An Expert Exploration Into St. Thomas Aquinas | Fr. Gregory Pine
Fr. Gregory Pine, a Dominican philosopher and assistant director of the Tomistic Institute, explores St. Thomas Aquinas’ 13th-century synthesis of faith and reason in Summa Theologiae, mocked today for "trivial" debates like angels yet praised by Chesterton as the most practical thinker. Aquinas rejected Enlightenment skepticism, grounding truth in scripture, Aristotle, and patristic wisdom, while his Dominican order’s urban mission countered monastic retreat. Modern distortions—like libertarian legal nihilism or toxic speech (detraction, slander)—stem from ignoring his principle that words must serve communion, not division. Pine’s Trading the Tongue offers a path: disciplined speech fosters virtue, aligning human exchange with divine grace and shared flourishing. [Automatically generated summary]
Each human being can have the confidence that his life, her life is not an accident.
There might be bad things that happen.
You may have experienced some measure of pain, a heaping, helping of suffering, seeming incoherences, but it's part of a story, and that story redounds to God's glory and potentially your salvation.
And so you can have the confidence that if you gaze into it, it won't be the boy that gazes back.
I don't know if this is more preachy than your show ordinarily is, but I kind of can't help myself.
I appreciate it.
I mean, you are a member of the order of preachers.
It would be contrary to your nature.
Preacher's got to preach.
If you were a long time viewer of my show, you will know that the sentences in every episode contain three things.
A noun, a verb, and a quote from St. Thomas Aquinas.
But a lot of people don't know who this guy is.
And they ask me, they say, Michael, tell me about Thomas Aquinas.
And I say, look, I love St. Thomas Aquinas.
I have a devotion to St. Thomas Aquinas.
My confirmation name is Thomas.
But what do I know, man?
I'm just a cigar salesman.
So I am so pleased to bring in someone who is truly expert.
That would be Father Gregory Pine of the Order of Preachers, who is a professor of philosophy at the Dominican House of Studies, as well as the assistant director of the Tomistic Institute, named after the aforementioned saint, Thomas Aquinas, and the author of Training the Tongue and Growing Beyond Sins of Speech.
Father, thank you for being here.
Thanks for having me.
I'm delighted.
I want to get to the subject of the book because that really pertains to podcasting.
In my line of work, there are really three constituent parts.
Detraction, calumny, and gossip.
That is basically the whole industry.
So I'd love to get to that.
I'm very concerned about matters of speech.
I wrote my own book on it, probably from a less theological lens.
First, I want to know.
I personally want to know, because even though I have a great devotion to Thomas Aquinas, he wrote 10 billion words and he expounded on every single topic under the entire sun.
Who is he?
And why do Catholics and traditional, more traditionally minded Protestants, and especially political conservatives, quote him all the time?
Good question.
Let me think about that.
I'm done thinking.
So St. Thomas Aquinas is a touchstone of the Catholic intellectual tradition.
In short, he inherited the main insights of those who went before him, and he communicates them in a way that's readily available to those who have come since.
So sometimes in the 21st century, people like they'll talk about St. Thomas Aquinas as if he were complicated or overly complex.
But the reason for which we still talk about him is that he managed to communicate in as coherent a way as one can for complex things.
So St. Thomas, in effect, the work that he undertakes is to kind of translate the divine wisdom to human concepts.
And yeah, I don't know exactly if that's the best way to kind of qualify it.
But he's referred to as the common doctor of the church because he inherited the main findings of those who went before him.
You know, he's a deep reader of sacred scripture.
He's engaging with the fathers of the church in really, really subtle and beautiful ways.
And then he's communicating the faith in its integrity.
So he's not just like, I like this, that, and the other thing, and I'm going to talk about them until the cows come home.
He tries to communicate the faith as it flows from God and as it conducts us back to God.
So yeah, if I were to summarize it in three adjectives, he's wise, he's holy, and he's comprehensive.
Well, that'll do it.
Nice.
I heard a story that, you know, he writes everything.
Probably the most famous work is the Summa Theologiae.
And then he has this mystical vision at the end of his life, and he comes back and he says, oh, everything I've written is straw.
One, is that true as far as legends about saints go?
And two, what does that mean?
So I think it's true.
So St. Thomas Aquinas is one of these saints who had his life and works kind of subjected to thorough scrutiny as part of like a modern canonization process.
The modern canonization process is kind of coming online in the centuries before him, but it's really, it's cruising, it's really doing what it ought to do by the time that he is up for canonization.
And so you'll hear that story recounted, I think, in the biography written in association with that process by William of Toko.
So it was like St. Thomas was in the priory in Naples at the end of his life.
He was assigned there from like 1272 to 1274 for his last stint.
And he used to celebrate Mass and then he would serve Mass for his like main scribe, Reginald Paperno.
And he would also spend a lot of time in Thanksgiving and he would weep copiously.
And it was the sacristan of that priory church, whose name is like Domenico, I've forgotten his last name.
And he was passing by and he heard in clear tones an exchange between St. Thomas Aquinas and the crucified Lord.
And like that's the main story.
Like he heard, well you have written of me, Thomas.
What would you have in return?
And St. Thomas is said to have responded, nothing but thyself, O Lord, nothing but thyself.
So I think it's good to keep that in mind, that our Lord thought that he wrote well, because shortly thereafter, kind of in association with that mystical experience and also the exhaustion of his life's work, St. Thomas pronounced upon his works that they were so much straw by comparison to what he had seen.
So it's not to say that they're straw, because if they were straw, he would burn them.
They're straw by comparison to what he saw and he saw the Lord.
And so shortly thereafter that, that event happened on the feast of St. Nicholas in 1273, and then he died on the 7th of March in 1274.
So it just precipitated the end of his life.
He actually died on the way to the Second Council of Lyon.
I might be muddling a couple of details of the story and just mishmashing.
So my apologies to those in the com box who asked.
It could have been the third council of Lyon.
No, probably not.
There isn't one, but nevertheless.
So that story that you just recounted is the other, one of the other very famous stories about him, which is that God says, you've written well of me.
And what will you have?
And instead of saying, I want a Ferrari or I want a box of Mayflower cigars, which would be worthy answers, you're questioning it.
Thank you very much.
I know we're a bit three minutes in.
But rather than that, he says, nothing but you, O Lord.
Which makes so much sense.
And so this reminds me of something that I see going around Twitter.
I see St. Thomas going around Twitter a lot, which does my heart good, because Twitter is a cesspool and it's full of scum and villainy.
But sometimes you see these bright moments.
And one thing that was going around was St. Thomas pointing out that lust is one of the causes of despair.
And I think actually he says sloth is maybe more primary a cause of despair, but lust is a big cause of it because lust turns your mind away from spiritual goods toward earthly goods.
And so because your mind isn't on spiritual goods, you know, you're lost.
Ultimately, that's where your hope has to lie.
And it made me realize that his answer is the obvious answer, because no merely terrestrial thing will ever satisfy any of us.
And so it's not just that he's being holier than now.
That's the only reasonable answer to give.
Nothing but you, O Lord.
When one reads Thomas Aquinas, it's so eminently reasonable.
And yet, the thinkers of the Enlightenment, so-called, mocked the scholastic thinkers of the Middle Ages and said, oh, they're all debating how many angels dance on the head of a pin or whatever.
How did the thinkers like Thomas Aquinas fall out of favor?
Are they coming back into favor again?
And if so, why?
Yeah, I think.
So this is my take.
This idea might be shared by other individuals.
I haven't checked in with them, so I'll just send it across the bow.
I think that in the history of theology, at a certain point, like especially in the late 15th, early 16th century, people get really concerned about nitty-gritty details.
And we understand why.
Because if you found yourself in an ambiguous moral situation or in a potentially compromising situation, you want to be able to act with certainty and confidence, especially when you fear for your ever-loving immortal soul.
And so during that time, especially with kind of contemporary changes in philosophy or the practice of philosophy, there was doubt that we could actually know the things themselves.
And so there became this great reliance on authorities.
So, you know, philosophers and theologians began adjudicating claims on the basis of who said or how vehemently this or that person said.
And so it became this kind of calculus of if you can marshal X number of authorities or Y number of authorities, then you can be certain, then you can be confident.
And it was as part of that conversation that people began to reject scholastic thought because it had become kind of decadent and it had become inordinately concerned with pacifying doubts rather than getting to the heart of the matter.
And so St. Thomas has always been someone to whom we can return because he's passionate about getting to the heart of the matter.
St. Thomas doesn't necessarily address a lot of these nitty-gritty details in his works, but he furnishes you with principles so that you can rehearse arguments, so that you can be in fruitful dialogue with your environment, your contemporaries, with whomever.
And I think that like that's, yeah, part of the reason for which St. Thomas has so much purchase now is because you read St. Thomas and you find that you can engage with life in a way that's more free, in a way that's more kind of abandoned, as it were.
Maybe that's the wrong word to choose.
But the basic idea is that you attend to what is most important and you find that that kind of unriddles the complexities.
And while life still might be hard, it's like hard to persevere in the practice of the faith, it needn't be overly complex.
And so like St. Thomas, even though people talk about him as overly complex, it ends up that he, yeah, he facilitates an encounter with life which proves more simple.
It reminds me of the Reagan line in his most famous speech, Time for Choosing.
He says, you know, some people say we offer simple answers to complex problems.
Maybe they are simple, not easy, but simple.
And in a way, I guess I get the same feeling from St. Thomas Aquinas, which is, I'm not saying that what he is teaching is easy to live out, but it is simple enough.
In fact, divine simplicity, I suppose, would be one of the things he teaches.
So then for people who are listening to this, and they're saying, okay, this is Thomas, he sounds like an interesting guy, and he had a lot of answers.
I mean, truly, I consult him on just about any question I have.
What should I have for breakfast on Tuesday is in the secunda secunde, I think.
They're going to say, okay, I get it, but what is it?
Like, what is it that he is teaching me practically for my life today that I am not getting from the modern world?
I think often in this line from Chesterton, he says, the most practical of persons is the mystic.
In the sense that the mystic has clearly between his navigational beacons the port of call, the mystic is headed for heaven.
And in light of heaven, he's able to make judgments as to things here on the surface of the earth and do so with clarity and conviction.
And I think that's the power of St. Thomas Aquinas in that he's not a slave to our practical considerations, but he furnishes us with, again, speculative principles, or maybe to make it more approachable for folks, he furnishes us with genuine wisdom that we find we can apply to practically every situation.
So there's some real input energy.
I think about those like charts in my ninth grade biology textbook, like you have to have like a catalyst.
Maybe it's whatever.
Shut up.
No one cares.
But the basic idea is like, you're going to have to invest a little bit at the outset to engage with the Catholic intellectual tradition or the Christian intellectual tradition more broadly.
But you find that it furnishes you with a grammar so as to speak coherently.
And then your own experience of life becomes more, I guess, transparent to these cool conceptual resources.
I'm speaking overly complexly, but the idea is this.
It's like a lot of us are eclectic in our thinking.
We're like, this cool person said that, and this holy person said this, and this other guy, whatever, who cares?
But the idea is that it all hangs together.
Like it all comes forth from God and returns back to God.
And that we can kind of tap into God's providential plans in their unfolding.
Not in that we become uber mentioned as a result, but in the sense that we can actually know and we can actually love.
So like when you and I enter a church, for instance, we're not like, hey, here's the thing.
People said that our Lord is present in the Eucharist, but like can't really rule out the other alternatives because we haven't seen him.
A peer in a Eucharistic meeting.
Who knows about anything?
So I'll genuineflect to the front of the church, to the left of the church, to the right of the church.
I'll genuflect to the entrance itself.
You know, it's like to cover my bases.
It's like, no, no, we just genuflect because we believe that we can have certainty, confidence that the Lord is who he says he is.
And on the basis of that conviction, St. Thomas is able to say, like, okay, here are steps.
Here are principles.
Here are arguments.
This is the way that you engage.
And I think a lot of people, like, part of the reason for which they find it so powerful is a lot of folks are out there just saying, like, these people are dumb.
So I'm going to say the opposite thing that they say.
You know, so it's not, you don't actually plunge the roots of your soul into metaphysical soil.
You don't actually like nourish yourself on what is.
You're just whatever.
St. Thomas says, like, you can know and you can love.
Because, right, there's the impulse to say, well, and I fall into this all the time.
Well, this old dead smart guy said something and good enough for him, good enough for me.
So there's that kind of appeal to authority.
But then there's another one I fall into.
There is this reflexive observation from the modern world, which is we say, well, look, that guy is wrong about everything.
He's wrong about literally everything.
And so if he says something that I don't know very much about, I'll just assume that that's not true and perhaps take the opposite approach.
And, you know, practically, it kind of works.
It does work out, but it's not rooted.
You're right.
That doesn't lend itself towards systematic thought.
So I think you've hit on this crucial point, which is in our world, our culture is very skeptical of certainty.
Even on the right, even among Christians, they just say, well, you can't ever really know.
16th and 17th Century Skepticism00:02:48
The medievals, the scholastics, Thomas Aquinas, they really knew.
Like they really knew.
When did we stop really knowing things?
Good question.
Short answer, I have no idea.
Long answer is I suspect it had something to do with the traumas that Europe passed through in the 16th and 17th centuries.
And you see that reflected in philosophical thought.
I'd like introduce my friend Father Bonaventure into the conversation who teaches specifically 18th century pietist precursors to Kantian thought.
Look, that is a fan favorite out here.
Millions of the audience members.
Morning, noon, and night.
Yeah, when you said at the beginning, like a lot of people are asking, who is this Thomas Aquinas?
I thought to myself, how many people, you know, at least, maybe four.
Yeah, can't rule it out.
That's okay.
I'm in a cottage industry.
Well, when it comes to the things that I'm interested in, it's like St. Thomas Aquinas and like Philadelphia sports.
I have a lot more.
Never mind.
Keep going, Gregory.
But the basic idea is this.
You know, so like Descartes, for instance, the beginning of the discourse on method is revolutionary.
Just call everything into doubt and then see what you can do on the basis of your subjective experience.
And then the idea that things which people claim to be certain of can be a source of, you know, violence, oppression, et cetera.
Whether those claims are adjudicated in good faith or whether that's just used as ammunition as a way by which to rule out difficult claims that have purchased on my life, which caused me to convert.
You know, we can talk about that all day and all night with all three people who care about who Thomas Aquinas is.
But yeah, I think that in the 16th and 17th century, you see the breakup of a kind of consensus.
And people blame that on science.
I don't think it's to be blamed on science.
Obviously, like the medievals had an appreciation for how science was to be conducted.
Their approach, their kind of methodology, methodology relied heavily on demonstration so that you could advance with certainty.
You make the empirical judgments and then you say, okay, let's ground this on the basis of what we know.
But yeah, I think that we're still in the whatever, aftermath, in the ruins of a kind of post-apocalyptic wreck that was visited upon us by 17th century folks.
I mean, this very company has gotten lots of views because of a movie called What is a Woman, which became this dominant question in our culture to show you the extremes of the skepticism.
So then, what do you say?
What does St. Thomas say to the person who is watching?
I've gotten a lot of emails on this.
They say, look, the culture is awful.
It's decadent.
It's terrible.
It's making me unhappy.
The behaviors that it imbues in me are making me unhappy.
I want to believe.
Salvation Historical Uncertainty00:09:14
I want certainty, but I just can't do it.
So what do you do?
So I'd say there are also salvation historical reasons for which we find it difficult to be certain and confident.
Like we're all laboring under the burden of sin.
So we come into this world despoiled of grace and wounded in our nature.
And so we're just thinking through things under the cloud of ignorance.
We're choosing through things with this kind of, I don't know what you would call it, like a knot of malice.
And then we're feeling through things with a healthy dose of like concupiscence and weakness mixed in.
So it's just hard to navigate life in that respect, insofar as the very tools with which we're trying to process our experience are themselves bent, not broken, but bent.
And so I think that like the real protagonist of history is the beggar in the sense that we have to beg for God if we are going to be delivered from our calamity.
Thanks be to God, Christ comes begging for us in some strange fashion.
And so like if we are going to know, there is a sense in which we're also going to have to be healed and grown beyond our present limitations.
So when people experience their bankruptcy, I think that's a beautiful precondition to asking for enrichment and specifically from the only person who can furnish it in plenary fashion, God.
So it's like when grace comes into our life, it heals us and it grows us.
It's not just like something that's layered on.
It gets into all of the nooks and crannies of our humanity and rectifies them, reconciles them, furnishes us with what we need in order to live well.
So I'd say for the person who wants to have certainty, who wants to have confidence, I'd say go to Eucharistic adoration.
Just sit yourself in front of the Lord.
I think a lot of people who aren't churched or who aren't religious find that a more pleasant place to be necessarily than mass because there's not as many moving parts.
They can just plunk themselves down and they can just, you know, it feels strange to talk to Jesus if you're not accustomed to Eucharistic teaching and practice.
But you can just sit down in a church where the Blessed Sacrament is either present in the tabernacle or exposed in a mantrants and just talk it out with the Lord.
And you might not yield much from that conversation, but the typical experience is that when you go home, you find that like the furniture of your moral life has shifted ever so slightly, sometimes more than so slightly.
It's shifted and it's kind of created space within which to re-engage or to like envision your life anew.
So I'm a cheater.
You know, like I don't like go for the philosophical proofs because I feel like I can just do the theological fire.
Right.
Right.
Why not just go direct?
Yeah.
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For some people who will say, I'm not familiar with sacramental theology.
I don't believe in the real presence of Christ in Holy Communion or what have you.
I would say, yeah, okay, fine, sure, I get it.
Plenty of Catholics don't believe in the real presence, according to public opinion surveys.
Very unfortunate.
But to your point on the wisdom of just go check it out.
Check out the adoration.
We're incarnate creatures, and we move through symbols.
That's how we interpret the world.
So when you pray to our Lord, you're either you might look at a picture or an icon.
You might look, I don't know, at a landscape at the beautiful creation.
You might close your eyes.
And even then, you're not looking at the back of your eyelids because there's some image that's going to pop up.
So, like, just go with me for a second.
Maybe look at, even if you think it's merely a symbol, what Christians have considered to be at least a symbol of our Lord for 2,000 years and actually considered to be much more than a symbol of our Lord.
I think that's really great advice.
Drew Clavin, my friend and colleague, had a kind of similar advice years ago.
Someone said, how do I believe in God?
And he said, well, here's how you believe in God for 60 days, in 60 days.
Just behave as though he exists.
Just try it out.
Fun little experiment.
Let's just behave as I'm reminded of this St. Thomas prayer that I sometimes pray, the prayer for students.
I sometimes pray it before I go speak.
And it says, you know, Lord, please free me from the twofold blindness into which I've been born, sin and ignorance.
And I do wonder for people who have all these problems and trouble believing or improving or whatever, I think like how much of that is just because we're all ignorant.
So it's like, you know, if you want to believe that God exists as an abstract principle, there are proofs.
Like St. Thomas famously has five of them, and they're pretty convincing.
So you can just like read that and maybe your mind will start to assent to it.
But two, you're burdened by a ton of sin.
And for a lot of people, I think they would say, well, yeah, what do I do about that?
Yeah, I'm racked by lust and wrath and pride and social media, which the individual platforms appeal to each of those, you know, Instagram and Twitter and TikTok, respectively, I think.
So I have great pity for them and for me in a way.
Well, what do you do about that?
What if you say I'm just too lusty and prideful and angry to reason?
Yeah, it's so that's a humble acknowledgement of one's existential state.
And I think where there is humility, there's already God's working or God is already working there.
I do think that so Christians hold it to be true that we're born in a state of original sin.
And I think that's a really liberating doctrine.
Sometimes people see it as a negative doctrine, but I take it as a positive doctrine because at a certain point, you're going to have to contend with the fact that everything that you touch, you kind of ruin.
And if it's just you ruining those things, well, that's devastating.
But if God endowed us with this original gift that we since lost and now come into the world left to ourselves, feeling a nostalgia for what was and a yearning that it might be reconstituted, and then we make a mess of things, like, okay, I can make more sense of that.
And so I take it that like, yeah, so yes, we are lustful, we are wrathful, we are prideful, all those things are true.
I just don't think it matters too terribly much what hand you've been dealt in the sense that you might come into this world with a certain temperament or a certain constitution and you might recognize that as not that good.
What matters is how you play the hand.
And I think the best way in which to play the hand is to address that hand to the one who dealt it and say like, what do you have in mind for this?
You know, because it's not a mere matter of chance.
He knows the cards that he gives.
And they're the deliverance of love.
They're not the deliverance of like chance or whimsy or caprice.
Like God wants, like if it is true, what Christians say, that God is a provident father, then this is the issue of love.
And so that being the case, then how do you choose to play it?
And I think the idea is, you know, like a lot of people are here saying to themselves, like, my real life is elsewhere.
I'm being kept from my real life.
People are holding me back.
People are oppressing.
Whatever it is.
We all have our characteristic temptations or the stories that we tell ourselves as to why we're not yet flourishing.
But the fact of the matter is that this is our real life.
This is the hand that we've been dealt and that we have the wherewithal to play it well, provided that we ask God for said wherewithal.
And so I think it's like, yeah, I think it's good to be reconciled to the truth.
I think it's good to abide in what is and say like, okay, I'm not that handsome, you know, like I'm balding.
And I use a weird vocalic register, which often loses as many people as it attracts.
You know, and like this habit, while cool in a certain sense, also totally detracts or like it makes it such that people just run in the opposite direction, especially in airports, you know, because they're already nervous.
So it's like you have to know who you are and what you're about.
And then you can live your life with a kind of, with a certain freedom, you know, something like abandon.
Yeah.
So yeah, I think that for people in those kind of in those situations, obviously, yeah, various ways in which to go about it.
I personally want everyone to be Catholic.
St. Thomas's Systematic Genius00:05:35
And it's not because I'm like an imperialist or a colonialist.
It's because we have all the means of grace and salvation because we have all the means whereby to heal and to grow, whereby to profit from God's offer of divine life.
And that's just wild.
You know, it's just, yeah, I don't know if this is more preachy than your show ordinarily is, but I kind of can't help myself.
I appreciate.
I mean, you are a member of the order of preachers, in fact.
It would be contrary to your nature.
Preachers were otherwise.
Yes.
Well, of course, of course.
And a lot of people are becoming Catholic right now.
Yeah.
And which I think is part of the Thomas Thomas, the Thomas Renaissance that we're seeing on social media.
For our Protestant friends who are watching, I think one thing that's attractive about St. Thomas Aquinas is that he's a systematic thinker.
You were touching on that a little bit earlier.
It all kind of makes sense amid all of the many letters that he wrote or that his secretaries wrote.
Sure.
And there were plenty of Catholic writers who are not systematic thinkers.
Sure.
And there are a lot of Protestant writers who are not.
And I remember Hilaire Belloc, the Catholic writer, making the point that Martin Luther, for whatever political virtues he had, was not really a systematic thinker.
Even if one is taken with his theology, it doesn't totally jibe.
Whereas for someone like John Calvin, even if you hate his theological views, there is a kind of coherence to it.
He's the most systematic thinker, probably.
I think Belloc calls him the genius of Protestantism.
So if one has multiple systems of thought, why is Thomas' the right one?
Yeah.
Have I thought about that in those terms?
It's interesting because, like, you know, not just to be anecdotal, I experienced St. Thomas's clarity of thought, his depth of insights, but I experienced it within the setting of his personal holiness for the first time.
And so, like, I never considered another systematic thinker.
Like, for me, it's always just been Thomas, Thomas, and Thomas.
I'm beginning to learn how to navigate other traditions, not so much as a native speaker, but as a kind of dilettante.
But for me, it's just always been St. Thomas, let's mystic tradition.
So I think that if we're making comparisons, we can, one, appeal to the authority of the church, which commends him as the common doctor, as the universal teacher of the Catholic faith, from whom we can all stand to profit.
So there is, in a certain sense, a kind of authority accorded to St. Augustine.
Like St. Augustine appears more in the Catechism of the Catholic Church than does St. Thomas because he's really the first one to engage a lot of these issues.
And St. Thomas relies upon him an incredible amount.
So of the sources that St. Thomas cites, obviously scripture is that which is cited most.
But then next, it's Aristotle and Augustine, which is fascinating.
So I think that what you have in St. Thomas, what you don't necessarily have in patristic teachers and preachers, is that system or systematic approach to the whole of the faith.
So often enough, Augustine is treating a particular issue.
You got the Donatists over here doing whatever.
You got the Maniches over here doing something else entirely.
You've got the Pelagians over here doing a third thing.
And so he's addressing them, seeking to correct their errors, but also to edify the flock in a way that they can comprehend, in a way from which they themselves can profit.
But he's not thinking like, okay, we've navigated all of these different controversies.
Now it's time to set forward the faith in its entirety.
He'll have like certain treatises which tend to be more systematic, like the In Coridian on Faith, Hope, and Charity, but he never writes that work.
St. Thomas comes at a time when people are beginning to write that work.
And you're recovering a lot of this patristic teaching.
St. Thomas had access to all of these excellent libraries, which a lot of people had forgotten about for like 800 years.
That's an exaggeration, 600 years.
And then you also have the reintroduction of a lot of really beautiful philosophical resources.
So I think that part of St. Thomas's genius is reliant on Aristotle's genius.
Because you have these real insights from the Platonic tradition, but they're not necessarily set forward in a systematic fashion.
They're set forward in the manner of a story or in the manner of a dialogue.
Whereas Aristotle, he was a schoolman.
He was, again, systematic in his approach.
And I think that Aristotelian philosophy corresponds most closely with what is controversial thought.
At this point, most people don't care, but here we go.
Hot takes within a very limited fold.
And so St. Thomas is recovering all of these riches from the patristic tradition and doing so with philosophical resources which cohere closely with reality.
And so he's able to set it forward in a way that cleaves to the thing itself.
So a lot of times you're like, there's something out there, and I'm going to say a lot of words and hope that it lands kind of in the vicinity.
It's kind of a horseshoes and hand grenades type approach to the truth.
Whereas for St. Thomas, it's, no, we've got the best philosophical resources, the best theological resources, and also the best thinker, arguably, of all time.
And he does so with a kind of consciousness that this should be explained in as coherent a fashion as possible.
Because a lot of the texts that he inherited were kind of like catch-as-catch-ken.
And, you know, so he says about the sentences of Peter Lombard, he's talking about a lot of cool things, but he's repeating himself.
He's not necessarily doing it in the order wherein we can best onboard all of these insights.
And yes, I think we can do better.
So that's like the introduction to the Summa Theologiae.
And then he just gets after it at the height of his career with a whole team, like a whole squad of people in his service.
And the results are magical.
Risky Movements to Become Dominican00:05:01
Nope, wrong word.
Mystical.
Yes.
Yes.
For those who have never dug in, which, you know, it's great.
Any question you have, you just Google the question Summa Theologiae and it'll probably come up.
He lays out three points and then he says what he has to say.
And then he responds to the three objections for like every single question under the sun.
Yeah.
With lots of secretaries writing it down, doing multiple things at once.
One last biographical point before we move on to other questions, but it kind of harkens back to this idea that sin makes us stupid and that maybe a lot of the reason that everyone behaves really stupidly today might have something to do with the widespread and encouraged constant mortal sin.
His family didn't want him to become a Dominican.
His family wanted him to become an abbot, have a nice, sort of prestigious, cushy position.
He wanted to be a Dominican.
They lock him up in a tower.
They send a hooker in.
he doesn't take well to this well he actually responds very well to this but not as as well not Yes, he chases her out with a torch, as I recall.
I'd say gently accompanies her to the door with a torch.
Lights her way for her.
Exactly.
Behind her, in fact.
Yes.
Why didn't they want him to become a Dominican?
And how did he resist a temptation that would be very difficult for many, many people?
So, to the first, they didn't want to become a Dominican because the Dominicans had been recently founded, maybe like 30 years prior, a little less than 30 years prior.
And so they were still kind of ragtag, as it were.
I guess something comparable would be like how someone might have looked at the missionaries of charity when it wasn't yet clear that St. Teresa of Calcutta was a saint.
So St. Dominic had been canonized at that point.
But nevertheless, it was like they were not especially prestigious, whereas other religious orders of the time had that reputation for being prestigious.
Why did he want to be a Dominican in the first place?
So I would tend to think.
So the Dominican ideal is at the time revolutionary.
Not in the way that a lot of people say revolutionary, but in the sense that it represented a departure from the norm, and it was risky.
Because up until that point, you had various movements of religious life.
So for those who don't know anything about this, you've got priests, and those priests might be attached to a place.
We call those diocesan priests.
Or they might be attached to a certain community.
We refer to those often enough as religious priests.
And religious priests tend to sort on the basis of interest.
Okay, so the first movement of religious priests is the monks, and their interest is cultivating recollection, seeking to be in the presence of God, praying throughout the course of the day as a way by which to sanctify time and working so as to support their temporal needs and maybe serving in the countryside if there are occasions.
But then the next movement is canons who live kind of like monks, but they have more pastoral responsibilities, but they tend to be rooted to a canonry, right?
So to like a cathedral chapter or something like that.
So the next movement is the friars.
The next big movement would be the friars.
And the risky thing about the friars is that they're way more mobile.
And whereas the monasteries tended to be in the countryside, they bring the monastery to city center.
So there's this sense that, okay, so for a Dominican friar, what's the ideal?
It's to contemplate and to furnish others with he whom you have contemplated.
So the idea is that you live a kind of monastic life and that you're transfigured by that, that you're transformed by that.
But then like Moses, who goes up to the mountaintop and has his face transfigured, you know, in brilliant light and then comes down and testifies or witnesses to the people.
So the Dominican friar is meant to preach.
He's meant to teach.
But it's risky because there's like a lot of sin and vice at the city center.
Okay, so part of the reason for which a monk would retreat to the countryside is to ensure a kind of cloistered environment where he could have, you know, some measure of confidence that he could live his life with recollection in the presence of the Most High God.
And so the Dominican ideal, it's risky, right?
It's decidedly risky.
And the act of life isn't necessarily well established in the church at that point.
So like the Franciscans come from the penitential movement, which is kind of wild and crazy.
And then the Dominicans come from the canonical movement, which is a little more established.
But nevertheless, it's kind of ragtag.
It's a risky business.
But I think St. Thomas was attracted by the ideal in the sense that he saw the fruit which was born of doctrinal preaching and teaching.
That by dedicating one's life to prayer and study, he himself became, I don't know, like the hope is that he'd become good and that he would go forth from his cloister and people would see something about his witness and think like, I want that.
You know, there's something about that.
Law as Will to Power00:15:14
Yes, just taking it back to 2026, for my whole life, people have been saying, look, man, I don't want doctrine and dogma.
And let's not be doctrinal.
Don't be dogmatic.
You know, look, I'm really spiritual.
I'm not religious, but I'm really spiritual, man.
And it probably reached its apotheosis in the new atheism.
And it's since crumbled into anarchy and decadence and chaos.
And now I think people say, actually, you know what?
That doctrine, that's kind of interesting.
Dogma, even, that's interesting.
And well, religion, what is religion?
And St. Thomas says, religion is a habit of virtue that inclines us to serve God, to give God what he deserves.
So, well, maybe that's a good, what's so bad about that?
I wonder if that's the, you know, the pendulum swinging back.
Yeah.
No, I think it's like, I mean, you could approach this from any number of advantages, but freedom unfolds within bounds.
And when you tell people that there are no rules, they end up miserable.
You know, if you like drop a ball in the midst of people and say like, play the game.
They're like, which game?
According to which rules?
Define for me the field of play.
Because otherwise, the strongest is just going to insist on his way.
It's like when you play card games with individuals who know them really well and continually introduce rules at intervals in a way that profits them.
You're like, oh my gosh.
It's just, it's insane.
But when you have a sense of like, okay, these are the bounds that delimit the space in which I can play, then you begin to enjoy it.
Chesterton has this point about like, if you put a bunch of kids on an island with sheer cliffs at the edge and tell them to have fun, they'll huddle at the center of the island.
But if you build a little wall around it, they can explore the whole of it.
So that's not to say that like we're purposefully limiting ourselves just so that we can get excited about oppression or repression.
But the idea is that our nature entails certain limits.
By virtue of the fact that we're human beings, you know, we ought to treat our teeth in a certain way.
If we like floss with, I don't know, like an iron file, we're going to cause problems for our enamel.
Like nature sets the terms according to which we flourish.
And in St. Thomas' estimation, like God is at the summit of creation.
And unless you enshrine that fact in your interior life, your exterior life will be a little bit chaotic because you'll be living in rebellion.
You'll be living contrary to what is.
And the only way in which to flourish is to live in harmony with what is.
And now, mind you, there's got to be scope there for growth.
Because we don't just say like, these are how things are.
I give up.
It's something to which we aspire.
Because, yeah, like I might know that God is to be preferred to all things, but at certain times, it might be difficult for me.
You know, if you put me through like Navy SEAL's hell week, and I've only had three hours of sleep over the course of the last three days and you say like, time to say the bravery, I might be like, you know, it might not be pretty.
But nevertheless, like it remains for us to appropriate that, to take that on board as best we can over the whole course of our life.
And that's part of what's exciting about being human.
That graduation reminds me.
We're talking about hookers more than I expected to in a conversation.
I guess it comes up once or twice.
But there's a frequently cited point as pertains to practical politics, which is that St. Thomas Aquinas, I think citing Augustine, conspicuously says, look, you might not want to outlaw prostitution entirely, which is kind of shocking.
You say, well, why not?
It's very bad and it's a vice and so shouldn't you.
And his answer is, well, not everyone is at the same level of virtue.
They're all at different parts on their journey, would be like the woo-woo way of saying it in modern parlance.
And so he says, you want the law to teach people and to instruct them and to bring them up a little bit, but you don't want it to be unattainable.
You don't want it to be so stringent that people actually crack and they end up worse off than they were even in the beginning.
So there's this great prudence that comes in those practical applications.
No, it's you often, yeah, you hear this in theological circles as well.
But this notion that, so the law is for our good, that's something that a lot of people wouldn't necessarily think instinctually.
Even on the right.
I mean, this is what kind of drives me crazy.
About our friends, our friends, the libertarians, you know, which are part of the conservative coalition, but they're not conservative.
They begin with different priors, philosophical priors.
And this is to me one of the big distinctions between a conservative and a libertarian, is conservatives tend to take the Christian view that the law is for our good and the virtuous pagan view that the law is, and like just the normal guy view that the law is for our good.
And the libertarians take this view that law is offensive or somehow itself unjust.
Am I strawmanning?
I don't care if I am.
I think that's their inclination.
Yeah, so I think that for us, this takes a kind of work of recovery to set forward how law is good.
So St. Thomas will define a law as an ordinance of reason, which, again, somewhat jargony, but the basic idea is that it's a reasonable dictate.
It's not just something that I enforce.
It's not just something that I will into existence.
Because I think a lot of people suspect law of just being will to power.
When truth be told, it's, no, there is a natural law at work in the world.
And we, as rational animals, are capable of discerning something of that natural law and then of determining it or specifying it further for our particular life together.
So it's not just a mere matter of efficiency or expediency.
It's a matter of how do we, as a polity, host a conversation as to what's good and then frame laws which can be educative, which can be pedagogical, conducting us to that good.
So he'll specify further, it's got to be by a legitimate authority.
It's got to be for the common good.
It's got to be promulgated.
You know, he'll hem it in.
But at the heart, it's an ordinance of reason.
So it goes back to the same point that we can actually know what's good and that we can actually come to an agreement as to what's good.
Father.
Father.
Don't you know?
There's someone screaming at their screen right now.
Yeah.
Saying, well, hold on.
One, is your good really the same as my good?
And two, and this is the question, I get it a lot.
Who decides?
Who is to decide?
Because what you're suggesting, that the law is to teach us, to make us behave in a certain way, that sounds like social engineering.
It sounds nearly like brainwashing.
It is downright totalitarian and offensive to any good American conservative.
How dare you, sir, come here to a podcast set and suggest that the law can be for our good.
Do you have any answers to those questions?
That was beautifully done.
You're good at this, by the way.
I don't know if anyone's told you that, but let it be known.
You're good at this.
That's very common.
I'm enjoying myself.
If you're like, what's that dude laughing about over there?
It's just, you're the man.
I greatly appreciate that.
So cheers.
Yes, so we could say any number of things.
If people have difficulty agreeing as to like how the speed limit should work, let's just start with something more basic.
Like, should you be able, for instance, to just, wow, I realize that a lot of these things we actually do differ about.
Because I was about to say like murder, and then here we are.
Here we are.
You got abortion on the one end.
You got euthanasia on the other end.
Maybe those aren't just as clear as I thought they would be.
Five years ago, they might have been.
At least in euthanasia, maybe.
But now, oh, marriage.
Oh, no.
Is there any.
I'm, wow, I'm undermining my own arguments as I hesitate and stammer.
That's embarrassing.
Now, if we were just judging by the standards of all of human history until like 2015, your point would have stood.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Something has accelerated.
Something has accelerated.
So maybe let's do like lying.
A lot of people think you can lie in any number of ways, but we all recognize at a certain level that if we were free to lie, okay, in a sense that like it couldn't be adjudicated, it was non-justiciable, and you couldn't make contracts.
Right.
And I think that everyone at a certain level is motivated by the making of contracts, at least as it concerns the making of money.
Yeah.
So you're going to be able to find something with anyone with whom you speak.
It's like, why aren't you killing me right now?
Why aren't you killing me right now?
You know, it's because I go to jail.
Okay, perfect.
So I think that we can typically find some common ground with our interlocutor as to the type of things which shouldn't be done.
Like, let's say that it's a kind of shrill political conversation.
I think most people would agree, like, Holocaust shouldn't come back.
Yeah.
You know, like, slavery.
Not all would agree, but most reasonable.
Yeah.
All reasonable people would.
Let's say like 99% of people would agree.
You know, like this shouldn't come back.
That shouldn't come back.
The types of things which we agree represent a kind of atrocity in the case of the event and social progress that we recognize that corporately as representing an atrocity.
So just as soon as somebody admits that, they're granting something after the manner of objectivity.
Okay.
They might have a complicated philosophical theory which gets them out of hard and firm commitments.
You know, they might be like, oh no, that only applies on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Right.
Okay, whatever.
But I think that everyone admits at a certain level that we have some kind of objective access to the good.
Okay.
Even like hardline relativists, I think like what a lot of relativists want is non-intervention.
They just don't want you dictating the terms of my life.
So what they want is a kind of tolerance.
But they often trot out a philosophical theory for the practical end which they hope to obtain.
That's a very wise statement because I think it explains all of it.
They want to be really nice and inclusive and polite in a certain understanding of politeness, probably a misbegotten understanding of politeness.
And so they backfill a bunch of philosophical gobbledygook and anthropological gobbledygook to just get to their end, which is shouldn't we be nice to the gays or something?
I mean, that's like a lot of our discourse, especially as pertains to sexual morality over the last 10 years, basically comes down to like, hey, I have a gay cousin.
Can I be nice?
And the end of that is like men and women aren't different.
That's like the anthropology that they've come.
But you don't.
need, you don't have to do that.
I don't think most people actually think that, even the ones who profess to.
Yes.
And so I think it's like, yeah, I find, I mean, in conversations that I'll often have with people regarding hang-ups to Catholic conversion.
So it's like this person's an atheist or this person's a Protestant or this person's Orthodox and they're thinking about becoming Catholic, but they've got this one doctrinal hang-up.
Sometimes I'll just, I'll try to figure out if there are actually practical considerations in the background.
Because it's like you're talking to the atheists, like, do you really care about worship vis-a-vis God and the Blessed Virgin Mary?
Or, you know, because like I acknowledge the fact that if you become Catholic, you're going to have to change your life.
And that's burdensome, or at least it seems burdensome from this vantage.
Because, you know, you think about Protestants who are thinking about becoming Catholic.
That will entail a reorientation of a lot of relationships.
You know, because while they may recognize, you know, that becoming Catholic is not the worst thing in the world, there may be some individuals in their family or in their friend group who think of it under that aspect.
And that's really hard.
And so they're going to be told you're hateful.
They're going to be told you're intolerant.
They're going to be told you're being brainwashed.
And I mean, like, what are you going to say back?
It's like, ah, I don't, you know, like, I love your mom.
Yeah, exactly.
In some cases.
And so like, I think a lot of us just have difficulty distinguishing between people, their desires, and the realization of their desires.
You know, and so like this person's becoming Catholic and we just say bad person.
We don't necessarily, but someone might say bad person.
Or, you know, as it concerns like the same-sex attraction, homosexual orientation or whatever it is, it's like, you know, unless you wholly embrace, unless you wholly validate what I do, that's a rejection of me as an individual.
It's like, I didn't say that, you know, but if that's your interpretive lens, then I'm kind of stuck.
Right.
So I think that a lot of the discourse breaks down when we fail to make basic distinctions.
And yeah, when we fail to actually facilitate a real conversation as to what matters or what the people are actually concerned about.
Yeah, that does.
It just, this idea from that St. Thomas prayer keeps coming up, which is, and even I miss it sometimes because I really like the abstract stuff and I love the precision of nailing down every premise.
But no, maybe it's that this person is dealing with an aberrant attraction or is too, I don't know, connected to some particular vice that they were there or they don't want to disappoint Aunt Gertrude or something like that.
And in a way that's much more easily answered, though maybe more difficult to actually live out when you realize that that's the obstacle, that's the stumbling block.
I mean, I think about it too in terms of, I mean, you say things on the internet and presumably people on the internet disagree with some of the things that you say.
Occasionally.
Yeah.
From time to time.
At a spiritual directory, what do I say?
From time to time.
But like in my own very limited experience, I do like a quarter of a fraction of not that much.
But like a lot of people tell me to my face that I haven't done well, which can be difficult, obviously, because I'm proud, you know, and I'm angry and I'm vainglorious.
And like recently, I just, in those moments, I just pray for the grace to not be against that person.
You know, because I think that like a lot of discourse comes down to the recognition, like it's not us versus them in many instances.
There are instances in which it's powers and principalities.
You know, it's not with flesh and blood.
And you just got to be straightforward about that.
There's no sense in like making everyone out to be just whatever.
This is a misunderstanding.
No, this is actually conflict.
But just to not be against that person.
Like I was having a conversation with somebody the other day, and this individual was informing me as to ways in which things that I said could be misinterpreted and applied in a way that would hurt people, which I'm sensible to.
Like certain things that the individual said, I don't necessarily agree with.
But at the end of it, I just said like, hey, because she was basically moving to the exit because she just expected me to be angry with her, you know, in my proud, vainglorious way, which is a reasonable expectation.
And I said, hey, if you don't want to go, you don't have to go.
I'm not against you.
And I'm open to the things that you're saying.
And dot, dot, dot.
And eventually she did have to go because blah, blah, blah, and that's and such.
But like, I think that we often have it in our minds that it's us versus them.
When truth be told, I mean, it's us versus the evil one.
And the evil one is sowing up.
I mean, he's not sowing up.
He's sowing discord, contention, strife.
And I think that's a lot of what we hear in the static that's presently on the airwaves.
Well, that is actually a great transition to your book, Training the Tongue, because this is, I feel seen.
I feel seen by your book.
Because I talk about this with my wife, sweet little Elisa, frequently.
This whole industry, and some practitioners more than others, it's detraction, calumny, and gossip.
And that's rough.
Evil One Sowing Discord00:03:48
You don't want to do it.
Like our Lord says, if you call someone an idiot, you're going to go to hell.
You know, maybe there's a little more to it than that, but still, that's pretty scary.
You don't want to hear that if you're the sort of person who wants to call people idiots sometimes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So what do we do about this?
Because the American right has adopted a position that actually comes from liberalism.
It was more of a left-wing position, but now they've adopted, which is free speech absolutism.
That you should be able to say not just like things within the confines of justice and morality and the law, but like literally everything, and there should be no consequences for it whatsoever.
And that's not my view.
I don't think that's a traditional conservative view or a Christian view.
So how do we rein in our nasty little tongues?
So I think the first step is a recognition of the purpose of the faculty of speech, which is communion.
Without sounding too, what did you refer to it earlier as woo-woo?
A little woo-woo.
A little, you know.
Okay.
Yeah.
Woo-woo or touchy-feely or whatever it is.
UAG.
Yeah, nice.
But like the point is to come together in the sense that, and this is a traditional philosophical position, namely that we are social animals or political animals.
Sometimes you'll hear it conjugal animals.
I like to add ecclesial animals.
But the idea is that our lives are meant to be shared.
So we come into the world related or we come into the world for relationship and interaction.
And we don't choose a lot of that.
It goes before us, which I think would be like a kind of classic response to social contract theory.
It's our sociality precedes us.
That is to say, it's baked into our nature.
The question is whether we'll lean in or whether we'll lean out.
And speech affords us a way of concretizing our thoughts and affections so as ultimately to share them so that we can come together.
Because by virtue of the fact that people have bodies, they're not able to occupy the same space.
And you know, like you think of all romantic literature, of an unchased sort, it's like devour.
Of a chased sort, it's like self-gift, you know, but like people want to be together.
Yeah.
Like people don't like the experience of distance, of misunderstanding or failed failure to launch, whatever, you get it.
So the promise of the faculty of speech is that we can come together.
But in order to do so, we need to be good stewards.
And so this gets back to the point about freedom.
Like freedom isn't an absolute good.
Freedom is a good, which is to be matured, ultimately, to be disciplined in the service of the good that lies in store, you know, like our development as human beings, our service of each other, and ultimately our worship of God.
So it's like we want to be fixed in the end.
We don't want to be like, I could choose to serve God, but I could also like choose to do drugs or I could.
That's such like a lame example.
I felt very Nancy Reagan with that.
Yeah, well, it's a good example.
Actually, because I think that is how many people, including conservatives, many of them, view themselves, view their human nature, and view the ideal of human nature as, you know, the kind of person who can, if I want to serve God, I will serve God.
And if I don't, by golly, that's my right as an American, isn't it?
And I think that's not.
The Mayflower pilgrims were Protestants.
They didn't probably have a fully atomistic view of things.
But I don't think they would have agreed with that statement.
I don't think they would have agreed with this notion that freedom is for the option of license.
And yet that now predominates, certainly on the left, but also on the right.
Yeah, so I think the idea is that freedom is the promise of fulfillment.
It's the promise of flourishing.
But we need to heal.
Need Discipline To Flourish00:03:56
We need to grow.
We need to discipline our human activity in a virtuous fashion so that we can come together.
And so on that basis then, like these, I make the emphasis in the book about cultivating verbal virtue because I think a lot of time when we hear sins of speech, we hear like root this out, root that out, root the other thing out.
And at the end of the day, if all you do is root out weeds from a garden, you just have an empty garden.
That's it.
So we want to cultivate good growth.
And there might be weeds that crop up, but the idea is that they'll get kind of forced to the periphery and then they'll be easier to identify, easier to root out by God's gift.
So yeah, just like telling the truth is something so basic.
But there's a recognition that the only way in which we can genuinely share is on the basis of the truth.
Because if I project some false notion of who I am, you know, let's say that I tell you that I like, I know a lot about New York sports.
I don't know anything about New York sports.
I hate New York sports teams.
Not because of anything they've done to me, but just like of who they are, you know?
Well, increasingly, given the Yankees' failures in recent years, they've done, even for me, they've done a lot to hurt me and chase me away, like a marriage that is hitting a rough patch.
Sorry.
Sorry, it's a digression.
No, it's great.
It's a good digression.
So, yes, so if I were to pretend to be other than I am, that's not real communion.
You know, it's just like I'd always be insecure in the sense like if he finds out that I'm actually a Philadelphia sports fan, he's going to know that I come from a kind of strange middle-class town where people use the F-word not just as a point of exclamation, but also as a conjunction, as a verb, as a noun, as a, I mean, it comes in as commas sometimes.
You know, it's just like, you know, it's like it's somewhat of a crass.
I'm not going to impress anyone by the fact of being from Philadelphia, except for Philadelphians, you know, because it's kind of a cult.
They're hardcore about it.
Yeah, exactly.
So it's like, so telling the truth becomes the basis of communion.
We can only come together on common ground.
And then approaching like the particular sins that you describe, yeah, so I focus a lot on like conversation.
You know, a lot of people talk about dialogue as if dialogue were a good in itself, which I don't think it is.
Dialogue is for something.
Yes.
And it's not always clear what it's for at the outset.
Like I think if you approach somebody whom you don't know and say like, let's talk about very serious things, that person's going to be like, back away slowly.
So I think there's a point to small talk.
We're meant to kind of perform our communion in the way that we can.
With the hope that we might mature in a friendship, but you're not going to be friends with everybody.
You might be friends with like two to five people and then acquaintances.
You're lucky.
Yeah, exactly.
So yeah, the idea there is that we're hosting a conversation because talking helps because life is worth sharing because we have a hope that we can go to God together.
And so then in order to do that, we need to encourage people to come kind of out of the cold and like gather around the hearth.
Like it's cold out there.
And we just lose touch with our extremities.
And we're like, what is going on?
But when you gather around a fire, you can feel life returning.
And I think that's what conversation is meant to do.
It's meant to welcome people into a human exchange, a human encounter.
But in order to do that, like we need to build each other up.
Because if we're always criticizing each other, whether to each other's faces or behind each other's backs, then there's a suspicion which keeps us at a distance and we're never going to be open up.
We're never going to be able to open up.
So I think that, yeah, the basic idea is the promise of communion is real, but that we need to discipline our faculty of speech in pursuit thereof.
Yeah, I've heard lying described as contraceptive speech.
Nice.
In as much as it undermines and maybe prevents the whole purpose of the speech.
The purpose of the speech, as you describe, is communion, and the basis for that is the truth.
So I love the idea also that you cultivate these positive virtues because going back to good old Aristotle, he describes sort of four states of virtue in my recollection of the ethics, which is there are the people who are just vicious.
They love sinning, man.
Promise of Communion00:04:24
It's so fun.
And then there are the incontinent who don't want to sin, but they do.
And then there are the continent who want to sin, like kind of at a deep level, are inclined to sin, but they don't for the most part.
And I think most people think that's it.
That's the range of human life.
But Aristotle tells us at least, and maybe one day I'll find out that he's right, that there's such a thing as virtue.
And that you can actually cultivate a desire to do good things and a revulsion against bad things.
Is that real?
I hope it's true.
No, I think that the development of one's character proceeds by stages.
And I think a lot of people find themselves in between states, as it were.
It's not like a stepwise function.
So whatever, I'm thinking of slope-intercept form right now, y equals MX plus B, because that comes up sometimes.
It does, yes.
No, I was talking about that 24 years ago.
I remember, I think it was the last time I spoke about that, yes.
Savage.
Okay, so leave free algebra at the door next time.
Okay, so the promise is that it becomes easier, prompter, yet more joyful to act out of those kind of good dispositions.
So I think like a lot of what we're doing as we seek to respond to the various goods in our life generously is we're addressing various obstacles or hindrances.
Like a lot of times when we recognize like I'd like to be more attached to this good, it will mean a kind of detachment from other things.
Like if I'm going to be wholeheartedly for this, I'm going to have to leave other things behind.
So you think about like an athlete, for instance.
Let's say that a talented basketball player, the point guard for the Philadelphia 76ers, is named Tyrese Maxi.
Let's say at the age of 12, he came to appreciate that he was better than a lot of his classmates.
And he realized that if he really invested in this, that he might be good.
And let's say at the time, like he was in the school play, he was on the mathletes, he was doing Scholars Bowl.
I'm just listing things that I did.
I'll never be cool.
It's good to know that from the outset.
But he might have done those things.
You don't know.
You can't rule it out.
Quizbowl, baby.
But he probably said to himself, like, listen, these things all meet at the same time.
I'm going to have to detach from certain lower goods in order to attach to certain higher goods.
And human life's like that.
In the sense that I like sour patch kids and I like cool conversations with cool people by chance happenstance and I like Eucharistic holy hours, right?
And I like heaven.
Don't yet know what it's going to be like entirely, but I've had some glimpses, you know?
Okay, so let's just say that it's Ash Wednesday, all right?
And I can only have one meal today because that's the church's law, and I might be lusting after Sour Patch kids, but this lower good has to take the backseat to this higher good in the circumstances, right?
And truth be told, my affections should not be as enslaved to Sour Patch kids as they are in fact.
And so I'm seeking to mature such that these higher goods have more purchase, that they have more claim to me.
And so I think that like what's happening as our characters are developed is that like a space is being created in our life to accommodate those goods.
And yeah, like we're addressing certain obstacles or certain hindrances to the full realization, but then we're also coming before God and saying like, hey, if this is going to work, it's going to be you who does it.
So one, grant me the grace to desire it.
And two, bring it to perfection.
So yeah, the promise is that it should be easy, which is wild.
Before I let you go, I know you have to, you've done one of these whirlwinds.
I actually, I enjoy doing this myself.
Fly in and out same day.
Yeah.
I know.
It's prevented going out and getting dinner, but Nashville is future Greenland right now.
It's all shut down.
It's freezing.
It's a precursor to our colonization of the Arctic.
It's fine.
Before I let you go, there are going to be people who say, well, okay, so I've learned a little bit about Thomas Aquinas, and I've learned, I've had these philosophical insights, and okay, he gave me kind of a hard sell on Catholicism.
Hopefully, maybe I'll take it up.
That'd be great.
I'd love to do it.
But at a real practical level, I'm at least convinced that I should want to be good.
How can I be good?
Goodness Beyond Us00:07:54
So I think goodness comes from beyond us, irrespective of whether one believes or does not believe.
Like even Aristotle recognized that there's a certain measure of chance, luck, fortune.
He thought that the virtuous man needed that.
And so in Aristotle's estimation, virtue is kind of an aristocratic thing because he thinks that you need to have enough time, enough leisure, enough money in order to be genuinely virtuous in the plenary sense.
But part of what I think is especially beautiful about the proclamation of the gospel is that the Lord's for each and every.
And not like a Marxist, you know, like he recognizes that there's a certain goodness to differentiation because he wants to incorporate us in a mystical body.
He doesn't want us to just like be blandly egalitarian.
Just a blob, like some kind of Marxist gray blob.
Exactly.
Yeah, that's not a body.
That's not a true body.
That's not a true body.
And so I think that each human being can have the confidence that his life, her life is not an accident.
There might be bad things that happen, decidedly bad things.
You may have experienced some measure of pain, a heaping, helping of suffering.
There might be a lot of like seeming incoherences, but it's part of a story, and that story redounds to God's glory and potentially your salvation.
And so you can have the confidence that if you gaze into it, like it won't be the void that gazes back.
So like, I think like a couple of preparatory virtues, which I commend to all people of all times and places are curiosity and honesty.
In a sense, like be curious about what you're actually experiencing.
I think a lot of people are worried to inquire as to what's going on in their life because they fear that there are no answers or there are no solutions.
But the fact of the matter is just take it on someone else's counsel or authority that there are.
And then you can be honest.
You can be like, I'm embarrassingly this way.
I am shamefacedly that way.
I am less than I ought to be.
Or I am, you know, I think a lot of people feel that they are simultaneously too little and too much, which is a terrible place to be.
But you can stand to be curious about your experience and honest with what you find.
And you can try to hand that over.
You know, like goodness comes from without.
And if there's going to be a goodness that enters your life, it's often going to be by asking for help from a friend, from a member of your family, from a trusted kind of source of wisdom, somebody who's been through it, somebody who's, whatever, been down that road.
But ultimately, I think that that network of relationships and interactions is meant to conduct us to God.
And so when he comes knocking, you're probably going to be able to recognize the sound at the very least, and maybe even the voice.
So, yeah, even in my attempts to be less than preachy, I end up being more than preachy.
But it's just, yeah, people can have the courage to live their lives because it's not beyond us.
People need a little preaching sometimes.
Amen.
That's the thing.
You mentioned you're from Philly.
I'm a New Yorker.
And so at various times in my life, I have been a little saltier with my language.
And it's kind of come and gone.
When I was a kid, and then I'd kind of clean up my language, and then I would come back in.
And I've really tried my best to root it out.
One, because it is a sin, right?
It's a venial sin to say naughty words.
So I don't want that.
I have enough problems.
I don't need more of that.
And two, it's kind of unbecoming, especially in mixed company.
But even with the fellas, I just, I try not to do it.
So I've done my best to root it out.
Now I actually have a kind of an aversion to it.
I try not, I don't like it when I hear people use naughty language.
How does that principle apply to the other sins of speech that we all frequently engage in?
I think, I mean, not unrelatedly, to use a torturous formulation at the beginning of a paragraph.
Not unrelatedly, she said in haste.
So I think part of the reason for which I think it's good to navigate around craft speech or naughty language as you describe it is that it tends to lower the tone of a conversation.
And when you consciously or deliberately lower the tone of a conversation, I think you open the door to further verbal vices or to further sins of speech.
So when you say like, hey, this is a place in which we say this word, that word, the other word, it seems to suggest this is a place in which we detract, calumniate, and otherwise gossip.
Because it's like, hey, you know, you can let your hair down.
Hey, you know, you can be at your leisure and say whatever occurs to you in the moment.
And so I think that like it goes back to the idea that speech is for communion, that we're meant to build each other up, not in like patronizing or condescending ways, like patting each other on the proverbial head, but in a sense that I think there's a lot of excellence that lies hidden in each of us that requires the community in a certain sense to recognize and then to elicit.
I think it's like the office of a friend to kind of coax the good out of his friend.
Not in that like, again, it's not in that like he knows better, but I think that there are ways in which our friends pull things out of us.
And I think that our speech should reflect that.
It should facilitate that.
And so, you know, like men tend to be competitive and comparative.
They tend to be, they tend not to give compliments too terribly often.
But I think that's a problem.
You know, it's like I live in a house with 45 Dominican friars and I listen to a rotation of 30 to 35 priests preach each month.
I try to tell them like when I think it's good, like, hey, that was a great homily.
Thanks for that insight.
That was beautiful.
Because it's like, listen, the world's big enough to accommodate more than one preacher.
You know, the point of us being here isn't so that each of us could contend for being the best preacher.
And I think that when someone sees something in you and calls it forth, it has a way by which of ennobling you, of actually helping you to mature into your true identity and mission.
And so, you know, so detraction is the sin where we speak about somebody behind his back and we say true things, but like kind of true things out of turn.
It's like, did you hear?
You know, it's like this person doesn't need to know.
And all it does is undermine the individual's reputation unnecessarily.
So calumny or slander is when I say false things.
So I've stooped to such a degree that I'm willing to invent stuff just to hurt this person in effect.
And then gossip, you know, like we use that to name a variety of things, but often enough gossip is fueled by a certain idle spirit.
So I think like when it comes to detraction and calumniation or calumny, it's often enough like we feel like we're in competition or we're in comparison, as it were, and we're trying to get ahead or we've been hurt and we're trying to hurt back.
Or it's like maybe there's an in-crowd and we want to be part of it.
And so we tender this information as whatever is necessary for admission.
You know, it's like, I've got the secrets.
Admit me to your company so I can share the secrets.
And it doesn't matter to us that other people are.
are wounded thereby.
Whereas often enough, gossip is just like we need to do something with our tongue.
And so we're completely content to trade in juicy morsels.
And I think that just directs us back to the point that we should be looking to cultivate edifying speech.
Because yeah, there's such dignity to our faculty of speech and we can use it in such beautiful ways.
You know, like the book ends with sections on humor.
You know, like humor is, it's delightful.
You can point out incongruities.
You can help kind of people navigate the tensions of their life.
Correction, we can encourage people in living a good life by just pointing out, whatever, this, that, and the other, not good.
Preaching and teaching, prayer, obviously that's how the book ends.
But yeah, I just think that often enough when we direct our gaze back to verbal virtue or the actual trajectory for which our speech is intended, it helps clarify.
That's a very good point.
Father Gregory, first of all, the book is called Trading the Tongue.
I think I'm going to buy a thousand copies.
I'll keep 500 for myself and I'll send 500 copies out to every other podcast.
Nice.
So it's very difficult because now I think it's a federal law.
Every white man under the age of 70 has to have a podcast in America.
So anyway, that'll be good for book sales.
And even people who don't have podcasts could certainly use a lot.
I have much more to say even on training the tongue.
Maybe we'll have to have you back to talk about it more now that I have my own copy.