VirTrue - Helping Man Grow in Truth and Virtue
You already know what you should be doing. That’s the uncomfortable part. Most people are not suffering from a total lack of knowledge. They are resisting moving toward those goods. You know you should: * pray * repent * apologize * begin * finish * commit * speak * act * obey And yet your soul drags itself toward those goods like a teenager being asked to unload the dishwasher. Not because the good is unclear. But because you feel like you are going to lose something if you act. Modern culture has made this even worse. We live in a civilization simultaneously addicted to frantic motion and allergic to meaningful action. People will spend six hours consuming: * productivity content * educational resources * self-improvement podcasts * motivational videos * immersive learning systems * personalized learning platforms * endless intellectual commentary to avoid thirty minutes of actual obedience or diligence to a task. We move constantly. But we rarely move toward what is truly important. And that is why the virtue of Alacrity matters. 🎧 Intro 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 Alacrity, or Alacritas, which Hugh of St. Victor includes on the Prudence branch of his virtue tree, while St. Thomas Aquinas helps us understand the relationship between promptness, prudence, obedience, charity, and movement toward the good. This episode continues the Prudence branch we have already begun cultivating: * Memory * Intelligence * Foresight * Counsel * Deliberation Because once prudence has: * remembered rightly * understood clearly * considered the repercussions * sought wisdom * weighed the matter well to reach a judgment one final question remains: Will you move? Alacrity is the soul’s joyful readiness to act once truth is known. And unlike the emotionally sterile definitions found in dictionary entries, the Christian understanding of Alacrity is not merely about quickness or cheerfulness. It is about moral movement. It is about becoming the kind of person who eagerly moves toward what is good, true, and beautiful once prudence has judged rightly. Quick reminder, the VirTrue app BETA testing is underway. Paid subscribers will receive early access and help shape the platform's direction as we continue building tools that cultivate virtue, uproot vice, and strengthen every branch of your VirTrue tree. Visit The Social Catholic [https://socialcatholic.substack.com] to support this work and help us continue building resources ordered toward wisdom, moral excellence, practical reasoning, virtue ethics, and rightly ordered love. The Social Catholic is a listener-supported podcast. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. 📖 Virtue Description The virtue of Alacrity is promptness and joyful readiness in the pursuit of the good. It is the soul moving quickly because it loves what is right. This is important: Alacrity is not recklessness. It is not hyperactivity. It is not impulsiveness. The alacritous person does not move quickly because they are emotionally reactive. They move quickly because prudence has already done its work. St. Thomas Aquinas repeatedly speaks about promptness in relation to virtue, obedience, and charity. The virtuous soul does not merely obey eventually. It becomes ready to move toward the good with eagerness. That is why Alacrity belongs on the Prudence branch. Because prudence without movement eventually becomes sterile. You can: * seek counsel forever * deliberate endlessly * gather information continuously * consume theology content constantly and still never obey. At some point: * judgment ends * movement begins This is why Alacrity follows Deliberation so naturally. Deliberation asks: “What is the right thing to do?” Alacrity responds: “Let’ss begin.” The truly prudent person doesn’t just arrive at right conclusions. He acts upon them with readiness of soul. Aristotle speaks repeatedly in Nicomachean Ethics about virtue as a golden mean between opposing extremes. And Alacrity fits beautifully within the moral virtue tradition because it governs how the soul moves toward the good once prudence has judged rightly. Because virtue is not merely knowing the good. Virtue is becoming the kind of person who enthusiastically and consistently moves toward the good. This becomes painfully visible in modern life. Many people today possess enormous amounts of: * information * opinions * educational content * theological knowledge * intellectual formation but remain spiritually immobile. The modern world mistakes awareness for transformation. But the Christian life is not merely about recognizing truth. It is about conforming yourself to it through action. ⚠️ Vice of Deficiency: Torpor Definition Torpor is sluggishness of soul that resists prompt movement toward the good. Why it fits The torpid person often knows exactly what should be done. That is what makes this vice so dangerous. This is not ignorance. This is resistance. The torpid soul: * delays obedience * postpones action * drags itself toward duty * hesitates after judgment * waits endlessly for perfect conditions Torpor often disguises itself as: * exhaustion * caution * preparation * “Not being ready yet.” But underneath it is usually an unwillingness to move. The torpid person says: “Eventually.” The alacritous person says: “Now.” Not because he is reckless. But because he loves the good more than comfort. What it looks like * delaying repentance * procrastinating difficult conversations * avoiding vocation * postponing prayer * endless preparation without beginning * spiritual hesitation * failure to act once the truth is clear And honestly, modern culture almost trains us into torpor. We consume: * productivity systems * educational resources * personalized learning * immersive learning tools * self-improvement content without ever allowing truth to become action. The soul becomes spiritually sedentary. Not because it lacks information. But because it resists movement. 🔥 Vice of Excess: Impetuosity (Impetuositas) Definition Impetuosity is excessive or ungoverned eagerness that outruns prudence. Why it fits The impetuous person moves before the soul is fully governed. Unlike the torpid person who refuses movement, the impetuous person cannot remain measured. He: * rushes into action * confuses urgency with wisdom * mistakes emotional intensity for conviction * treats movement itself as virtue This vice is especially common in modern activist culture. Everything becomes: * immediate * urgent * emotionally charged * performative The impetuous person believes: “If I feel strongly, I must act immediately.” But prudence governs action. The alacritous soul moves promptly AFTER wisdom has judged rightly. The impetuous soul moves because movement itself feels emotionally satisfying. What it looks like * emotional overreaction * reckless activism * impulsive decision making * burnout cycles * dramatic commitments without endurance * treating busyness as holiness * constant urgency without stability The impetuous person often appears energetic. But energy and virtue are not the same thing. A wildfire also moves quickly. That does not make it ordered. 🧍 My Life [https://socialcatholic.substack.com/p/rule-of-life] I often mention my ADHD in the “my life [https://socialcatholic.substack.com/p/rule-of-life]” section mostly because it has been and occasionally still is a significant struggle for me to overcome, but it is also often times a benefit as well. That is the case with Alacrity. There are two common behaviors with ADHD that interact with the virtue of alacrity, and the dependency on whether you act virtuously or with sluggish vice is enthusiasm. ADHD minds are actually capable of prompt, joyful action when the question of why is sufficiently answered. That is where last week’s virtue of deliberation comes into play. In order to motivate myself to act with alacrity, I have to deliberate well on why this is an important course of action. If I can see the broader picture and realize how my work will advance something of true value, I can hotwire my brain to jump into action. But if the outcome is obscured or delayed and the result is technically right but not immediately impactful to the “big picture,” it can be incredibly difficult to summon the proper motivation to respond to the task with alacrity. I use other strategies when I’m not really feeling the motivational energy. I can make the task a game, I can give myself some kind of reward for achieving success, but oftentimes I resort to the sure-fire way to generate the appropriate motivation, last-minute panic. Nothing sparks action like the surge of adrenaline and dopamine that comes from the last minute. I may have had some impetuous tendencies as a youth, and those tendencies may rear their head on occasion, but my struggle lies in managing my motivation and hacking my brain out of the sluggishness of torpor, and into the virtue of alacrity. 🌍 The Secular Perspective Modern culture lives at both extremes simultaneously. We saw some of this in earlier virtues this season. On the one side, we behave very torpidly. People endlessly delay: * marriage * children * vocation * commitment * conversion * responsibility We talked about this from the standpoint of deliberation and foresight as the belief that there is always a slightly better option waiting around the corner. But at a deeper level, our culture isn’t moved by what is good, true and beautiful anymore. We want cheap, powerful, and satisfying instead, and when we fail to see those kinds of motivations, we are sluggish in our response. Consumer culture has turned commitment into a threat. People fear closing doors on opportunities more than they fear wasting their lives. At the same time, modern culture glorifies impetuosity. Everything is: * urgent * immediate * reactionary * emotionally amplified Social media rewards immediate engagement, not prudence. The first to act wins, and from a media standpoint, there really isn’t a downside to acting impulsively. The same 5 news agencies are still driving our public discourse, regardless of the fact that their information is always fast and wrong. Modern media forms souls that either: * never move * or: * move constantly without direction The prudent man does neither. He: * seeks wisdom * deliberates honestly * judges rightly * and then acts with joyful readiness Alacrity is not frantic movement. It is disciplined eagerness toward the good. Areas in US government that could use some alacrity: * The Powerful people caught up in the Jeffery Epstein scandal. * The UAP/UFO release of information * Term limits for Congress * 82% of Americans support the requirement to show ID when voting, but that statistic is over a year old, and nothing has changed. * Insider trading in Congress. We’ve known for decades that they are doing it and that it is wrong, but no one is taking action. * Nigeria, Christians have been systematically executed for years, and no one is doing anything about it. 🌟 Example Saint: St. Francis Xavier Lived: 1506–1552 From: Navarre, Spain Mission: Missionary to India, Japan, and Southeast Asia If there is a saint who embodies the virtue of Alacrity ordered toward God, it is St. Francis Xavier. Francis Xavier’s life was defined by joyful readiness in the service of Christ. When called to mission, he went. Not eventually. Not once conditions became comfortable. Not after securing stability and certainty. He moved. Francis Xavier traveled across: * India * Malacca * the Moluccas * Japan enduring: * disease * exhaustion * poverty * persecution * danger * and isolation because the love of God had made his soul ready for movement. What makes Francis Xavier such a perfect example of Alacrity is that his energy was not chaotic. It was governed by obedience and charity. He was not merely busy. He was ready. Why he fits Promptness toward the good Francis Xavier responded immediately when God placed mission before him. Resistance to torpor He did not delay obedience waiting for comfort or certainty. Resistance to impetuosity His zeal remained governed by obedience, prudence, and mission. Love in motion His life demonstrates that true love moves toward sacrifice willingly. Missionary readiness Francis Xavier reminds us that holiness is not merely knowing what God asks. It is becoming eager to do it. As St. Francis Xavier wrote: “I am more and more convinced that the earth belongs to those who suffer.” St. Francis Xavier reminds us that prudence is not complete when truth is merely understood. Prudence reaches completion when the soul joyfully moves toward the good. 💬 Tell Me What You Think Do you struggle more with: * Torpor * or: * Impetuosity? Do you resist movement toward the good? Or do you rush ahead faster than prudence can govern you? Share your thoughts with me in the comments and continue the conversation. Like, share, and subscribe. Help us continue to spread virtue by doing all the things the search and social algorithms like! The Social Catholic is a listener-supported podcast. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. 🙏 Act of Alacrity O my God, You have revealed what is good, true, and beautiful, and I resolve to move toward it with readiness of soul. I reject spiritual sluggishness, hesitation, and the false comfort that delays obedience. I reject reckless zeal and movement ungoverned by wisdom. I choose to act promptly when prudence has judged rightly, and to pursue Your will with eagerness rather than reluctance. I resolve not merely to admire the good, but to move toward it courageously and without delay. Grant me the grace to accomplish what I now will before You. 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]
36 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de VirTrue - Helping Man Grow in Truth and Virtue!