Sunday, July 12, 2026

Synodality Against Unity. From the Church That Receives the Faith to the Church Produced by Consensus


 
Óscar Méndez Oseguera

The Church does not become one by walking together; she walks because she is already one. Her unity arises neither from a method, nor from conversation, nor from a synthesis of experiences, but from Christ Himself, the one Bridegroom of one Bride. Every ecclesial reform must therefore be judged by its fidelity to what the Church has received, not by its capacity to produce consensus. Wherever process seeks to occupy the place of Tradition, synodality ceases to be an instrument of communion and begins to operate as a counter-form of Catholic unity: without altering the indefectible being of the Church, it obscures her visibility and corrupts her ordinary mode of operation, replacing the transmission of the revealed deposit with the administration of divergent opinions.

Public Revelation attained its fullness in Jesus Christ. No further revelation is to be expected before the glorious manifestation of Our Lord. The Church does not live by inventing a new truth, but by faithfully guarding, expounding, and transmitting the truth she has received. Nor is the unicity of the Church a pastoral conclusion: just as there is one Christ, so there is one Body and one Bride. The one Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church, governed by the Successor of Peter and the bishops in communion with him.

What is being challenged here is not the existence of synods, councils, or prudent forms of consultation within the Church’s hierarchical constitution. From antiquity the Church has known episcopal deliberation, pastoral consultation, and councils ordered to the supernatural common good. What must be judged severely is constitutive synodalism: the attempt to make process a principle of ecclesial self-understanding, government, and reform; the temptation to make the Church understand herself no longer from the Revelation she has received, but from the historical path by which she listens, discerns, and reformulates herself.

Synodalism cannot abolish what Christ founded, for the Church is indefectible. It can, however, corrupt her visible operative principle. By turning listening into a practical source of doctrine, morals, and ecclesiastical government, it introduces an understanding of the Church that substitutes the ascending causality of manufactured consensus for the descending causality of truth received, guarded, and handed down.

I. The One Church: A Principle Prior to Every Process

The unicity of the Church is not a pastoral result but a theological datum. The Church is one because Christ is one. Unity is neither an atmosphere, nor a sensibility, nor a procedure; it is an essential property of the supernatural society founded by the Incarnate Word.

The International Theological Commission itself, in its 2018 document on synodality, defines synodality as the Church’s modus vivendi et operandi, yet expressly situates it within a hierarchically ordered community. A synod, assembly, or council does not constitute a parallel power; it serves communion under the legitimate pastors. If that formal principle is taken seriously, an operative dimension cannot redefine the sources of the communion that precedes it.

The Church can walk because she already possesses a principle, a form, and an end. She is not an indeterminate pilgrimage discovering her identity as she advances. She is the Bride journeying toward the consummation of what she has already received from her Lord. Once this is forgotten, the path no longer leads to truth; the path begins to produce it.

Here lies the first fracture. Catholic unity is founded upon truth received; synodalism tends to found it upon process shared. But a unity founded upon process is not Catholic unity. It is conversational unity. It may preserve the signs of communion, but it has altered their root.

II. The Three Bonds of Communion and the Objection from Development

According to the law of the Church and the classical doctrine of her visibility, full communion in the visible Church is recognized through three bonds: the profession of one and the same faith, participation in the same sacraments, and submission to the same ecclesiastical government. Lumen gentium teaches that those are fully incorporated into the society of the Church who accept her entire constitution and all the means of salvation established within her; canon 205 expresses this clearly in the bonds of profession of faith, the sacraments, and ecclesiastical government.

Contemporary synodalism introduces, de facto, a fourth and spurious bond: the procedural bond. It is no longer sufficient to preserve the faith, the sacraments, and hierarchical obedience; one must also adhere to the grammar of the process. He who preserves doctrine but resists the method appears divisive. He who erodes dogma but participates in the conversation is validated as a legitimate interlocutor. Process thus becomes more binding than the deposit.

Against this judgment, reformist thought will raise its most sophisticated defence by appealing to the doctrine of doctrinal development, to Newman, or to an expansive reading of Dei Verbum 8. It will argue that synodality represents a homogeneous maturation of the Church’s self-understanding. Yet this appeal encounters the insurmountable limit established by Saint Vincent of Lérins: authentic development must occur in eodem scilicet dogmate, eodem sensu eademque sententia—in the same dogma, in the same sense, and in the same judgment. Catholic development explicates what was contained in the premise; it does not contradict it in practice.

When synodal praxis authorizes divergent interpretations of morality or sacramental discipline, it does not develop dogma; it suspends its practical dominion. The abstract formula is preserved while its necessary consequence is rendered sterile. By the very logic of homogeneous development, preservation of type is a criterion of authenticity. If the type of descending authority and visible unity is altered, what has occurred is not development but corruption.

III. Authority Inverted: From Guardianship to the Administration of Opinions

The true question raised by the synodal deviation concerns the proper understanding of the potestas received from Christ to guard, teach, and govern. Authority in the Church is not an ascending delegation from the faithful but a descending mandate. The Magisterium exists to judge experiences in the light of the faith, not to adapt the faith to the weight of experience.

Synodalism transforms the operation of authority. The pastor no longer appears chiefly as one who teaches and governs in the name of Christ, but as one who facilitates and synthesizes processes. Authority does not disappear; it is dissolved immanently into the mechanism. Synodality does not democratize authority in order to destroy it; it dissolves authority into procedure in order to relieve the ruler of responsibility.

The pastor ceases to answer directly for the truth taught and begins to shelter behind “communal discernment.” Unity ceases to be formally doctrinal, sacramental, and hierarchical, and becomes merely administrative.

The Final Document of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly of 2024 presents itself as the fruit of a path marked by listening to the People of God and by the discernment of the pastors. Its publication was expressly approved by Pope Francis, and Episcopalis communio provides that when the Final Document is expressly approved by the Roman Pontiff, it participates in the ordinary Magisterium of the Successor of Peter. The novelty does not consist in the process bestowing authority upon itself. It consists in the fact that the fruit of a dynamic of listening and synthesis is juridically disposed to be assumed into the magisterial order.

Hence the decisive question: what judges what? If the deposit of faith judges the synthesis, the procedure remains in its proper instrumental place. But if the synthesis, clothed with a higher investiture, begins to shield what ought first to have been judged by the deposit, then the instrument ceases to serve the truth and begins to occupy its practical place.

IV. From the Sensus Fidei to the Common Opinion of the Baptized

This operative displacement requires the denaturing of the concept of the People of God. The sensus fidei is neither a sociological survey nor an average of the sensibilities of the baptized. It is a supernatural connaturality with revealed truth, presupposing grace, docility toward the Magisterium, and perseverance within Tradition.

The International Theological Commission, in its 2014 document, expressly distinguishes the sensus fidei from public opinion and identifies the dispositions necessary for its authenticity: participation in the life of the Church, attentive hearing of the Word of God, openness to reason, adherence to the Magisterium, holiness, and concern for the edification of the Church. That document is itself a witness against the attempt to confuse the sense of the faith with the shifting opinions of the faithful considered merely as a sociological body.

When the sensus fidei is translated into democratic listening, Revelation ceases to be the rule and becomes the matter to be interpreted. It is one thing to know the wounds of men in order to heal them with the truth; it is quite another to bend doctrine toward the wound until doctrine itself is deformed.

Once the speech of the assembly is treated as possessing a quasi-revelatory function, experience displaces the deposit and centres of local interpretation multiply. The community no longer appears primarily as the recipient of the faith, but as the place from which its practical meaning emerges.

V. Communal Protestantism

The charge of Protestantization must be formulated with theological precision. What is at issue is not a frontal rupture with Rome, but the adoption of an interpretive principle similar in its dissolving structure. Classical Protestantism replaced the living Magisterium with individual private judgment, thereby destroying the sufficient principle of visible unity and provoking inevitable fragmentation.

Modernist synodalism replaces the Magisterium with communal private judgment. The ultimate subject of practical interpretation is no longer the isolated individual, but the assembly, the episcopal conference, or the territorial discernment group, each adapting Tradition to its historical experience. The formal language remains Roman, but the operative principle is Protestantizing: the subject that ought to receive the truth begins to act as the instance determining its meaning.

The history of Protestantism reveals what follows when the visible principle of unity is lost. The common faith becomes the particular reading of a group; the common Scriptures become local interpretation; the common community becomes a denomination; reform becomes the reform of reform.

Transferred into the Catholic sphere, the danger does not consist chiefly in the immediate appearance of formally separate denominations. It lies rather in the coexistence of incompatible practical Catholicisms beneath a single visible administration: German, African, Latin American, North American, progressive, or traditional, all invoking communion, yet not all professing, worshipping, and governing according to the same understanding of the faith.

The atomization produced by Protestantism followed from its principle, not merely from the temperament of its founders. Once the subject receiving Revelation becomes the final subject interpreting it, division is already contained in the premise. First unity with Rome is broken; then those who have broken with Rome divide among themselves.

Synodalism threatens to reproduce that consequence internally. It does not necessarily establish new denominations outside Rome; it permits local communities to act as though each possessed a proper practical norm within Rome. The result is not yet formal separation, but a thinning of real unity beneath the continued signs of juridical communion.

VI. Three Documented Signs of Practical Rupture

The dissolution of unity does not necessarily announce itself as juridical schism. It establishes itself as a fragmented praxis that alters the faithful’s understanding of doctrine.

1. The regionalization of practical morality

Fiducia supplicans opened the possibility of non-liturgical blessings for couples in irregular situations and for same-sex couples, while insisting that no confusion should arise between such blessings and the blessing proper to marriage. Yet the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar, through Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo, declared that such blessings would not be offered in Africa because of the danger of scandal and confusion, while expressly maintaining communion with the Pope.

The subsequent clarification of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith acknowledged the need to clarify the document’s reception and admitted that, in some contexts, a longer period of pastoral reflection might be required.

The visible result was an officially tolerated practical plurality: what could be presented in some places as a legitimate pastoral gesture was declared impracticable elsewhere because of the danger of scandal. The doctrinal formula remained universal; its practical sign became territorial.

The gravity of the matter lies precisely here. A moral and sacramental sign is not indifferent to doctrine. The faithful learn what the Church believes not only through propositions but through what she blesses, permits, forbids, and celebrates. Where opposed practices are tolerated under the same doctrinal formula, unity remains verbal while ecclesial life teaches divergent lessons.

2. The claim to local normativity

The German Synodal Way has made this danger unmistakable. The Holy See itself was compelled to declare that the German process possessed no authority to oblige bishops and faithful to adopt new forms of government or new approaches to doctrine and morals.

That Roman intervention demonstrates that the danger was not imaginary. A local ecclesial structure was beginning to act as though it possessed the power to redirect doctrine, morality, and ecclesiastical government.

This is more than a disciplinary excess. It reveals the internal tendency of the synodal principle once emancipated from the deposit and the apostolic constitution of the Church. Every region invokes its context; every culture claims its own reception; every assembly produces a synthesis; every local body seeks recognition for its discernment. Catholic universality is then endangered by a federalization of doctrine in practice.

3. Punitive asymmetry as a principle of government

The third sign is the asymmetry between the treatment of inherited Tradition and the treatment of doctrinal innovation. While ecclesiastical authority exercises centralized severity toward the traditional Roman liturgy—Traditionis custodes and the subsequent Responsa ad dubia strictly regulated the use of the liturgical books prior to the reform of 1970 in the name of ecclesial communion—processes touching doctrine, morals, and ecclesiastical government are often granted patience, dialogue, graduality, and time.

This contrast does not by itself establish formal schism, but it reveals an operative orientation. Traditional fixity is treated as an immediate danger; diffuse doctrinal innovation is treated as a process to be accompanied.

The severity directed against Tradition and the patience extended to heterodoxy are not necessarily contradictory within the new principle. For a Church conceived as process, the intolerable offence is not deviation but fixity; not innovation against the deposit, but resistance from those who insist that the deposit is not available for revision.

VII. The German Laboratory and Religious Immanentism

The German case deserves separate examination, not as a geographical eccentricity, but as an anticipation. It reveals what occurs when the logic of process assumes a local constitutive function and seeks to order doctrine, morals, and ecclesiastical government from the historical experience of a particular Church.

This laboratory discloses the modernist root already condemned by Saint Pius X: religious immanentism. In Pascendi dominici gregis, Saint Pius X denounced the doctrine according to which religious sentiment arises through “vital immanence,” making religious consciousness the rule to which even doctrinal and disciplinary authority must conform. Within that logic, the Church and authority arise from religious consciousness, while the Magisterium tends merely to formulate what corresponds to the common consciousness.

The German synodal experiment operates according to this structure. Faith no longer appears as something coming from without through the preaching of a truth received—fides ex auditu—but as something arising from the collective consciousness and evolving experience of the People of God. The synod then becomes the technical instrument for extracting, ordering, and giving normative form to this supposedly immanent revelation.

This is why the language of “lived experience,” “new understandings,” “signs of the times,” and “local reception” cannot be treated as a merely pastoral vocabulary. Once such categories acquire normative force over doctrine and discipline, experience is no longer an object to be judged by the faith. It becomes the principle from which the faith is practically reinterpreted.

The ancient modernist thesis is therefore not overcome; it is reorganized ecclesially. What once emerged from individual religious consciousness now emerges from communal consciousness. The assembly replaces the solitary subject, but the immanentist structure remains.

VIII. Two Understandings of the Church in Conflict

Dogmatically, the Church of Christ is one and indefectible; there are not two ontological Churches. Yet two incompatible principles of ecclesial understanding now operate within the same visible body: the Catholic principle of received Tradition and the synodal-modernist principle of constitutive process.

According to the Catholic principle, the source of meaning is Revelation completed with the Apostles. According to the synodalist counter-form, the signs of the times acquire a practical value approaching a quasi-revelatory function.

According to the Catholic principle, the bond of unity is the univocal profession of the orthodox faith. According to the counter-form, unity is found in procedural inclusion within “walking together.”

According to the Catholic principle, authority imperatively guards the deposit through the munus docendi and the munus regendi. According to the counter-form, authority facilitates, receives, and synthesizes consensus.

According to the Catholic principle, truth judges, corrects, and orders action. According to the counter-form, historical experience reinterprets truth.

This is not an external separation between two visible societies. It is a counter-form inhabiting institutions, language, and structures of obedience proper to the Church. Its effectiveness lies precisely in avoiding formal schism while producing interior dissolution. It preserves the exterior signs of communion while attenuating the real bonds of unity.

The expression “two Churches” must therefore be used only analogically and with the greatest precision. There cannot be two true Churches of Christ. Yet there can be two contrary principles at work within the same visible ecclesiastical field: one by which the Church remains what she received from Christ, and another by which men of the Church attempt to make her operate according to a principle foreign to her constitution.

The first is Tradition: the transmission of what has been received. The second is process: the progressive production of what is to be accepted.

The first preserves unity because it submits all ages, nations, and local Churches to one received truth. The second fragments unity because it grants historical experience a practical authority capable of multiplying local interpretations.

The first is Catholic because it is universal in origin, content, worship, and government. The second is Protestantizing because it allows the interpreting community to become the operative measure of the received deposit.

IX. Conclusion: Synodality Subjected to Unity

The Catholic Church is not one historical possibility among others, available to be reformulated through a procedure of communal self-understanding. Her identity does not arise from the consensus of the living, but from the Revelation entrusted once and for all to the Apostles.

Synodality is legitimate only insofar as it remains strictly subordinate to unity in faith, sacraments, and apostolic government. Once it becomes independent and claims the right to serve as a principle of ecclesial self-construction, it fractures unity by altering its source: from faith to process, from Tradition to consensus, from the Magisterium to listening, from apostolic government to the participatory administration of opinions.

Where there was a deposit, it introduces constitutive discernment.
Where there was Tradition, it introduces process.
Where there was apostolic authority, it introduces the administration of consensus.
Where there was unity of faith, it introduces coordinated plurality.
Where there was a mission of conversion, it introduces inclusion without return.

The Church will not be saved by listening to herself, but by listening anew to her Lord. Wherever process replaces identity, what confronts us is no longer reform, but the modern form of a rupture that does not yet dare to speak its name.

The Church does not need to become the product of a path. She must remain faithful to the truth that constitutes her. Only by remaining Catholic does she remain visibly one.

Friday, July 10, 2026

I ENTRUST EVERYTHING TO YOU


"O Mary, my Mother and my hope! Under your mantle I take refuge; do not cast me away, as I deserve. Look upon me and have compassion on my misery. Obtain for me the pardon of my sins, holy perseverance, the love of God, a good death, and heaven! From you I expect everything, since you are all-powerful before God. Make me holy, for it is in your power. O Mary! See that I entrust everything to you; in you I have placed all my hopes."

Saint Alphonsus Liguori, "The Way of Salvation."

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

THE FIRE OF THE GOSPEL

 

THE FIRE OF THE GOSPEL

We have every right to proclaim the Gospel and teach our faith in its entirety, including its moral teachings. If they want to persecute us, let them persecute us. If they want to discriminate against us, let them discriminate against us. If they want to imprison us, let them imprison us. Nothing will stop the fire of the Gospel.


Monday, July 6, 2026

IF THE DEVIL FEARS ANYTHING, IT IS PRAYER

 

“There is nothing the devil fears more than mental prayer: that is why he is constantly seeking ways to destroy the spirit of prayer in souls… For mental prayer and sin cannot coexist (Quoted by La Puente).

A person who does not pray is like an animal without reason. There is nothing better for humankind than prayer, and without it, it is impossible to remain long in the life of grace. Therefore, it is essential to turn to this most powerful means of salvation every day.

For this reason, the devil is so afraid of prayer, and there is nothing that angers him more, and nothing he tries harder to prevent, than prayer.”

Saint Philip Neri. (Codesal, “Anthology of Texts on Prayer”).


Wednesday, July 1, 2026

THE FRATERNITY EXPLAINS TO THE POPE THE MEANING OF EPISCOPAL CONSECRATIONS: "WE WANT TO SEW THE ROBE OF CHRIST, NOT TEAR IT."


Just hours after the episcopal consecrations held on July 1st in Écône, Fr. Davide Pagliarani, Superior General of the Society of Saint Pius X, responded with a highly respectful letter to Pope Leo XIV explaining their meaning.

Fr. Pagliarani expressed his "deepest" gratitude for the Pope's paternal gesture in the letter and explained the Fraternity's sincere desire to serve the Church: "It seems to us that it is precisely our duty to do everything possible to sew the robe of Christ, torn by forces and pressures incompatible with an authentically Catholic spirit." The Fraternity does not see itself as one who tears, but as one who tries to repair.

The superior of the SSPX also invoked the case of thousands of souls who, he affirms, have recovered their faith and religious practice thanks to the apostolate of the Society, and asked the Pope to let his pastoral heart be "sensitive to this very particular situation." He closed the letter with a note of almost intimate hope: "For some time now I have been praying to Saint Rita for the present situation. I have seen in the election of an Augustinian Pope a sign of hope. I am certain that the saint will intercede. It is never too late."

Father Pagliarani noted that "One day, all the difficulties between the Holy See and the Society will be resolved. A gesture of understanding on the part of Your Holiness, far from harming unity, can only demonstrate to the world and to all Christians your concern for unity and your paternal kindness."

Below is the full text of the letter to the Pope, in which the SSPX emphasizes that the consecrations are not intended as a rupture but are an act that it believes will benefit and was necessary for the Catholic Church:

The Superior General
To His Holiness
Pope Leo XIV

Ecône, June 30, 2026

Most Holy Father:

I sincerely thank you for the letter you kindly sent me.

I was deeply moved by your paternal concern.

For a long time, I have long desired the opportunity to meet with Your Holiness to express to you personally our sincere desire to serve the Church. Unfortunately, that opportunity has not arisen.

I only ask that you consider the authenticity of this intention, which is in no way fictitious. Paradoxically, in the current circumstances, it seems to us a necessary duty to do everything possible to mend the garment of Christ, torn by forces and pressures incompatible with a truly Catholic spirit.  I simply ask that you consider the authenticity of this intention before making a decision regarding the Society of Saint Pius X. It is not too late.

Far be it from us to separate ourselves from the Roman Church; on the contrary, we wish to serve her through extraordinary means, as one helps a mother going through a serious difficulty who needs particular assistance that not everyone understands. But I am certain that the Holy Father could understand.

The Holy See has already demonstrated its ability to understand very complex situations and to grant the necessary time.

I humbly ask you to take the necessary time for this discernment.

If my words are not enough, I would ask you to reflect on two very simple facts. First, the Society was already declared schismatic in 1988, for reasons and under circumstances entirely analogous to the present ones; and yet, after so many years, we are speaking like a father to his son.  His Holiness paternally exhorts me to avoid a schism that, theoretically, has already occurred. Does Your Holiness not believe that this very attitude of yours, for which I am so grateful, constitutes proof that the Fraternity is neither schismatic nor hostile to the Church?

Secondly, some years ago, the Holy See entrusted two bishops of the Church with the mission of dialoguing with the Priestly Fraternity St. Pius X: Mons.  Vitus Huonder, then Bishop of Coira, today deceased, and Mons.  Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of Astana.  Both, after taking the necessary time to discern, recognized the deeply Catholic spirit of the Fraternity and testified to it publicly.

But, above all, allow me to address Your Holiness on behalf of the thousands of souls who have rediscovered the Catholic faith and religious practice through the apostolate of the Fraternity.  It is a fact that his predecessors took note of.  These souls have no greater desire than to attain salvation by this instrument which Providence has placed at their disposal.  They have suffered and they are sincere.  I am sure that his fatherly heart as a universal Shepherd will be sensitive to this particular situation.  One day, all difficulties between the Holy See and the Brotherhood will be resolved.  A gesture of understanding on the part of Your Holiness, far from harming unity, will only be able to manifest before the world and before all Christians his concern for unity and his fatherly kindness.

I leave all this to your consideration.  I renew my prayer for Your Holiness.

For a long time, even before his election, I have been entrusting the current situation to Santa Rita.  I saw in the election of an Augustinian Pope a sign of hope.  I am sure the Saint will intercede.  It's never too late.

I beseech Him to grant us His blessing.

I gladly take this opportunity to reiterate Your Holiness, very devout in the Lord.

Don Davide Pagliarani


Monday, June 29, 2026

THE HAPPINESS THAT CANNOT FIT WITHIN "PRIDE". St. Thomas Aquinas and What "Gay Pride" Cannot Give to the Soul

 


By Oscar Méndez Oseguera

June once again offers us the public spectacle of "Pride": streets, flags, music, slogans, institutions, brands, and public authorities united under a single celebration. This is no longer a marginal phenomenon or merely the demonstration of a particular social group; it has become a true civil liturgy of late modernity. The calendar does more than commemorate; it educates. It does more than organize dates; it proposes symbols. It does more than allow crowds to march; it teaches society what it should look at, what it should celebrate, and what it should call freedom.

For this reason, Christians should not remain on the surface of the phenomenon. The issue here is not to judge the dignity of persons, but rather to examine the adequacy of a cultural promise of happiness. So-called gay pride, considered as the spiritual sign of an age, claims that human beings are liberated when they transform their desires into a public identity. St. Thomas compels us to ask whether such an operation can give the soul the peace that is born only from the order established by virtue.

The question, therefore, is not whether "Pride" has achieved visibility. That is obvious. The question is whether visibility is enough for happiness; whether public recognition can replace virtue; whether an identity founded upon desire can give the soul the rest that is attained only when the appetites are ordered toward the true good.

Before proceeding further, it is necessary to clarify a few terms. When the word "anthropology" is used here, it does not refer to the academic discipline that studies cultures, peoples, or customs. Rather, it refers to something more fundamental and decisive: an understanding of the human person. Every culture possesses an anthropology, even if it never explicitly states it. Every legal system presupposes one. Every educational system transmits one. Every public demonstration proclaims one. To declare what should be celebrated in humanity is, in effect, to declare what one believes the human person to be.

It is equally important to clarify the word "appetite." In the classical tradition, appetite does not refer merely to bodily hunger. It signifies every interior inclination toward something perceived as desirable: pleasure, affection, power, recognition, rest, companionship, possession, revenge, tenderness, domination, belonging. Human beings are filled with appetites because they are filled with movements toward goods, whether real or merely apparent. The moral problem does not arise because human beings desire; it arises because they can desire wrongly, they can desire in a disordered manner, and they can mistake a partial good for their ultimate good.

This is something everyone knows, even before opening the works of St. Thomas. No one educates a child by telling him that all of his impulses are equally good. No one calls surrendering to anger "freedom." No one calls addiction "fulfillment." No one believes that a lie becomes noble simply because someone feels it intensely. No one considers revenge to become justice merely because the offended person desires it with all his heart. There are desires that must be governed because not everything that arises within us perfects us.

This common intuition is the gateway to the thought of St. Thomas. The Christian tradition does not artificially invent an opposition to desire; rather, it recognizes that human desire requires form, measure, and direction. The stable disposition by which our inclinations are ordered toward the good is called virtue.

Virtue is not a decorative word. Nor is it merely outwardly good behavior. Virtue signifies an interior strength brought into order. It is a habitual perfection of the soul that enables a person to act well—not through passing enthusiasm, but with stability. The virtuous person is not someone who lacks passions, temptations, or wounds. Rather, he is one who refuses to allow them to occupy the throne. His greatness does not consist in being free from struggle, but in knowing toward what end that struggle must be directed.

Here we arrive at the decisive point: St. Thomas does not begin moral theology by asking what a person feels, but by asking toward what end a person must be directed in order to be happy. His first great moral question is not what is permitted or forbidden, but what constitutes the ultimate end of the human person. Every agent acts for an end. Every human being seeks something he regards as good. Every human being—even when mistaken—desires, in one way or another, to be happy.

Yet precisely because human beings desire happiness, they can also be mistaken about what happiness truly is.

They may seek it in pleasure and remain empty. They may seek it in applause and remain restless. They may seek it in fame only to discover that fame cannot quiet the soul. They may seek it in wealth, in power, in social approval, in absolute independence, in mastery over their own bodies, or in the reinvention of their own identity. They may even mistake happiness for what merely offers relief, intensity, or protection against an ancient wound.

This is the truth our age finds difficult to accept: sincere desire does not guarantee the true good.

.

The modern world has been taught to believe that authenticity consists in affirming whatever one feels. Yet psychological sincerity is not sufficient for moral rectitude. A desire may be sincere and still fail to lead toward the good. An inclination may be intense and yet fail to bring order to the soul. An identity may be defended with great passion and still be incapable of giving peace.

The question of "gay pride," considered as a cultural phenomenon, must be situated precisely at this point. It is not merely a demand for civil tolerance. Nor is it simply the pursuit of respect in the face of genuine humiliations or concrete injustices. Its deeper claim is something else: that a particular form of desire reveals the identity of the person and that this identity ought to be publicly celebrated as a path to liberation.

St. Thomas would ask: Liberation toward what?

For not every liberation truly liberates. Some chains are broken so that a person may walk toward the good, while others are broken only to deliver him into the hands of another master. Desire without virtue appears to be freedom while it tears down limits; afterward it reveals itself as a tyrant once it no longer allows the soul to rest. Disordered passion requires no external prison: it is enough for a person to learn to call it "me."

Here we encounter one of the gravest operations of modernity: transforming desire into identity. As long as desire remains simply desire, it can be examined, educated, ordered, purified, overcome, or elevated. But once desire becomes identity, every correction appears to be an act of aggression. If a person says, "This is something I experience," he can still ask what ought to be done about it. But if he says, "This is who I am," then every call to order seems like a denial of his very person.

This transformation alters the entire moral life. What was once the proper matter of virtue becomes untouchable. What could once be judged by reason is shielded from all judgment. What was once to be ordered toward a higher good is now presented as the very center of human dignity. Inclination ceases to be something a person experiences and becomes that by which he seeks to define himself completely.

Here lies the decisive substitution: virtue is replaced by identity.

Virtue asks: Does this desire lead me toward the good?

Modern identity asks: Does this desire express who I am?

Virtue asks: Should this inclination be brought into order?

Modern identity answers: This inclination must be recognized.

Virtue asks: What perfects the human person?

Modern identity answers: That the individual be affirmed in his own self-perception.

Yet self-perception does not create truth. The mere fact that someone perceives himself in a particular way is not enough to make that perception the ultimate measure of reality. We recognize this in every other area of life. The proud person perceives himself as superior. The resentful person sees himself as an absolute victim. The envious imagine themselves to be champions of justice. The addict believes himself to need precisely what destroys him. The angry person feels entitled to wound others. No reasonable person would argue that such perceptions ought to govern the moral life simply because they are deeply felt.

The point is not to equate different realities as though they were identical. Rather, it is to establish a principle: the human person is not perfected merely by obeying everything he feels. He requires a criterion higher than his own interior impulses. He needs reason. He needs virtue. He needs truth.

For this reason, human nature must not be understood as a rigid, merely biological, or brutal concept. Here, nature means that the human person is not an indeterminate substance capable of assuming any form whatsoever without consequence. He possesses a structure. He possesses powers. He possesses ends. His intellect is made for truth. His will is made for the good. His body is not a mute object but an integral part of his personal being. His freedom exists not to invent the good arbitrarily, but to adhere to it.

When a culture denies this, it does not liberate the human person.

It leaves him without a map.

And a person without a map does not become freer.

He becomes easier to manipulate.

If there is no human nature, then only the will remains.

If there is no objective good, then only preference remains.

If there is no virtue, then only subjective authenticity remains.

If there is no ultimate end, then only partial projects remain—projects that promise much and deliver little.

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Modern pride belongs within this same logic. It tells man: do not seek a standard outside yourself; affirm what you feel. Do not ask whether your desire ought to be ordered; make it your name. Do not accept that your life has a received end; construct yourself according to your own will. Do not admit that virtue may require renunciation; call every limit violence.

The result appears liberating, yet it impoverishes. For man is not set free when every desire is authorized. He is set free when he becomes capable of rightly willing the good. Freedom is not merely the absence of obstacles. Nor is it the ability to do whatever one wishes with oneself. True freedom is the interior mastery that enables one to choose what perfects the human person. Whoever cannot resist his passions is not free, even if no one outside prevents him from acting.

For this reason, chastity—so incomprehensible to the contemporary imagination—is not a gloomy denial of love. It is a lofty form of freedom. It is not hatred of the body, but the defense of the body against its reduction to a mere instrument. It is not contempt for affection, but the safeguarding of affection lest it degenerate into possession. It is not the sterility of the heart, but the education of desire so that one may love without devouring.

Contemporary culture has become so successful that almost no one is able to understand this anymore. It has identified limits with repression, norms with hatred, virtue with trauma, nature with oppression, and mercy with unconditional affirmation. In doing so, it has deprived man of one of the noblest possibilities of his existence: to struggle against himself for the sake of a greater good.

For there are struggles that do not destroy a man; they ennoble him. There are renunciations that do not impoverish; they purify. There are limits that do not imprison; they save. There are acts of obedience that do not humiliate; they bring order. There are wounds that should not become identities, but should instead be opened to a higher hope.

Here the word "mercy" must recover its Christian meaning. Mercy does not consist in confirming a person at the precise point of his disorder. Neither does it consist in humiliating him because of that disorder. Rather, it consists in loving him so deeply that he is never reduced to it. False mercy says, "You are what you desire; celebrate it." True mercy says, "You are more than what you desire; bring it into right order."

There are real sufferings in many human lives. It would be unjust to deny this. There is loneliness, abandonment, mockery, rejection, broken families, distorted affections, early wounds, sincere searching, and painful confusion. No one who thinks as a Christian can turn such suffering into an occasion for contempt. Yet neither can he accept that compassion consists in canonizing the wound.

A wound is not healed by turning it into a flag. An inclination is not brought into order by declaring it sovereign. Suffering is not redeemed by transforming it into an ideology. Human pain deserves truth, companionship, patience, justice, and grace—not a civil liturgy that tells it it no longer needs healing but only celebration.

This is why pride cannot give what it promises. It can offer visibility, but visibility is not truth. It can offer belonging, but belonging is not communion. It can offer recognition, but recognition is not virtue. It can offer legal protection, but legal protection is not beatitude. It can provide language, but language does not change the nature of things. It can provide celebration, but celebration cannot substitute for the peace of the soul.

Crowds may fill the avenues. Music may cover, for a few hours, the unrest within. Flags may color the city. Institutions may repeat their formulas of support. Corporations may turn the cause into a marketing campaign. The calendar may bestow civic solemnity upon what an age chooses to celebrate.

But after every march comes silence.

After every slogan, the soul remains.

After every celebration, one question still endures:

Am I happy?

Not: Am I visible?

Not: Am I applauded?

Not: Am I recognized by the law?

Not: Do I belong to a group?

Not: Do I possess words with which to name my desire?

Not: Have I learned how to defend myself?

The more serious question is this:

Does my soul rest in the good?

St. Thomas would answer that the soul does not find rest in the affirmation of itself, but in the possession of the true good. It does not rest when the world confirms its desires, but when its desires are rightly ordered. It does not rest when it transforms its wounds into its identity, but when those wounds no longer govern it. It does not rest when it proclaims absolute autonomy, but when it recognizes its ultimate end.

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The culture of pride says, "Accept yourself."

St. Thomas would say, "Order yourself toward the good."

The culture of pride says, "Affirm your desire."

St. Thomas would say, "Discern whether that desire perfects you."

The culture of pride says, "Make your inclination your name."

St. Thomas would say, "Do not confuse what you experience with that for which you were created."

The culture of pride says, "Peace will come when everyone celebrates you."

St. Thomas would say, "Peace will come when your faculties rest under the order of reason and grace."

That is the irreducible difference.

Either man possesses a nature and an end, or he is nothing more than material for self-construction.

Either desire must be ordered toward the good, or the good itself must be redefined according to desire.

Either virtue perfects freedom, or freedom consists in emancipation from every virtue.

Either mercy leads man toward the truth, or it becomes nothing more than the emotional affirmation of what leaves him incomplete.

Our age has preferred a mercy without truth—a mercy that accompanies but does not call, that embraces but does not raise up, that listens but does not correct, that avoids every immediate wound at the cost of abandoning man to a deeper one. It is a comfortable compassion because it refuses to bear the cost of speaking the truth.

True mercy is more demanding because it loves more deeply. It is not satisfied that a person be recognized by the world; it desires that he be reconciled with the good. It is not content that he cease to be rejected; it desires that he cease to be divided within himself. It does not offer pride as an anesthetic; it offers virtue as a path.

Here we return to the significance of this month and its marches. When a society publicly celebrates pride, it is not merely celebrating people who desire not to be humiliated. It is celebrating an idea: that man finds freedom when his desire is recognized as identity, and his identity becomes a source of pride.

That idea deserves to be examined.

It is not enough to repeat that it is inclusive, modern, compassionate, or inevitable.

One must ask whether it is true.

Above all, one must ask whether it is capable of making man happy.

For there are apparent happinesses.

There are forms of relief that are not fulfillment.

There are kinds of belonging that are not communion.

There are forms of recognition that are not peace.

There are identities that, though they appear emancipating, become prisons.

A person believes he has escaped an external oppression only to discover, too late, that he has become enclosed within an interior definition.

He is no longer permitted to say, "This is happening to me."

He is expected instead to say, "This is who I am."

He is no longer offered a vocation.

He is handed a label.

He is no longer proclaimed a call to conversion.

He is assigned a sense of belonging.

Christianity, however, does not reduce man to his label.

It does not reduce the soul to its wound.

It does not reduce a life story to its dominant inclination.

It does not identify dignity with self-affirmation.

On the contrary, it proclaims that the human person is a rational creature, ordered toward the good, capable of virtue, wounded by sin, in need of grace, and called to a happiness that infinitely surpasses every sensible satisfaction or political recognition.

For this reason, there is a happiness that cannot fit within pride.

It cannot fit because pride bends back upon itself, whereas true happiness requires going out of oneself toward the good.

It cannot fit because pride must constantly assert itself, whereas true happiness must be received.

It cannot fit because pride renders the wound untouchable, whereas true happiness begins when the wound consents to cease governing.

It cannot fit because pride makes desire into a closed identity, whereas virtue opens the soul toward its proper end.

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The final word, then, should not be hatred.

It should be a warning.

Not a bitter warning, but a grave one; directed not against persons, but against the falsehood that confines them.

You are not your desire.

You are not your inclination.

You are not your wound.

You are not the slogan your age has given you.

You are not the flag beneath which you learned to defend yourself.

You are not the political name assigned to your sorrow.

You are a creature called to the good, capable of virtue, in need of grace, and ordered toward a happiness that cannot be manufactured in the streets, decreed by law, or attained through the public celebration of one's own fragility.

Pride may fill the avenues.

It may gather multitudes.

It may win over institutions.

It may color the civic calendar.

It may persuade everyone to repeat the slogans of the age.

But it cannot give the soul what is born only when desire ceases to rule and consents to be brought into right order.

Only then does freedom cease to be noise.

Only then does desire cease to be a tyrant.

Only then does identity cease to be a prison.

Only then does the soul no longer need pride as a defense.

Only then can peace begin.