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Will and free choice are not two powers, but one
Grant that I may never crave to do things impulsively, nor disdain to do what is burdensome.
Like most kids, I didn’t enjoy doing household chores. Even as a full-grown adult, assuming this space is safe, I’m still not that big of a fan. Whenever I would tell my parents that a particular task was too difficult or what they were asking me to do wasn’t fair, they would inevitably respond with the proverb, “Where there is a will, there’s a way.”
I never knew what that phrase meant other than I couldn’t play with my friends until my room was clean. Not long after I heard it, I’d somehow summon the will to shove everything under my bed. Finally, I could go outside and play baseball in peace.
It would be years before I discovered Thomas Aquinas. “The will and free choice are not two powers, but one,” he famously wrote. This is something I struggle with to this day. I know what I should do, but I can also talk myself out of it. I’m very persuasive when debating my will. To make things easier, no adults are around to dole out punishment if I don’t do what I should.
Grant that I may never crave to do things impulsively, nor disdain to do what is burdensome
Lest I begin things before I should or abandon them before finishing.
A simple tutorial on how to tell better stories by one of the greatest writers of his generation.
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“Happiness is secured through virtue; it is a good attained by man’s own will.”
Thomas Aquinas