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Christ's acts of merit and satisfaction presuppose freedom in the
proper sense, [802] not merely spontaneity, [803] which
is found already in the animal. Now it would seem that Christ, if
He is to obey freely, must also be able to disobey. Hence the
question: how is freedom to be harmonized with absolute impeccability?
Impeccability, in Christ, does not mean merely that, in fact, He
never sinned. It means that He simply could not sin. He could not
for three reasons:
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a) by reason of His divine personality, which necessarily excludes
sin:
b) by reason of His beatific vision of God's goodness, from which
no blessed soul can ever turn aside:
c) by reason of His plentitude of grace, received inamissibly as
consequence of the grace of union.
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How can Jesus be perfectly free if He is bound by obedience to His
Father's will? Dominic Banez [804] was obliged to study this
question profoundly, in answer to certain theologians of his epoch,
who tried to safeguard the freedom of Jesus by saying that He had not
received from His Father a command to die on the cross for our
salvation. This position has defenders even in our own times.
Thomists reply that the position contradicts the explicit words of
Scripture: "I give My life. This is the command I have received
from My Father. That the world may know that I act according to the
commandment My Father has given me. Arise, let us go. If you keep
My commandments, you will abide in My love, even as I have kept the
commandments of My Father, and abide in His love." [805]
Christ became obedient unto death, even to death on the cross.
[806] .
Now obedience, properly speaking, has as formal object a command to
be fulfilled. And if one says, unjustifiably, that the commands
given to Christ were only counsels, how could Christ, being
absolutely impeccable, neglect even the counsels of His Father?
Hence the question inevitably returns: How can impeccability be
harmonized with that real freedom which is presupposed by merit?
The Thomistic reply begins by distinguishing psychological liberty
from moral liberty. A command takes away moral liberty, in the sense
that disobedience is illicit. But the command, far from taking away
psychological liberty, rather builds on this liberty as foundation.
The command is given precisely to ensure free acts. No one commands
fire to burn, or the heart to beat, or any other necessary act. A
command is self-destructive where there is no liberty.
And precept remains precept, and is freely fulfilled, even when he
who obeys is impeccable, because the thing commanded (death for our
salvation) is good from one viewpoint, and not good, even painful,
from another viewpoint. This object is entirely different from the
divine goodness clearly seen in the beatific vision. The blessed in
heaven are not free to love God whom they see face to face, though
they too remain free in other acts, to pray, for example, at this
time, or for this person.
Further, if the command to die destroys Christ's liberty, we would
have to say the same of all precepts, even of those commanded by the
natural law, and thus Christ would have no freedom to obey any
precept, and hence could have no merit.
But the difficulty seems to remain. If Christ was free to obey,
then He could disobey and thus sin. But faith teaches, not only that
He did not sin, but that He could not sin.
In answer let us weigh the following reflections.
1. Liberty of exercise suffices to safeguard the essence of liberty.
Man is master of his act when he can either place the act or not place
it. Such an act is free, even where there is no choice between
contrary acts, hating, say, and loving, or between two disparate
ways of attaining an end.
2. The power to sin is not included in the idea of freedom, but is
rather the defectibility of our freedom, just as the possibility of
error is the defectibility of our intellect. This power to sin does
not exist in God who is sovereignly free, nor in the blessed who are
confirmed in good. Hence it did not exist in Christ, whose freedom,
even here on earth, was the most perfect image of divine freedom.
Genuine freedom then does not include disobedience, but rather
excludes it. Genuine freedom wills, not evil, but always good. It
chooses between two or many objects, none of which is bad, but all
good. [807] .
3. Disobedience is not to be confused with the mere absence of
obedience. In a sleeping child, for example, though he be the most
obedient of children, there is, here and now, the absence of
obedience, but no disobedience. Disobedience is a privation, a
wrong, a fault, whereas mere absence of obedience is a simple
negation. This distinction may seem subtle, but it expresses the
truth. Christ, like the blessed in heaven, could not disobey, even
by omission or neglect. But His human will, incapable of
disobedience, can still see the absence of obedience as good,
[808] as something here and now not necessarily connected with
His beatitude. Death on the cross was good for our salvation, but it
was a good mixed with non-good, with extreme suffering, physical and
moral. Hence it was an object which did not impose necessity on His
will. Nor did the divine will impose necessity, since, as we have
seen, the precept, by making the omission illicit, removes indeed
moral liberty, but, on the contrary, presupposes and preserves
physical and psychological liberty.
When then does Jesus love necessarily? He thus loves His Father
seen face to face, and hence all else that is, here and now,
connected, intrinsically and necessarily, with that supreme
beatitude, just as we necessarily will existence, life, and knowledge
without which we see that we cannot have happiness. But Jesus willed
freely all that was connected, not intrinsically, but only
extrinsically, by a command, with beatitude. Death, at once
salutary for us and terrible in itself, did not attract necessarily.
The command did not change either the nature of the death, or the
freedom of the act commanded. Hence Christ's response.
Thus Jesus obeyed freely even though He could not disobey. As
distant illustration of this mystery, we may refer to a painful act of
obedience in a good religious. He obeys freely, hardly reflecting
that he could disobey. Even if he were confirmed in grace, this
confirmation would not destroy the freedom of his obedient act. The
will of Christ, says St. Thomas, [809] though it is
confirmed in good, is not necessitated by this or that particular
good. Hence Christ, like the blessed, chooses by a free will which
is confirmed in good. This sentence, in its simplicity, is more
perfect than the long commentaries thereon, but the commentaries serve
to show the truth hidden in that simplicity. The sinless liberty of
Christ is the perfect image of God's sinless liberty. [810]
.
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