This is not Christian ethics |
When
St. Thomas Aquinas turns to his study of the moral life, the return of the
rational creature to his Creator, he begins not with the personal conscience of
the believer, nor with the objective precepts of the moral law, nor even with
virtue and vice, but with the pursuit of happiness. In the Summa Theologica, St. Thomas tells us that happiness is the last
end of all men, it is the one end two which all men tend. This, then, is the
goal of morality: To aid us in the attainment of happiness, which is found in
the vision of the Divine Essence.
In
this matter, St. Thomas is following his divine Teacher, who began the Sermon
on the Mount, the great discourse on the Christian life, with the Beatitudes:
He began to teach them
saying: Blessed are they…
Christ
our Savior does not begin his instruction with law, nor with the subjective
discernment of the individual conscience, but with beatitude. Blessed, he says, which means happy. He draws the disciples to the
Christian life through appealing to their deepest desire – he who made us knows
that we want to be happy, and he also knows how we will get there.