W
Wesrock
Guest
We seek the good. Due to our disordered nature sometimes we prioritize some goods selfishly and to excess, but we still do it because it seems like the “best” option at the time. Whatever is goinv on in our heads makes it outweigh anything else.
So there are two things of importance here. The first is ghat we are cleansed of any residual attachment to sin before obtaining the beatific vision. The second is that the beatific vision is the unveiling of the infinite and perfect good to us. Since we desire to meet the good but struggle to fulfill that need in life, could we possibly turn away once that perfect good is suddenly present to us fully? If we are finally completely fulfilled by God, not just hypothetically, but fulfilled to the core of our being, feeling it at all levels within us, having something we may never have realized was needed all along but in an infinite and perfect way compared to anything finite in this life, to which even barely turning your face away (figuratively) would result in an incredible absence within you, who could ever turn away? Being perfectly fulfilled, and I stress this because I fear people can only think of this analogously with imperfect goods which can grow stale or still not be enough, no one would ever turn away from God. We are free to do so, technically, perhaps, but it’s inconceivable that anyone would at that point.
And I should stress that God doesn’t just make us feel good or enrapture us to feel so. He IS the perfect good, full stop. Not the perfect good [insert qualification here], but goodness itself. The beatific vision isn’t just a subjective good, but the obtaining of a vision of the true, objective good.
While our ability to prioritize goods is affected by our disordered nature, all of us are moved by the will to seek the good. Any disordered actions are themselves an attempt to try to fulfill this need within us. The movement of the will towards the good is ultimately the movement of the will towards God. All of our actions and choices, then are directed towards seeking God, whether we know it or intend it, that is what the fundamental movement of the will is towards, though we have choice in how we exercise our will in response to that.
So there are two things of importance here. The first is ghat we are cleansed of any residual attachment to sin before obtaining the beatific vision. The second is that the beatific vision is the unveiling of the infinite and perfect good to us. Since we desire to meet the good but struggle to fulfill that need in life, could we possibly turn away once that perfect good is suddenly present to us fully? If we are finally completely fulfilled by God, not just hypothetically, but fulfilled to the core of our being, feeling it at all levels within us, having something we may never have realized was needed all along but in an infinite and perfect way compared to anything finite in this life, to which even barely turning your face away (figuratively) would result in an incredible absence within you, who could ever turn away? Being perfectly fulfilled, and I stress this because I fear people can only think of this analogously with imperfect goods which can grow stale or still not be enough, no one would ever turn away from God. We are free to do so, technically, perhaps, but it’s inconceivable that anyone would at that point.
And I should stress that God doesn’t just make us feel good or enrapture us to feel so. He IS the perfect good, full stop. Not the perfect good [insert qualification here], but goodness itself. The beatific vision isn’t just a subjective good, but the obtaining of a vision of the true, objective good.
While our ability to prioritize goods is affected by our disordered nature, all of us are moved by the will to seek the good. Any disordered actions are themselves an attempt to try to fulfill this need within us. The movement of the will towards the good is ultimately the movement of the will towards God. All of our actions and choices, then are directed towards seeking God, whether we know it or intend it, that is what the fundamental movement of the will is towards, though we have choice in how we exercise our will in response to that.