlier, they are related one to
the other under Temperance as those desires which are easier to moderate than
the subject matter of the cardinal virtue, which is the desire of the flesh. It
must be noted that these virtues: humility, studiousness and the various outward
forms of modesty, have to be mastered early and remain with the young (or be
recaptured by the old) so that they may have the virtuous foundation for
attaining temperance in the things more difficult to handle. It stands to reason
that when the easier and more elementary things are missed, the latter, mature
and more onerous duties will suffer a tragic fate.
Returning to the analogy of
the virtue ladder, we began with those virtues that make for an easier initial
ascent. In the future we shall examine one more set of virtues related to
temperance that are essential for all men, namely clemency and meekness, and
then move on to the specific forms of temperance and their necessary constituent
parts. That will bring us firmly and safely to the first landing on the virtue
ladder.
[1]
Please note that the term “spiritual” does not
mean supernatural as is often confused. “Spiritual” refers to the immaterial
nature of the higher creatures, namely: angels and
men.
[2] Note how this is so unlike our modern churchmen’s presentation of man. Here the mystery of man is still reasonably comprehensible. How different this is from the moderns who present him as essentially mystifying, and therefore the object of veneration and even solipsism.