They are experiencing Christianity as joy and hope, having thus become lovers of Christ.

Tag: Natural Law

  • Charity Is a Supernatural Virtue

    Today when people hear the word “charity,” they often think of donations, fundraisers, or volunteer work. These are good things, but they only scratch the surface of what charity really is.

    In Christian teaching, charity—caritas—is not simply kindness or generosity. It is a supernatural virtue. Saint Paul places it above even faith and hope:

    “Now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.” (1 Cor 13:13)

    Why is charity the greatest? Because it is not something we generate on our own. It is God’s own love, poured into our hearts by grace, enabling us to love as He loves.

    The Natural Foundation

    Even without revelation, human beings are inclined to goodwill toward others. Aristotle called this eunoia—acting with the good of others, and the common good, in mind. This is a natural virtue, and it is real. We can see it in acts of kindness, civic friendship, and common concern for neighbors and strangers alike.

    Yet, natural virtue is fragile. It can be easily distorted by pride, fear, or selfishness.

    Grace Perfects Nature

    Christ calls us beyond this natural level:

    “Be ye perfect, even as your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Mt 5:48)

    On our own, we cannot attain such perfection. But grace builds on nature and lifts it higher. When God infuses charity into the soul, it transforms natural goodwill into supernatural love. We are empowered to love not only as we would want to be loved, but as Christ Himself loves—freely, fully, and sacrificially.

    The Freedom of Love

    Aristotle observed that no act is virtuous unless it is voluntary. Forced “charity” is no charity at all. The same holds true in the supernatural order: Christian love must be freely chosen. It is a gift of grace, but also a response of the heart.

    That is why true charity is always personal. It is not only about writing a check or supporting a program. It is about opening the heart to God and to others—loving in freedom, with the very love of Christ that has first been given to us.

    Edited with assistance of ChatGPT-5

  • Is There a Moral Order Beneath It All?

    What Myth, Scripture, and Psychology Reveal About Natural Law

    Exploring the ancient wisdom behind modern chaos—with a little help from AI.

    🔍 What If There Is a Pattern to All This?

    I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about what drives human flourishing—and what causes decline.

    Whether I’m reflecting on myth, studying the Hero’s Journey, reading psychology, or engaging with Church teaching, I keep seeing the same structure underneath it all:

    • The struggle toward meaning.
    • The necessity of sacrifice.
    • The risk of freedom.
    • The danger of apathy.
    • The call to responsibility.

    It started to look less like a loose collection of ideas and more like an orthodoxy—a kind of natural rhythm built into life itself. Not just religious truth. Not just cultural wisdom. Something deeper.


    📜 Enter: Natural Law

    As I followed this thread, I realized I wasn’t the first to notice it. This convergence of truths has a name in classical thought:

    Natural law—the idea that there is a moral structure to the universe, written not just in books or doctrines, but in human nature itself.

    According to thinkers like Aristotle, Cicero, and Aquinas, natural law is:

    • Universal: True for all people, at all times.
    • Discoverable: We can reason our way into it by observing human nature.
    • Moral: It tells us how we ought to live—not arbitrarily, but in alignment with what we are.

    In other words, the same truths I’ve been trying to highlight through myth, psychology, and personal growth… were already mapped out long ago.


    🤝 How AI Helped Clarify My Thinking

    This might sound strange, but I’ve been using ChatGPT as a thinking partner in this journey. Not to replace faith or tradition—but to help synthesize ideas, test assumptions, and speak clearly about complicated topics.

    When I asked ChatGPT whether the “orthodoxy” I keep seeing (across myth, scripture, psychology, and history) could be understood as natural law, it confirmed exactly what I’d hoped:

    Yes—what you’re tracing is a form of natural law. A moral pattern embedded in the human condition itself. A cycle of meaning and decline, truth and illusion, sacrifice and rebirth.

    And what’s more, ChatGPT offered something I didn’t expect:

    While it reflects the full range of modern thought (including some of our cultural distortions), it also mirrors the timeless truths that keep recurring across civilizations. In that way, AI becomes a kind of mirror—showing us both our wisdom and our confusion.


    🧭 Why This Matters

    In a time when people are confused about what’s real, what’s right, or what’s worth pursuing, rediscovering the idea of natural law offers an anchor.

    It tells us:

    • We’re not just making it up as we go.
    • There’s a path toward meaning, even in chaos.
    • The old stories still matter—because they speak to something unchanging in us.

    Whether through Plato or Peterson, Genesis or Jung, the same message echoes:

    “Live in truth. Sacrifice for what matters. Take responsibility. Don’t lie.”


    💬 Final Thought

    I’m using these tools—ancient and modern, spiritual and psychological—to call myself (and maybe others) back to the center. Not as a return to legalism, but as a return to reality.

    Natural law isn’t just a theory. It’s the grammar of the human soul.

    And if even AI can recognize it… maybe it’s time we take another look.