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Someone familiar with this material please tell me if it’s compatible with Catholic theology. My inter-library loan book on Maximus Confessor isn’t in yet and I need this question answered.
Maximus Confessor said humans have two wills, natural will (as before the fall, aligned with good) and gnomic or deliberative will (which wanders). This explains the tension between pursuing what we want (yelling at someone I’m angry with, for example) and pursuing what we want (holiness). St. Paul wonders why he does what he hates instead of doing what he wants. So our task is to line up our gnomic/deliberative will with our natural will. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnomic_will)
I got really excited about this until I saw that, according to wikipedia, it’s an Orthodox theology. irk. Does it hold water for Eastern Catholics?
The newadvent article on Maximus Confessor contains a discussion of will, but it’s mostly about the will of Jesus, not normal people’s wills.
Maximus Confessor said humans have two wills, natural will (as before the fall, aligned with good) and gnomic or deliberative will (which wanders). This explains the tension between pursuing what we want (yelling at someone I’m angry with, for example) and pursuing what we want (holiness). St. Paul wonders why he does what he hates instead of doing what he wants. So our task is to line up our gnomic/deliberative will with our natural will. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnomic_will)
I got really excited about this until I saw that, according to wikipedia, it’s an Orthodox theology. irk. Does it hold water for Eastern Catholics?
The newadvent article on Maximus Confessor contains a discussion of will, but it’s mostly about the will of Jesus, not normal people’s wills.