VI. OF WHAT IS IMPLIED IN A HUMAN ACT FOR IT TO BE A GOOD MERITORIOUS ACT,
OR A BAD DEMERITORIOUS ACT; AND OF MERIT AND DEMERIT IN GENERAL
Is it possible to say by what means man on earth and in this life can prepare himself, by way of merit, to receive from God some day in token of reward the beatific vision in which consists man's eternal happiness?
Yes, this he can merit solely by his acts (VI., Prologue).
Of what kind of acts is there question?
Of virtuous acts.
What is meant by "acts of virtue"?
They are those "acts which man performs by his own
free will in conformity with God's will under the action
of grace" (VI.-CXIV.).
What is necessary that man's acts should proceed from his will?
It is necessary that he perform them spontaneously
and with the knowledge that he is their cause (VI. 1-8).
What is meant by saying that he must perform them spontaneously?
It is meant that he must perform them without
constraint or force (VI. 4, 5, 6).
How can man be coerced or forced to do something against his will?
Man can be coerced or forced to do something against
his will in two ways: by violence and by fear (VI. 4, 5, 6).
What is understood by violence?
By violence is understood a force exterior to man
which fetters his members and impedes him from acting
as he wills, or makes him do exteriorly what his will
rejects (VI. 4, 5).
What is understood by fear?
By fear is understood an interior movement which
makes man will a thing he would not otherwise will,
but to which he consents in the present circumstances
in order to avoid some evil that threatens (VI. 6).
Is that which one does under violence wholly involuntary?
Yes, that which one does under exterior violence is
wholly involuntary (VI. 5).
Why under "exterior" violence?
Because sometimes the word "violence" is taken to
signify the internal movement of anger.
In this case and in the case of other interior movements which excite or incline the will may one also speak of involuntariness?
No, in these divers cases one may not speak of
involuntariness unless perchance these interior movements
be so vehement as to deprive man of the use of his
reason (VI. 7).
And when one acts through fear, is the act also involuntary?
When one acts through fear the act is voluntary, but
with it there is an admixture of involuntary in this
sense, that that which is done is indeed willed, but it is
willed with reluctancy and by reason of some evil from
which man shrinks (VI. 6).
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