VirTrue - Helping Man Grow in Truth and Virtue
🎧 Intro You are being trained every single day to stop deliberating. Not accidentally. Systematically. You open your phone, and within seconds, you are absorbing: * outrage * headlines * political tribalism * AI assistant summaries * clips without context * emotionally charged commentary * strangers speaking with absolute certainty about things they learned six minutes ago And slowly, almost imperceptibly, your soul begins losing the ability to weigh things carefully. You begin reacting before understanding. Or maybe you go the opposite direction. Maybe you have become trapped in endless hesitation. You replay conversations in your head at 2:00 AM like your brain is running courtroom footage for a trial nobody else remembers. You overthink decisions. You endlessly research. You seek advice from twelve different people, hoping one of them will finally remove uncertainty completely. Modern people are drowning in information and starving for practical wisdom. And that is exactly why the virtue of Deliberation matters. Welcome to VirTrue where we work together to turn away from vice, and to adopt the virtuous life we’re all called to. I’m your host, Jethro Higgins. Today on VirTrue we’re going to talk about Deliberation, or Deliberatio, which Hugh of St. Victor includes on the Prudence branch of the virtue tree, St. Thomas Aquinas will help us with the precise moral language needed to understand the virtue clearly. This episode continues the Prudence branch we have already begun cultivating: * Memory * Intelligence * Foresight * Counsel Because Deliberation is where all of those virtues begin working together inside the soul. This is where practical reasoning happens. This is where wisdom stops being theoretical and begins preparing for action. And frankly, this is one of the places where modern culture is becoming deeply malformed. Quick reminder, the VirTrue app BETA is underway. Paid subscribers receive early access and help shape the direction of the platform as we continue building tools that help cultivate virtue. Visit socialcatholic.substack.com [http://socialcatholic.substack.com] to support this work and help us continue building resources to help you grow in truth and virtue. The Social Catholic is a listener-supported publication. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. 📖 Virtue Description Deliberation is the disciplined process of weighing possible actions before making a judgment. It is the interior labor of practical reasoning. Deliberation examines: * motives * duties * circumstances * consequences * competing goods * and possible outcomes before choosing how to act. Remember from last week when we highlighted that St. Thomas Aquinas says: “To take good counsel and to judge well belong to prudence.” (Summa Theologiae, II-II, Q.51, A.3) Prudence is not merely possessing information. It is knowing how to think rightly before acting. And those are not the same thing. You can listen to theology podcasts for ten years, own seventeen books with highlighted passages you never finished, and still make absolutely catastrophic decisions in your marriage, friendships, finances, or spiritual life. Because wisdom is not trivia. Wisdom is rightly ordered action. At first glance, Deliberation can sound almost identical to Counsel, which we discussed in the previous episode. Because Counsel already involved: * inquiry * seeking wisdom * slowing down * avoiding impulsive action But these virtues relate to one another in the same way other virtues throughout VirTrue have related to one another. In the Charity season, we discussed Compassion as the inward movement toward another’s suffering, while Mercy was the outward action that flowed from it. In the Hope season, we discussed Contrition as the interior sorrow for sin, while Confession carried that repentance into concrete action. Counsel and Deliberation relate in much the same way. Counsel opens the soul to inquiry. It recognizes: “I need wisdom before I act.” Deliberation performs the actual work of weighing the matter itself. It asks: “Now that I have sought wisdom, what action is truly right?” This is why the virtues of Prudence build upon one another. Memory recalls the lessons of the past. Intelligence understands the present situation clearly. Foresight sees where possible actions may lead. Counsel opens the soul to guidance and inquiry. And Deliberation weighs all of those realities together before judgment is made. This is the interior courtroom of prudence. This is where practical wisdom is formed. Aristotle discusses this extensively in Nicomachean Ethics, especially in Book VI, where he distinguishes between theoretical reason and practical reasoning. Because moral virtue is not merely about possessing knowledge. It is about acting virtuously within particular circumstances. The virtuous man doesn’t just feel strongly. He reasons rightly. He weighs matters honestly. He seeks the true conclusion. And then he acts. That is why Deliberation belongs not merely to intellectual virtue, but to moral virtue. The purpose is not endless analysis. The purpose is right action ordered toward God. ⚠️ Vice of Deficiency: Inconsideration (Inconsideratio) Definition Inconsideration is the failure to sufficiently weigh what ought to be considered before acting. Why it fits The inconsiderate person does not properly examine: * consequences * motives * circumstances * duties * or moral realities before forming judgment. This vice corrupts practical reasoning itself. Aquinas treats inconsideration as a species of imprudence because prudence requires careful consideration before judgment is formed. The inconsiderate person: * reacts before understanding * judges before examining * condemns before discerning * speaks before thinking And if we are being honest, you have probably experienced this yourself online. You see something outrageous. Your emotions spike immediately. Your brain starts writing the comment before you even finish examining the matter. Modern culture constantly trains you toward inconsideration. Social media rewards immediacy. Outrage spreads faster than truth because outrage does not require deliberation. The algorithm does not reward prudence. It rewards emotional certainty. The inconsiderate person confuses immediacy with wisdom. What it looks like * impulsive moral judgments * reacting from headlines * emotional decision making (not engaging the rational apetite) * refusing reflection * acting before gathering facts * assuming confidence equals competence Or as the internet might put it: “Read zero articles. Saw half a headline. Became an expert immediately.” That is inconsideration. 🔥 Vice of Excess: Vacillation (Vacillatio) Definition Vacillation is the corruption of deliberation through endless instability and inability to settle into judgment. Why it fits The vacillating person endlessly oscillates between possibilities. He: * reopens settled questions * endlessly second-guesses * fears commitment * delays action perpetually Unlike the inconsiderate person who never weighs the matter sufficiently, the vacillating person weighs it forever. You have probably felt this too. You replay decisions repeatedly in your head. You endlessly research. You ask for advice from multiple people, then start over because none of the answers completely removed uncertainty. This vice often disguises itself as intelligence or carefulness. But underneath it is usually fear. Fear of: * responsibility * imperfection * consequences * commitment * failure The vacillating soul desperately wants certainty before action. But prudence rarely operates with absolute certainty. It operates with sufficient judgment. At some point: * inquiry ends * judgment forms * action begins Otherwise, deliberation collapses into paralysis. That’s why next week’s virtue will be alacrity, or promptness. This process of deliberation should lead to prompt action. What it looks like * analysis paralysis * obsessive optimization * constant second-guessing * endless research without commitment * reopening decisions repeatedly * consuming educational content endlessly without transformation The vacillating person remains permanently at the crossroads. 🧍 My Life [https://socialcatholic.substack.com/p/rule-of-life] This podcast is actually a good example of this virtue playing out in real life. I had the idea for both the podcast and the VirTrue app for nearly eight years before I finally acted on it. Part of that delay was prudence. I wanted to fully deliberate on the virtue model I was building from. I wanted to finish my Master’s degree in Theology. I wanted greater clarity. Better structure. More preparation. More certainty. But eventually I realized something uncomfortable. Some of my “deliberation” was no longer prudence. It was fear disguised as preparation. I could always find: * one more thing to study * one more improvement to make * one more conversation to have * one more reason to wait God eventually allowed me to enter a season of profound suffering that forced me to stop endlessly circling the runway and finally take action. And honestly, I think many modern people live there permanently. We have become a culture defined by failure to launch. We deliberate endlessly because commitment feels dangerous. I see myself in the deficiency here too though. Shoot first and ask questions later when I see something that upsets me. I like to jump into debate, and that sometimes overshadows my ability to approach the topic through reason. 🌍 The Secular Perspective Modern culture simultaneously destroys and imitates deliberation. On one side, you are constantly being trained toward inconsideration. Everything around you pushes you toward: * instant commentary * instant outrage * instant tribalism * instant certainty You are expected to react immediately to events you barely understand. People will even shame you for not taking a strong stance the same day something perceived as outrageous happens. And because digital culture moves at incredible speed, thoughtful practical reasoning begins to feel unnatural. Silence feels suspicious. Careful inquiry feels weak. Deliberation itself starts feeling socially dangerous because the crowd demands emotional certainty immediately. At the same time, modern culture also produces endless vacillation. You are drowning in: * ai assistant tools * educational content * podcasts * productivity systems * self-help frameworks * tutorials * commentary * endless competing opinions And yet many people have never felt more incapable of decisive moral action. It’s such a toxic pairing. The demand for immediate responses coupled with a paralyzing incapability to take a decisive moral stance. This pattern is weaponized by people of every ideology. Your hesitation becomes the evidence that you have the “EVIL” opinion. Without deliberation: * courage becomes recklessness * intelligence becomes manipulation * conviction becomes fanaticism * freedom becomes chaos Prudence teaches you to: * deliberate honestly * judge rightly * act courageously * trust God with the outcome 🌟 Example Saint: St. John Henry Newman Lived: 1801–1890 From: London, England Mission: Theologian, preacher, educator, convert, defender of conscience rightly formed by truth If there is a saint who embodies Deliberation ordered toward truth, it is St. John Henry Newman. Newman was not converted through emotional impulse or social pressure. His conversion came through years of disciplined inquiry, practical reasoning, historical study, theological reflection, prayer, and painful honesty. He carefully weighed: * Scripture * Church history * Apostolic succession * doctrine * authority * conscience * and the claims of the Catholic Church before finally concluding that he could no longer remain where he was. What makes Newman extraordinary is that his deliberation did not end in endless analysis. It ended in action. He followed truth even when it cost him: * reputation * career * friendships * status * security * and public approval That is deliberation perfected through prudence. Not reacting emotionally. Not remaining trapped in endless uncertainty. But weighing carefully, judging honestly, and acting courageously once the truth became clear. Why he fits Deliberation ordered toward truth Newman spent years carefully examining competing claims before reaching judgment. Resistance to inconsideration He refused emotional reaction, intellectual tribalism, and shallow certainty. Resistance to vacillation Once his conscience reached judgment, he acted despite enormous personal cost. Practical reasoning rooted in reality His faith was not sentimentality. It was disciplined inquiry ordered toward truth. Conscience formed through deliberation Newman reminds us that conscience is not self-expression. It is the soul’s obligation to conform itself to what is true. As Newman famously said: “To live is to change, and to be perfect is to have changed often.” St. John Henry Newman reminds us that prudence is not merely gathering information. It is honestly seeking the truth, judging rightly, and then having the courage to act when the truth demands change. 💬 Tell Me What You Think Which vice do you struggle with more? Inconsideration? Or vacillation? Do you react too quickly? Or do you endlessly weigh possibilities without ever committing to action? Share your thoughts with me in the comments, and continue the conversation. Like, share, and subscribe. Help us spread virtue. And visit socialcatholic.substack.com [https://socialcatholic.substack.com] to support this work. 🙏 Act of Deliberation O my God, You have given me reason so that I may seek truth and act according to wisdom rather than impulse. I reject haste, emotional reaction, and judgment formed without reflection. I reject fear, endless hesitation, and the paralysis that refuses to act once truth is known. I resolve to deliberate honestly, seek wisdom humbly, judge rightly, and act courageously according to Your will. I choose not merely to gather knowledge, but to conform my mind and will to what is good, true, and beautiful. Grant me the grace to deliberate well. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏 Prayer Lord, bless us with faith, hope, love, prudence, temperance, fortitude, and justice that we may live as you intended man to live, in all virtue and righteousness. Help us to flee from sin, and avoid all temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil. Protect us with a spiritual hedge in front of us, behind us, above us, below us, to our right, and to our left, within us, and all around us, and seal it with the blood of your precious Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. Help us to keep you in everything that we think, say, and do. Amen. ⚔️ Go out and fill the world with virtue, Deus Vult! Follow Us on Social Media and Popular Podcast Networks: Get full access to The Social Catholic at socialcatholic.substack.com/subscribe [https://socialcatholic.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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