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A merchant about to purchase precious stones should
learn something of their relative value, if he would
make a wise selection. In like manner, a Christian
should have some knowledge of the intrinsic merit of
each virtue to aid him in making a proper choice.
The virtues of which we have been treating may be
divided into two classes, the first of which includes
the more interior and spiritual virtues, the other
those which are exterior or sensible. To the first
belong the three theological virtues, which have God
for their immediate object; and the virtues which
facilitate the accomplishment of our duty to God,
such as humility, chastity, mercy, patience,
prudence, devotion, poverty of spirit, contempt of
the world, denial of our own will, love of the cross
and mortification, with many others to which we here
give the name of virtue in the broadest acceptation
of the term. These are called interior and spiritual,
because their action is chiefly within the soul,
Nevertheless they are often manifested to the world,
as we see, for instance, in the virtues of charity
and religion, which produce a number of exterior
works to the praise and glory of God. The exterior
virtues are fasting, mortification, pious reading,
vocal prayer, chanting of the Psalms, pilgrimages,
hearing Mass, assisting at the offices of the Church,
with all the outward ceremonies and practices of a
Christian or religious life. Though these virtues,
like the others, have their seat in the soul, yet
their action is always exterior, while the acts of
the spiritual virtues, faith, hope, charity,
humility, contemplation, contrition, or repentance,
are often entirely within. There is no doubt that the virtues of the first class
are more meritorious and pleasing to God than those
of the second. "Woman, believe me," said Our Saviour
to the woman at the well, that "the hour cometh, and
now is, when the true adorers shall adore the Father
in spirit and in truth. For the Father also seeketh
such to adore him. God is a spirit, and they that
adore him must adore him in spirit and in truth." (Jn.
4:21,23-24). For this reason David, describing the
beauty of the Church and that of a soul in the state
of grace, says that all her glory is within in golden
borders, clothed round about with variety. (Cf. Ps.
44:14). And the great Apostle, writing to Timothy,
says: "Exercise thyself unto godliness, for bodily
exercise is profitable to little; but godliness is
profitable to all things, having promise of the life
that now is, and of that which is to come." (1Tim.
4:7-8). According to St. Thomas, godliness here
signifies the worship of God and charity to our
neighbor, while bodily exercise means fasting and
other austerities. This is a truth of which even the pagan philosophers
were not ignorant. Aristotle has written very little
of God, yet in one of his works he expresses himself
thus: "If the gods take any interest in human things,
as we have reason to believe they do, there is no
doubt that they take most pleasure in what bears most
resemblance to themselves – that is, in man's spirit
or mind; hence they who adorn their minds with a
knowledge of truth, and their souls with the beauty
and harmony of virtue, must be most pleasing to
them." The celebrated physician Galen expresses
the same thought. Writing upon the structure of the
human frame, and the different relations and
functions of its various parts, in which the wisdom
and power of the Sovereign Artisan are particularly
manifest, he is overcome with admiration, and,
abandoning the language of science for that of
religion, he exclaims, "Let others honor the gods
with offerings of hecatombs. [Sacrifices of 100 oxen
or cattle offered by the pagans to their deities.] As
for me, I shall honor them by proclaiming the
greatness of their power, which so readily executes
all that their wisdom ordains; and their infinite
goodness, which refuses nothing to their creatures,
but abundantly provides for all their needs." Such
are the words of a pagan philosopher. Let us refer
them to the true God; and what more can a Christian
say? The great Galen unconsciously repeats the words
of God's prophet: "I desired mercy, and not
sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than
holocausts." (Osee 6:6). The hecatomb of the pagan
may be considered as the imitation of the holocaust
of the Jew. From the praise bestowed upon the
interior virtues we must not conclude that the others
are of little value. Though not so noble as the
former, they are nevertheless most efficacious in
acquiring and preserving them. For example, retreat
and solitude guard us from innumerable sights and
sounds which endanger the peace of our conscience,
and imperil our chastity. We are all sensible of the
importance of silence in preserving devotion, and
avoiding those faults into which we are led by
excessive conversation. "In the multitude of words,"
says Solomon, "there shall not want sin." (Prov.
10:19). Fasting, when performed in a state of
grace, besides being a meritorious act of the virtue
of temperance, as it is at all times, also expiates
our sins; subdues the inclinations of the flesh;
repels our enemy; disposes us for prayer, pious
reading, and meditation; and preserves us from the
excesses, quarrels, and passions awakened by
inordinate indulgence. As for pious reading, the
recitation of the Psalms, assisting at the divine
office, and hearing sermons, it is evident that these
acts of the virtue of religion are most efficacious
in enlightening the understanding and inflaming the
will with a desire for spiritual things. To
acquire and preserve this precious virtue of
devotion, which of itself disposes us for the
practice of all other virtues, we must watch over
ourselves with special vigilance. So little suffices
to make us lose this delicate virtue. Frivolous
conversations, excessive mirth, immoderate indulgence
at table, slight anger, unnecessary disputes,
curiosity and eagerness to see and hear what does not
concern us, besides many similar faults, while not
grave in themselves; weaken, and sometimes destroy,
the spirit of devotion. To preserve the intense heat
communicated to it by the fire, iron must be kept
continually in the furnace – or, at least, it must
seldom be withdrawn. Otherwise it will quickly resume
its former temperature. In like manner, if we would
keep our hearts inflamed with the fire of devotion,
we must remain closely united to God by the practices
we have mentioned. These reflections will show us
the importance of the second class of virtues, and
the relation which they bear to the others. The
virtues of the first class form the end; the virtues
of the second are the means to attain this end. The
first may be said to be the health of the body; the
second, the medicine to obtain it. The first may be
regarded as the spirit of religion, the second as its
body – though absolutely necessary for its welfare.
By observing the counsels we have here laid down you
will avoid two equally lamentable errors. One was
that of the Pharisees in the time of Christ, and the
other is that of certain heretics of the present day.
The Pharisees, carnal and ambitious men, accustomed
to the literal observance of a law then framed for a
carnal people, disregarded true justice and interior
virtues, and were satisfied, according to the
expression of the Apostle, with "an appearance of
godliness." (2Tim. 3:5). Under a virtuous exterior
they concealed a corrupt and wicked heart. The
heretics of our day, endeavoring to avoid this error,
fe(1 into the opposite extreme and preached contempt
for exterior practices. But the Catholic Church
preserves a happy medium between both, and, while
maintaining the superiority of the interior virtues,
recognizes the merit and advantage of those that are
exterior, just as in a well-governed commonwealth
each one enjoys the merit and prerogatives which
belong to him.
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