IV. The moral act
Teleology and teleologism
71.
The relationship between man's freedom and God's law, which has its intimate
and living centre in the moral conscience, is manifested and realized in human
acts. It is precisely through his acts that man attains perfection as man, as one
who is called to seek his Creator of his own accord and freely to arrive at
full and blessed perfection by cleaving to him.119
Human acts are moral acts
because they express and determine the goodness or evil of the individual who
performs them.120 They do not produce a change merely in the state of
affairs outside of man but, to the extent that they are deliberate choices,
they give moral definition to the very person who performs them, determining
his profound spiritual traits. This was perceptively noted by Saint
Gregory of Nyssa: "All things subject to change and to becoming never
remain constant, but continually pass from one state to another, for better or
worse... Now, human life is always subject to change; it needs to be born ever
anew... But here birth does not come about by a foreign intervention, as is the
case with bodily beings...; it is the result of a free choice. Thus we are in
a certain way our own parents, creating ourselves as we will, by our
decisions".121
72.
The morality of acts is defined by the relationship of man's freedom
with the authentic good. This good is established, as the eternal law, by
Divine Wisdom which orders every being towards its end: this eternal law is
known both by man's natural reason (hence it is "natural law"), and —
in an integral and perfect way — by God's supernatural Revelation (hence it is
called "divine law"). Acting is morally good when the choices of
freedom are in conformity with man's true good and thus express the
voluntary ordering of the person towards his ultimate end: God himself, the
supreme good in whom man finds his full and perfect happiness. The first
question in the young man's conversation with Jesus: "What good must I do
to have eternal life? " (Mt
19:6) immediately brings out the essential connection between the
moral value of an act and man's final end. Jesus, in his reply, confirms
the young man's conviction: the performance of good acts, commanded by the One
who "alone is good", constitutes the indispensable condition of and
path to eternal blessedness: "If you wish to enter into life, keep the
commandments" (Mt 19:17). Jesus' answer and his
reference to the commandments also make it clear that the path to that end is
marked by respect for the divine laws which safeguard human good.Only
the act in conformity with the good can be a path that leads to life.
The rational ordering of
the human act to the good in its truth and the voluntary pursuit of that good,
known by reason, constitute morality. Hence human activity cannot be judged as
morally good merely because it is a means for attaining one or another of its
goals, or simply because the subject's intention is good.122 Activity
is morally good when it attests to and expresses the voluntary ordering of the
person to his ultimate end and the conformity of a concrete action with the
human good as it is acknowledged in its truth by reason. If the object of the
concrete action is not in harmony with the true good of the person, the choice
of that action makes our will and ourselves morally evil, thus putting us in
conflict with our ultimate end, the supreme good, God himself.
73.
The Christian, thanks to God's Revelation and to faith, is aware of the
"newness" which characterizes the morality of his actions: these
actions are called to show either consistency or inconsistency with that
dignity and vocation which have been bestowed on him by grace. In Jesus Christ
and in his Spirit, the Christian is a "new creation", a child of God;
by his actions he shows his likeness or unlikeness to the image of the Son who
is the first-born among many brethren (cf Rom
8:29), he lives out his fidelity or infidelity to the gift of the
Spirit, and he opens or closes himself to eternal life, to the communion of
vision, love and happiness with God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.123
As Saint Cyril of Alexandria writes, Christ "forms us according to his
image, in such a way that the traits of his divine nature shine forth in us
through sanctification and justice and the life which is good and in conformity
with virtue... The beauty of this image shines forth in us who are in Christ,
when we show ourselves to be good in our works".124
Consequently the moral life
has an essential "teleological" character, since it consists
in the deliberate ordering of human acts to God, the supreme good and ultimate
end (telos) of man. This is attested to once
more by the question posed by the young man to Jesus: "What good must I do
to have eternal life? ". But this ordering to one's ultimate end is not
something subjective, dependent solely upon one's intention. It presupposes
that such acts are in themselves capable of being ordered to this end, insofar
as they are in conformity with the authentic moral good of man, safeguarded by
the commandments. This is what Jesus himself points out in his reply to the
young man: "If you wish to enter into life, keep the commandments"
(Mt 19:17).
Clearly such an ordering
must be rational and free, conscious and deliberate, by virtue of which man is
"responsible" for his actions and subject to the judgment of God, the
just and good judge who, as the Apostle Paul reminds us, rewards good and
punishes evil: "We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so
that each one may receive good or evil, according to what he has done in the
body" (2 Cor
5:10).
74.
But on what does the moral assessment of man's free acts depend? What is it
that ensures this ordering of human acts to God? Is it the intention of
the acting subject, the circumstances — and in particular the
consequences — of his action, or the object itself of his act?
This is what is
traditionally called the problem of the "sources of morality".
Precisely with regard to this problem there have emerged in the last few
decades new or newly-revived theological and cultural trends which call for
careful discernment on the part of the Church's Magisterium.
Certain ethical
theories, called "teleological", claim to be concerned for
the conformity of human acts with the ends pursued by the agent and with the
values intended by him. The criteria for evaluating the moral rightness of an
action are drawn from the weighing of the non-moral or pre-moral goods to
be gained and the corresponding non-moral or pre-moral values to be respected.
For some, concrete behaviour would be right or wrong according as whether or
not it is capable of producing a better state of affairs for all concerned.
Right conduct would be the one capable of "maximizing" goods and
"minimizing" evils.
Many of the Catholic
moralists who follow in this direction seek to distance themselves from
utilitarianism and pragmatism, where the morality of human acts would be judged
without any reference to the man's true ultimate end. They rightly recognize
the need to find ever more consistent rational arguments in order to justify
the requirements and to provide a foundation for the norms of the moral life.
This kind of investigation is legitimate and necessary, since the moral order,
as established by the natural law, is in principle accessible to human reason.
Furthermore, such investigation is well-suited to meeting the demands of
dialogue and cooperation with non-Catholics and non-believers, especially in
pluralistic societies.
75.
But as part of the effort to work out such a rational morality (for this reason
it is sometimes called an "autonomous morality" ) there exist false
solutions, linked in particular to an inadequate understanding of the object of
moral action. Some authors do not take into sufficient consideration the
fact that the will is involved in the concrete choices which it makes: these
choices are a condition of its moral goodness and its being ordered to the
ultimate end of the person. Others are inspired by a notion of freedom
which prescinds from the actual conditions of its
exercise, from its objective reference to the truth about the good, and from
its determination through choices of concrete kinds of behaviour. According to
these theories, free will would neither be morally subjected to specific
obligations nor shaped by its choices, while nonetheless still remaining
responsible for its own acts and for their consequences. This "teleologism", as a method for discovering the
moral norm, can thus be called — according to terminology and approaches
imported from different currents of thought — "consequentialism"
or "proportionalism". The former
claims to draw the criteria of the rightness of a given way of acting solely
from a calculation of foreseeable consequences deriving from a given choice.
The latter, by weighing the various values and goods being sought, focuses
rather on the proportion acknowledged between the good and bad effects of that
choice, with a view to the "greater good" or "lesser evil"
actually possible in a particular situation.
The teleological ethical
theories (proportionalism, consequentialism),
while acknowledging
that moral values are indicated by reason and by Revelation, maintain that it
is never possible to formulate an absolute prohibition of particular kinds of
behaviour which would be in conflict, in every circumstance and in every
culture, with those values. The acting subject would indeed be responsible for
attaining the values pursued, but in two ways: the values or goods involved in
a human act would be, from one viewpoint, of the moral order (in
relation to properly moral values, such as love of God and neighbour, justice,
etc.) and, from another viewpoint, of the pre-moral order, which some
term non-moral, physical or ontic (in relation to the
advantages and disadvantages accruing both to the agent and to all other
persons possibly involved, such as, for example, health or its endangerment,
physical integrity, life, death, loss of material goods, etc.). In a world
where goodness is always mixed with evil, and every good effect linked to other
evil effects, the morality of an act would be judged in two different ways: its
moral "goodness" would be judged on the basis of the subject's
intention in reference to moral goods, and its "rightness" on the basis
of a consideration of its foreseeable effects or consequences and of their
proportion. Consequently, concrete kinds of behaviour could be described as
"right" or "wrong", without it being thereby possible to
judge as morally "good" or "bad" the will of the person
choosing them. In this way, an act which, by contradicting a universal negative
norm, directly violates goods considered as "pre-moral" could be
qualified as morally acceptable if the intention of the subject is focused, in
accordance with a "responsible" assessment of the goods involved in
the concrete action, on the moral value judged to be decisive in the situation.
The evaluation of the
consequences of the action, based on the proportion between the act and its
effects and between the effects themselves, would regard only the pre-moral
order. The moral specificity of acts, that is their goodness or evil, would be
determined exclusively by the faithfulness of the person to the highest values
of charity and prudence, without this faithfulness necessarily being
incompatible with choices contrary to certain particular moral precepts. Even
when grave matter is concerned, these precepts should be considered as
operative norms which are always relative and open to exceptions.
In this view, deliberate
consent to certain kinds of behaviour declared illicit by traditional moral
theology would not imply an objective moral evil.
The object of the
deliberate act
76.
These theories can gain a certain persuasive force from their affinity to the
scientific mentality, which is rightly concerned with ordering technical and
economic activities on the basis of a calculation of resources and profits,
procedures and their effects. They seek to provide liberation from the
constraints of a voluntaristic and arbitrary morality
of obligation which would ultimately be dehumanizing.
Such theories however are
not faithful to the Church's teaching, when they believe they can justify, as
morally good, deliberate choices of kinds of behaviour contrary to the
commandments of the divine and natural law. These theories cannot claim to be
grounded in the Catholic moral tradition. Although the latter did witness the
development of a casuistry which tried to assess the best ways to achieve the
good in certain concrete situations, it is nonetheless true that this casuistry
concerned only cases in which the law was uncertain, and thus the absolute
validity of negative moral precepts, which oblige without exception, was not
called into question. The faithful are obliged to acknowledge and respect the
specific moral precepts declared and taught by the Church in the name of God,
the Creator and Lord.125 When the Apostle Paul sums up the fulfilment
of the law in the precept of love of neighbour as oneself (cf
Rom
13:8-10), he is not weakening the commandments but reinforcing them,
since he is revealing their requirements and their gravity. Love of God and
of one's neighbour cannot be separated from the observance of the commandments
of the Covenant renewed in the blood of Jesus Christ and in the gift of the
Spirit. It is an honour characteristic of Christians to obey God rather than
men (cf Acts
4:19; 5:29) and accept even
martyrdom as a consequence, like the holy men and women of the Old and New
Testaments, who are considered such because they gave their lives rather than
perform this or that particular act contrary to faith or virtue.
77.
In order to offer rational criteria for a right moral decision, the theories
mentioned above take account of the intention and consequences of human
action. Certainly there is need to take into account both the intention — as
Jesus forcefully insisted in clear disagreement with the scribes and Pharisees,
who prescribed in great detail certain outward practices without paying
attention to the heart (cf Mk
7:20-21; Mt 15:19) —
and the goods obtained and the evils avoided as a result of a particular act.
Responsibility demands as much. But the consideration of these consequences,
and also of intentions, is not sufficient for judging the moral quality of a concrete
choice. The weighing of the goods and evils foreseeable as the consequence of
an action is not an adequate method for determining whether the choice of that
concrete kind of behaviour is "according to its species", or "in
itself", morally good or bad, licit or illicit. The foreseeable
consequences are part of those circumstances of the act, which, while capable
of lessening the gravity of an evil act, nonetheless cannot alter its moral
species.
Moreover, everyone recognizes
the difficulty, or rather the impossibility, of evaluating all the good and
evil consequences and effects — defined as pre-moral — of one's own acts: an
exhaustive rational calculation is not possible. How then can one go about
establishing proportions which depend on a measuring, the criteria of which
remain obscure? How could an absolute obligation be justified on the basis of
such debatable calculations?
78.
The morality of the human act depends primarily and fundamentally on the
"object" rationally chosen by the deliberate will, as is borne
out by the insightful analysis, still valid today, made by Saint
Thomas.126 In order to be able to grasp the object of an act which
specifies that act morally, it is therefore necessary to place oneself in
the perspective of the acting person. The object of the act of willing is
in fact a freely chosen kind of behaviour. To the extent that it is in
conformity with the order of reason, it is the cause of the goodness of the
will; it perfects us morally, and disposes us to recognize our ultimate end in
the perfect good, primordial love. By the object of a given moral act, then,
one cannot mean a process or an event of the merely physical order, to be
assessed on the basis of its ability to bring about a given state of affairs in
the outside world. Rather, that object is the proximate end of a deliberate
decision which determines the act of willing on the part of the acting person.
Consequently, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches,
"there are certain specific kinds of behaviour that are always wrong to
choose, because choosing them involves a disorder of the will, that is, a moral
evil".127 And Saint Thomas observes that "it often happens
that man acts with a good intention, but without spiritual gain, because he
lacks a good will. Let us say that someone robs in order to feed the poor: in
this case, even though the intention is good, the uprightness of the will is
lacking. Consequently, no evil done with a good intention can be excused.
'There are those who say: And why not do evil that good may come? Their
condemnation is just' (Rom
3:8)".128
The reason why a good
intention is not itself sufficient, but a correct choice of actions is also
needed, is that the human act depends on its object, whether that object is capable
or not of being ordered to God, to the One who "alone is good",
and thus brings about the perfection of the person. An act is therefore good if
its object is in conformity with the good of the person with respect for the
goods morally relevant for him. Christian ethics, which pays particular
attention to the moral object, does not refuse to consider the inner
"teleology" of acting, inasmuch as it is directed to promoting the
true good of the person; but it recognizes that it is really pursued only when
the essential elements of human nature are respected. The human act, good
according to its object, is also capable of being ordered to its
ultimate end. That same act then attains its ultimate and decisive perfection
when the will actually does order it to God through charity. As the
Patron of moral theologians and confessors teaches: "It is not enough to
do good works; they need to be done well. For our works to be good and perfect,
they must be done for the sole purpose of pleasing God".129
"Intrinsic
evil": it is not licit to do evil that good may come of it (cf
Rom 3:8)
79.
One must therefore reject the thesis, characteristic of teleological and
proportionalist theories, which holds that it is
impossible to qualify as morally evil according to its species — its
"object" — the deliberate choice of certain kinds of behaviour or
specific acts, apart from a consideration of the intention for which the choice
is made or the totality of the foreseeable consequences of that act for all
persons concerned.
The primary and decisive element
for moral judgment is the object of the human act, which establishes whether it
is capable of being ordered to the good and to the ultimate end, which is
God. This capability is grasped by reason in the very being of man,
considered in his integral truth, and therefore in his natural inclinations,
his motivations and his finalities, which always have a spiritual dimension as
well. It is precisely these which are the contents of the natural law and hence
that ordered complex of "personal goods" which serve the "good
of the person": the good which is the person himself and his perfection.
These are the goods safeguarded by the commandments, which, according to Saint Thomas, contain the
whole natural law.130
80.
Reason attests that there are objects of the human act which are by their
nature "incapable of being ordered" to God, because they radically
contradict the good of the person made in his image. These are the acts which,
in the Church's moral tradition, have been termed "intrinsically
evil" (intrinsece malum):
they are such always and per se, in other words, on account of their
very object, and quite apart from the ulterior intentions of the one acting and
the circumstances. Consequently, without in the least denying the influence on
morality exercised by circumstances and especially by intentions, the Church
teaches that "there exist acts which per se and in themselves,
independently of circumstances, are always seriously wrong by reason of their
object".131 The Second Vatican Council itself, in discussing the
respect due to the human person, gives a number of examples of such acts:
"Whatever is hostile to life itself, such as any kind of homicide,
genocide, abortion, euthanasia and voluntary suicide; whatever violates the
integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, physical and mental torture
and attempts to coerce the spirit; whatever is offensive to human dignity, such
as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery,
prostitution and trafficking in women and children; degrading conditions of
work which treat labourers as mere instruments of profit, and not as free
responsible persons: all these and the like are a disgrace, and so long as they
infect human civilization they contaminate those who inflict them more than
those who suffer injustice, and they are a negation of the honour due to the
Creator".132
With regard to
intrinsically evil acts, and in reference to contraceptive practices whereby
the conjugal act is intentionally rendered infertile, Pope Paul VI teaches:
"Though it is true that sometimes it is lawful to tolerate a lesser moral
evil in order to avoid a greater evil or in order to promote a greater good, it
is never lawful, even for the gravest reasons, to do evil that good may come of
it (cf Rom 3:8) —
in other words, to intend directly something which of its very nature
contradicts the moral order, and which must therefore be judged unworthy of
man, even though the intention is to protect or promote the welfare of an
individual, of a family or of society in general".133
81.
In teaching the existence of intrinsically evil acts, the Church accepts the
teaching of Sacred Scripture. The Apostle Paul emphatically states: "Do
not be deceived: neither the immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor sexual
perverts, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor robbers
will inherit the Kingdom
of God"
(1 Cor
6:9-10).
If acts are intrinsically
evil, a good intention or particular circumstances can diminish their evil, but
they cannot remove it. They remain "irremediably" evil acts; per
se and in themselves they are not capable of being ordered to God and to
the good of the person. "As for acts which are themselves sins (cum iam opera ipsa peccata sunt), Saint
Augustine writes, like theft, fornication, blasphemy, who would dare affirm
that, by doing them for good motives (causis
bonis), they would no longer be sins, or, what is
even more absurd, that they would be sins that are justified?".134
Consequently, circumstances
or intentions can never transform an act intrinsically evil by virtue of its
object into an act "subjectively" good or defensible as a choice.
82.
Furthermore, an intention is good when it has as its aim the true good of the
person in view of his ultimate end. But acts whose object is "not capable
of being ordered" to God and "unworthy of the human person" are
always and in every case in conflict with that good. Consequently, respect for
norms which prohibit such acts and oblige semper
et pro semper, that is, without any exception,
not only does not inhibit a good intention, but actually represents its basic
expression.
The doctrine of the object
as a source of morality represents an authentic explicitation
of the Biblical morality of the Covenant and of the commandments, of charity
and of the virtues. The moral quality of human acting is dependent on this
fidelity to the commandments, as an expression of obedience and of love. For
this reason — we repeat — the opinion must be rejected as erroneous which
maintains that it is impossible to qualify as morally evil according to its
species the deliberate choice of certain kinds of behaviour or specific acts,
without taking into account the intention for which the choice was made or the
totality of the foreseeable consequences of that act for all persons concerned.
Without the rational determination of the morality of human acting as
stated above, it would be impossible to affirm the existence of an
"objective moral order"135 and to establish any particular
norm the content of which would be binding without exception. This would be to
the detriment of human fraternity and the truth about the good, and would be
injurious to ecclesial communion as well.
83.
As is evident, in the question of the morality of human acts, and in particular
the question of whether there exist intrinsically evil acts, we find ourselves
faced with the question of man himself, of his truth and of the
moral consequences flowing from that truth. By acknowledging and teaching the
existence of intrinsic evil in given human acts, the Church remains faithful to
the integral truth about man; she thus respects and promotes man in his dignity
and vocation. Consequently, she must reject the theories set forth above, which
contradict this truth.
Dear Brothers in the
Episcopate, we must not be content merely to warn the faithful about the errors
and dangers of certain ethical theories. We must first of all show the inviting
splendour of that truth which is Jesus Christ himself. In him, who is the Truth
(cf Jn
14:6), man can understand fully and live perfectly, through his good
actions, his vocation to freedom in obedience to the divine law summarized in
the commandment of love of God and neighbour. And this is what takes place
through the gift of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth, of freedom and of
love: in him we are enabled to interiorize the law, to receive it and to live
it as the motivating force of true personal freedom: "the perfect law, the
law of liberty" (Jas 1:25).
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