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Objection 1: It would seem that good is the object of fear. For
Augustine says (Questions. 83, qu. 83) that "we fear nothing
save to lose what we love and possess, or not to obtain that which we
hope for." But that which we love is good. Therefore fear regards
good as its proper object.
Objection 2: Further, the Philosopher says (Rhet. ii, 5)
that "power and to be above another is a thing to be feared." But
this is a good thing. Therefore good is the object of fear.
Objection 3: Further, there can be no evil in God. But we are
commanded to fear God, according to Ps. 33:10: "Fear the
Lord, all ye saints." Therefore even the good is an object of
fear.
On the contrary, Damascene says (De Fide Orth. ii, 12) that
fear is of future evil.
I answer that, Fear is a movement of the appetitive power. Now it
belongs to the appetitive power to pursue and to avoid, as stated in
Ethic. vi, 2: and pursuit is of good, while avoidance is of evil.
Consequently whatever movement of the appetitive power implies
pursuit, has some good for its object: and whatever movement implies
avoidance, has an evil for its object. Wherefore, since fear implies
an avoidance, in the first place and of its very nature it regards evil
as its proper object.
It can, however, regard good also, in so far as referable to evil.
This can be in two ways. In one way, inasmuch as an evil causes
privation of good. Now a thing is evil from the very fact that it is a
privation of some good. Wherefore, since evil is shunned because it
is evil, it follows that it is shunned because it deprives one of the
good that one pursues through love thereof. And in this sense
Augustine says that there is no cause for fear, save loss of the good
we love.
In another way, good stands related to evil as its cause: in so far
as some good can by its power bring harm to the good we love: and so,
just as hope, as stated above (Question 40, Article 7),
regards two things, namely, the good to which it tends, and the thing
through which there is a hope of obtaining the desired good; so also
does fear regard two things, namely, the evil from which it shrinks,
and that good which, by its power, can inflict that evil. In this
way God is feared by man, inasmuch as He can inflict punishment,
spiritual or corporal. In this way, too, we fear the power of man;
especially when it has been thwarted, or when it is unjust, because
then it is more likely to do us a harm.
In like manner one fears "to be over another," i.e. to lean on
another, so that it is in his power to do us a harm: thus a man fears
another, who knows him to be guilty of a crime lest he reveal it to
others.
This suffices for the Replies to the Objections.
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