Radical Wholeness: Day 40
Author: Andrew Comiskey
November 22, 2020
‘Aquinas assigns
intemperance to the
“roving unrest of spirit”, which he says is the
first-born daughter of acedia (or sloth)…
Acedia is the dreary sadness of
a heart unwilling to accept the greatness to which man is called by God; this
inertia raises its paralyzing face
wherever man is trying to shake off the
obligatory nobility of being that belongs to his essential dignity as a person,
and in particular the nobility of the sonship of God, thus denying his true
self.’ (The Four Cardinal Virtues, Josef Pieper, p. 200)

‘It may be the sign of
complete rootlessness. It may mean that man has lost his capacity for living
with himself, nauseated and bored by the void of an interior life
gutted by
despair, he is seeking with selfish anxiety and on a thousand futile paths that
which is given only to the noble stillness of heart held ready for sacrifice
and thus in possession of itself, namely, the fullness of being.’
(The Four Cardinal
Virtues, Josef Pieper, p. 201)
‘Not only is temperance
beautiful in itself, it also renders men beautiful. Beauty, however, must be
understood in its original meaning:
as the glow of the true and the good
irradiating from every ordered state of being, and not in the patent
significance of immediate, sensual appeal. The beauty of temperance has a
more spiritual, more austere, more virile aspect. It is of the essence of this
beauty that it does not conflict with true virility, but rather has an affinity
to it.
Temperance, as the wellspring and premise of fortitude,
is the
virtue of mature manliness.’
(The Four Cardinal Virtues, Josef Pieper, p. 203)
Have we found chastity
yet? We’ve fought through (but not conquered) prudence, justice, and fortitude;
we are now engaging temperance and its daughter chastity. My take is not
unfamiliar to anyone who follows Desert Stream Ministries.
Integrating our sexual
humanity with our most noble spiritual aspirations requires reaching for more. We who have been foolish and damaged in our sexual
selves can be re-envisioned by the God who made us and who redeems us according
to the fullness of His being. According to St. Paul, we can know this fullness
at the very center of our humanity (Eph. 3: 16-19). That means
whatever the
Designer has in store for our sexual humanity, He can help us realize.
Of course, we’ve a hand in
this.
We can respond to His stirrings or not. As He awakens dormant
parts of us, we can rise or go back to sleep. As He reunites formerly
disjointed aspects of our humanity, we can start to exercise our new
coordination with others or stay indoors and play it safe.
The virtues of
temperance and chastity are about cultivating the good habits of aspiration--knowing
Whose (the Father of all living) we are and what He calls us to realize this
side of heaven. At the very least that means becoming aligned with our powers
of life and love.
We’ve two obstacles here.
The greater secular culture urges us to splice our humanity up according to
whatever ‘feeling state’ we possess; this is now one of the great planks of
today’s civil rights.
Instead of recognizing our weakened personal
identities and the disturbing sexual ‘symptoms’ that arise from them, the world
of politics, academia, and popular media reframe them as our ‘true selves,’ and
urge us to parade them. All in the name of freedom. Anyone who resists is
deemed criminal, abetting ‘conversion therapists’ in their quest to coerce
young persons into fake ‘change’ efforts.
At a recent nearby City Council
meeting in which a dour and disheveled LGBTQ+ activist expounded on the horrors
of ‘change’ (though he had no personal experience with it nor could name a
practitioner in town), I saw a glimpse of what Pieper describes as a soul driven
by
‘a roving unrest of spirit’, one ‘gutted by despair, seeking with selfish
anxiety and on a thousand futile paths’ that which is only granted one who can
quiet himself before the Source of our nobility.
One might think that the
Church is the counterpoint to our impoverished culture, the Source of our
‘fullness of being.’ She fundamentally is. My freedom today as a husband,
father, and grandfather is based wholly on her faithfulness to her Bridegroom.
But
sadly, her pastoral application can seem at odds with her convictions; she is often
animated by a compassion so Jesus-free that it is indistinguishable from the
world’s.
Much of the Church struggles
to believe that Jesus died to break sin’s grip and rose to raise us with Him. Can
the Gospel, should the Gospel, restore the LGBTQ+ identified? Uncertain, we
‘accompany’ sexual sinners to their doom.
Agents of sloth, asleep in the
Light, we have lost sight of human nobility in the sexual realm, what
Pieper describes as the temperance that ‘irradiates the true and the good,’ and
reveals something of mature virility in men trained by her.
Pieper is prophetic. He
urges us to shake off that ‘dreary sadness of heart’ and to live like persons
raised from the dead, able and willing through Jesus and Bride to become noble,
creative, true-to-form. We can know
that form because we are made in His image. And we know the One who assumed our
haggard efforts at creating ourselves, who with Almighty mercy invites us to
rise and exercise the form of our new, true humanity of which He never lost
sight.
He will stop at nothing to envision and help us realize the radical
wholeness for which He died. To stop reaching for more is to trample underfoot
the blood He shed.
‘Jesus, thank You for Your
vision for our lives. Your sight is true and Your unfailing love sure. You
invite us to not settle, and instead to reach for more. Help us to forego worldly
consolations and plateaus; empower us to exercise the sight and strength we
have, to see beyond our stingy, disappointing world to the bigger one You won
for us. You made us to become good gifts--help us to give our gifts. Our freedom
hinges on it. You gave all, that we might give all. Free us for that great
adventure.’
‘Jesus, thank You that we
are first and foremost citizens of Your Kingdom. Your saving purposes, the
plans of Your heart, endure forever (Ps. 33:11). Patriotism and its partisan
interests must bow before “Your will be done.” “The eyes of the Lord are on
those who fear Him, who trust in His unfailing love” (Ps. 33:18).’
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