Fortitude: A Cardinal Virtue and a Gift of the Holy Spirit
By Scott P. Richert, About.com
One of the Four Cardinal Virtues:
Fortitude is commonly called courage, but it is different from what much of what we think of as courage today. Fortitude is always reasoned and reasonable; the person exercising fortitude is willing to put himself in danger if necessary, but he does not seek danger for danger's sake.
The Third of the Cardinal Virtues:
What Fortitude Is Not:
A Gift of the Holy Spirit:
It is in martyrdom that we see the best example of fortitude rising above a mere cardinal virtue (able to be practiced by anyone) into a supernatural gift of the Holy Spirit. But it also shows itself, as the Catholic Encyclopedia notes, "in moral courage against the evil spirit of the times, against improper fashions, against human respect, against the common tendency to seek at least the comfortable, if not the voluptuous."
Fortitude, as a gift of the Holy Spirit, also allows us to cope with poverty and loss, and to cultivate the Christian virtues that allow us to rise above the basic requirements of Christianity. The saints, in their love for God and their fellow man and their determination to do what is right, exhibit fortitude as a supernatural gift of the Holy Spirit, and not merely as a cardinal virtue.
I didn't know until now that one of the gifts of the Spirit can also be a virtue until now.
ReplyDeleteAccording the above article fortitude is also called "courage." But real courage is not foolhardiness and it is not the seeking of danger for danger's sake. In fact part of the definition is the "curbing of recklessness."
We need to pray for two other virtues-prudence and justice-to help us to use true fortitude in our Christian living.
This article reminds me of the Serenity Prayer:
God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change;
The COURAGE to change the things I can;
And the WISDOM to know the difference!
It was my decision to put upper case letters in the words "serenity," "courage," and "wisdom," but I don't mean to yell at you. I have no way to italicize or underline the words in the comments so I have to use something else-such as ALL CAPS-to place the emphasis I wanted to on the three words.
(And people who know me well could say I'm a loud-mouth anyway-lol!)