I read the Into and at least half of the chapter on Prudence, but I decided to skip justice and get back to it later… I read the chapter on Fortitude to catch up.
I was struck by Fr’s point that we must go beyond being a pious person and move towards being a devout person (p. 72). He says we must be willing to ask ourselves “whether we would have been willing to follow the itinerant preacher who had seriously annoyed the powers that be.” That is a challenge for me, personally,… to go beyond my private piety/prayer, etc. and to actually live out my faith (allow the Holy Spirit to live in me) to the point that I really engage other people and the world around me… to take risks at put fortitude to the test.
Still, I also relate to his point that, for most of us, fortitude is exercised in the long struggle of daily life rather than staring down the barrel of a gun. I am bearing a great cross in my life recently, and I realize what this daily fortitude is.
One last point (for now): with fewer people having eternal life as their goal,… my generation (I am on the brink of 30) will exhibit fewer examples of heroes in this supernatural sense of fortitude (and yet, those who do have the goal of heaven may be forced into greater heroism when persecution steps up).