Saturday, November 16, 2013

Essay: Virtue

This essay may look very familiar to you. I posted this essay a few weeks ago, but it has since been expanded to reach the page limit for the Torrey application essay. I like this version much better than the previous one, and I hope you do too.

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C.S. Lewis once said, “No justification of virtue will enable a man to be virtuous.”  A significant amount of weight lies in this single quote from Lewis’ essay, The Abolition of Man.   For instance, what is virtue?  Once that question has been answered, more arise.  One such question is what Lewis means by a “justification of virtue.”  Another question that demands to be answered is what will enable a man to be virtuous?  In order to begin answering the last two of these three questions, one must naturally answer the first.  For many people, the nature of virtue is ambiguous.  For instance, many people would agree that murder is wrong, but that lying is fine on occasion.  This is perhaps why there are such firm laws against murder but more convoluted ones on what constitutes lying, or fraud.  But when all is said and done, the man himself must choose whether or not to be virtuous, whether laws governing morality are placed over him or not.  Manmade laws only serve as guidelines, not as concrete restraints.  Whether or not a man is virtuous depends on the choice of the man himself, though there are also ways to instill virtue in him from a young age.

Virtue is not rational, insomuch as one cannot explain what drives a man to die for his country without acknowledging the existence of something outside of observable fact.  The act of being virtuous, or morally good, is not something mankind comes by naturally.  Virtue is prompted by the conscience, God’s law of morality, which demands certain actions of man which are morally good.  In truth, every man knows what is morally good, even if he does not always listen to the still, small voice that teaches him.  In a sense, virtue has emotional as well as cognitive properties to it, since the heart recognizes what is beautiful, and the mind seeks to copy that beautiful deed or image.  Returning to the example of a man who is willing to die for his country, Lewis says in The Abolition of Man that such a man would not do such a thing out of rationality.  This is because a rational man would seek his own preservation.  Although the man could argue that he does so for the benefit of future generations, he has not observed them and cannot therefore say whether such a drastic action as his own death for his country would, in fact, benefit them.  Instead, it is out of love that he does such a thing.

While virtue is not a rational concept, a man can attempt to point out what is good and bad using his mind.  He can make lists of moral and immoral actions, but this does not make him virtuous.  Such a man can be an excellent philosopher but still be a scoundrel if he does not follow his own advice.  This can be seen in the life of King Solomon.  He became the wisest man alive, but acted unwisely in following false gods.  Becoming virtuous is not just a cognitive action—one must integrate all the parts of man: the mind, the body, and the heart.  The mind must listen to the heart when it tells him what is good, and the body must act appropriately on what the mind knows is good.

In order to fully integrate these parts of man to become virtuous, one should preferably begin learning and practicing virtue from a young age.  If a man starts learning to become virtuous as an adult, he has already become so hardened in his ways that it is difficult, though not impossible, for him to break his habits and follow the calling of virtue.  One good way to learn virtue is to learn through example.  Reading and hearing about virtue teaches about the idea of virtue, but this only engages the mind.  To engage the heart, selfless love from another is required to awaken the heart to the beauty of virtue.  By learning through example, the child does not simply learn what virtue is, but also how it is to be acted upon.  The child, or anyone who attempts to learn virtue, should also saturate himself in the goodness, the truth, and the beauty of God’s Word, and also in manmade art.  The latter of these is not as important as the former, but it helps the learner to understand human nature and how virtue applies to it.  After a while, such exposure to morally good
stories and images begins to rub off on the learner.

Literature is one of best ways to teach virtue from a young age, or at any age, since a good novel has the potential to be both entertaining and insightful.  C.S. Lewis himself wrote many novels that are still entertaining to both children and adults, in the forms of The Chronicles of Narnia and The Space Trilogy.  These books explore many fascinating concepts and give examples of virtue in action within imaginative settings that draw in the reader’s attention.  A young child often can learn to be virtuous simply by reading such stories or having them read to them.  The trusting nature of a child absorbs tales of virtuous knights like a sponge, aspiring to be virtuous himself.  An adult, on the other hand, must generally make more of an effort to see and act on virtue in novels, reverting usually to skimming over the goodness and truth of a novel to focus on the beauty.  Beauty is good, of course, but a fixation on it, to the point where a man desires beauty for himself, but does not seek it out for the benefit of others, is an erroneous desire.  Theological and philosophical essays can teach an adult about virtue as well, but stories teach what they cannot: how to hope and dream for what is to come – for glory.

Parents must come to understand that no matter how much they may attempt to shelter their children, their children will eventually be on their own in the world and will inevitably encounter evil.  Any child completely sheltered from evil ideas, even if they have been saturated in goodness, having never been exposed to the darkness before, could easily be overwhelmed by the enemy’s arguments and succumb to them.  A parent’s reaction to this potential circumstance should not be to simply inoculate his or her child’s mind with evil imagery but also to show the antithesis to the evils shown to the child.  There may not be a rational counter-argument for every idea the child comes up across, but there will always be a Biblical one.  In addition, a parent’s attitude in the face of an evil that he or she cannot explain should not be to give up, but to seek out answers.  Parents should also teach their children to have this attitude of always seeking out answers, because if a person has this attitude towards evil, he or she will be less likely to be overcome in the face of a seemingly complete defense of sinful ideas.  Even when exposing a child to evil in the world, one should still avoid literature that dwells on evil to the point where it is nearly glorified, like most teenage romance novels of the modern age.  On the other hand, some books, like 1984, George Orwell’s dystopian novel, portray evil in the proper form for such a purpose as exposing a child to the evil of the world.  Such a book shows what evil truly is: something that should not be desired, something that should be avoided in every case.  Books that portray evil as undesirable are important to read since they serve as warnings against sin and, particularly in the case of 1984, apathy towards the evil actions of others.

Although everyone recognizes that there are moral and immoral actions, there are those who would argue that virtue in the Biblical sense either does not exist, or that it is unimportant.  People who believe either case recognize morality for their own purposes, seeking to promote it in others for their own benefit.  Those who say it does not exist are generally materialists, believing that this current, physical life is all there is, has been, or ever shall be.  They argue that man’s capability for thought is merely an evolutionary advance, and that any emotion he might feel is simply a chemical reaction within our bodies.  People with this viewpoint must, of necessity, deny the existence of a conscience, since there is no physical advantage of having one.  However, a conscience is different from instinct in that it points out what is good for others, not what is good for the self.  To borrow an analogy from C.S. Lewis, the existence of hunger proves that bread also must exist, whether or not the hunger in question is sated by it.  Following the same reasoning, because the conscience exists in every person, whether or not it is heeded, it must exist to promote virtue.

As to the second idea, that if virtue exists, it must be unimportant, this is actually a common fault of many people who claim to be Christians, and falls under the heresy of Epicureanism.  Epicureans believe that, once they are saved, it does not matter what they do since when they die they will receive the same reward as Christians who do good works in life.  As a result, Epicureans act on their fleshly desires, living in the moment, and do not care for the good of others.  The problem here is that a person’s actions in life do matter in the long run.  A man’s actions are always taking him in one of two directions: down to Sheol, or to eternal life with God.  And even when a man is saved, and the price of his sin has been paid, if he does not act on his newly-acquired inheritance to become more like Christ, he has not truly grasped the relationship he now has with God.  For a man who truly understands the nature of God will realize that God, as the ultimate good, just, loving being that He is, is someone to aspire to become like, no matter how good the man might already think he is.  For instance, who would settle for begging on the streets when every opportunity had been given him to rise to greatness?  Acting on virtue is important because it combats the darkness of the world and brings the virtuous person out of the depths of sin and closer to becoming like Christ.

Overall, hearing about and knowing the concept of virtue is not enough to be virtuous, just as C.S. Lewis stated.  But knowing the concept is at least a start, since a man must still build on that idea and choose to live in a world filled with good, so that he may learn to be good himself.  Even if it does come down to a person’s choice as to whether or not he or she will not only know good, but also do good, the person must have first somehow learned not only what is good, but what good looks like in action.  Learning what is good can be done through extensive, thoughtful reading; observation of those who are virtuous themselves; and reading of the Scriptures; to name only a few methods.  Mankind learns best through imitation in most cases, and this is certainly applicable to learning virtue.  Christians are called to be a light to this dark world so that others who are lost can learn virtue through their good examples.

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