I’ve been speaking at a few parishes
within my home diocese of Joliet, IL about my new book, Faith with Good Reason. During the talks, a general theme has come
up which is quite simple in concept, but perhaps sometimes forgotten; it’s the
fact that what we think ultimately directs what we do.
Many might be familiar with the tragic
philosophy that says, “I think, therefore I am”. This makes the reality of our
being dependent upon our thinking; it also bodes very well for a narcissistic
society. With this as a base premise, one could see how believing in “yourself”
is the most important thing in the universe to believe in. It also explains how
bad things can happen in democracies in which the souls of the citizens are
ruled by their own desires.
St. Augustine said something that
sounds similar, but might as well come from the other side of the universe; “I
believe, therefore I speak.”1 Perhaps St. Augustine got this from St. Paul who wrote,
“Since, then, we have the same spirit of faith, according to what is written,
‘I believed, therefore I spoke,’ we too believe and therefore speak” (2 Cor
4:13). Both saints would acknowledge that their ability to proclaim Truth
ultimately comes from something outside of themselves…and that something is what
we call “God”.
If God is Truth itself, then “I think,
therefore I do” may be more accurate words to live by if put in the context of
the human soul. Our intellect thinks and our will does. Our will reaches for
what our intellect has understood.
Consider the importance of “thinking
& doing” in the following non-theological example: 2
- A World Series bat and ball signed by
some famous Chicago Cubs costs $1500.
- The bat costs $1000 more than the
ball.
- How much does the ball cost?
Let’s go forward with the thinking that says the
ball must be $500. Now suppose an individual offers you the same ball for $400
and you think, “Good deal! I can save a hundred bucks!” If you were to pay the $400 you would actually be
losing $150 because the ball is only $250!
Breaking the problem down step-by-step,
we can see the reality:
The
bat and ball cost $1500: Bat + Ball
= $1500
The
bat costs $1000 more than the ball: Bat
= Ball + $1000
We
now express the problem like this: (Ball
+ $1000) + Ball = $1500
How
much does the ball cost?: ($250 + $1000)
+ $250 = $1500
So the ball is $250 and the bat is $1250 for a grand
total of $1500. Why is
this important? Because what we think directs what we do. If we are thinking
wrongly (like thinking the ball is $500), then we will be doing wrongly (like
taking a bad deal).
Some of this logic can spill over into
the notion of “Love the sinner, but hate the sin”. This is an important idea
because we know we can separate an inclination we have from what we do
about it. I am a sinner, but it is not necessary that I sin. To internalize
this and make it real I need to understand what sin is and why it’s bad for me.
If I were an alcoholic it would not be necessary that I drink, but again, to
internalize this and make it real I would need to understand what alcohol is
and why it’s bad for me. Loving the sinner, but hating the sin also frees us to
love our enemies, since we are able to separate the two.
But what if we go forward with the
thinking that says…
- Who we are is what we do
- Our inclinations define who we are
If this is true, then our actions are as
integral to who we are as our skin color or our gender. With this mentality
it’s easy to see why those who dissent from Catholic teaching in areas of human
sexually (the topic of almost all dissent) might hate the phrase “Love the
sinner, but hate the sin”.
For example, if some are inclined
toward same-sex attraction, that’s who they are—and who they are and what they
do cannot be separated, right? In other words, if you are gay, you should be
gay. It’s an immutable fact. Go out and start dating; try different things with
different partners. See what you like and what you don’t. Be who you are!
Furthermore, if anyone hates what you are doing, they must also hate you personally
since the two naturally go together. By the way, the exact same thinking can
apply to opposite-sex attraction in the context of fornication. Go out and
start dating; try different things with different partners. See what you like
and what you don’t. Be who you are.
If we are thinking wrongly, then we
will be doing wrongly! If God is Truth, then objective Truth should be the
object of our intellect, which will in turn direct the will. If love is an act
of the will, then to love or discern something we need to know it. The primacy
of the intellect is important in order to act and love properly.
“The origin of all deviant practice is deviant
thought. The knowing why it is deviant is a function of mind based on a standard
of reason. It is the steady ‘knowing why’ that, before anything else, we are
missing.” 3
- Saint
Augustine, Confessions (New York: Barns & Noble Books, 2007), p. 5.
- Daniel
Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
2011), p. 44.
- James V.
Schall, S.J., Catholic World Report [Website], “Catholics and the Present
Confusion”, (9 January 2017), Site address: http://www.catholicworldreport.com/Item/5337/catholics_and_the_present_confusion.aspx
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