The Seven
Gifts
of the Holy Spirit by Rev.
William G. Most
We turn now to the Seven Gifts of the sanctifying
category. They are: wisdom, understanding, knowledge,
counsel, fortitude, piety and fear of the Lord.
They each perfect certain basic virtues. Four of them
perfect the intellectual virtues. Understanding gives an
intuitive penetration into truth. Wisdom perfects
charity, in order to judge divine things. Knowledge
perfects the virtue of hope. The gift of counsel perfects
prudence.
The other three gifts perfect virtues of the will and
appetites. The gift of piety perfects justice in giving
to others that which is their due. This is especially
true of giving God what is His due. Fortitude perfects
the virtue of fortitude, in facing dangers. Fear of the
Lord perfects temperance in controlling disordered
appetites.
To illustrate the difference between things done with
the Gifts and those done with the ordinary virtues, we
will take up the gift of counsel.
There are three kinds of guides a person may follow in
making his decisions:
1) The whim of the moment. Aristotle in his Ethics 1.
5 says that to act that way is a life fit for cattle, who
do just what they happen to feel like doing.
2) Reason, which in practice is always aided by actual
graces, which God gives so generously. For example,
suppose I see three options open to me, all of which are
moral. Ideally I would make at least mentally a list of
the good points and of the bad points of each. The I
would look over the whole board, and pick what gives the
best effect for me. Or if I come to think I need penance
for my sins, I would ask: How much have I sinned, so I
can know how much penance? What kind of penance will fit
with my health? With the obligations of my state in life?
And after several steps, a decision is reached. This
method is called discursive, since it moves from one step
to another.
3) In the third and highest way, a soul does not go
from one step to another, in a discursive process, but
the answer is, as it were, dropped fully made and
complete into his mind by the Gifts. This was the case of
Our Lady, for example, at the Annunciation. If she had
been operating in the ordinary mode, she might well have
reasoned: Now my people have been waiting for centuries
for the Messiah (as soon as Gabriel said He would reign
over the house of Jacob forever, even any ordinary Jew
would have known that He was the Messiah). Now He is
here. I should share this news with others, especially
the authorities in Jerusalem. And what about my husband,
Joseph? In a short time he will not be able to avoid dark
thoughts. But the Gospel shows she did none of these
things. God needed to send a special angel to tell
Joseph. so the Gifts can lead souls to points not
contrary to reason, but far more lofty than what reason
would suggest.
Cf. the following from St. John of the Cross: (Ascent
3.2.10; cf. Living Flame 1.4; 1.9 and 2.34): "God
alone moves the powers of these souls . . . to those
deeds which are suitable, according to the will and plan
of God, and they cannot be moved to others. . . . Such
were the actions of the most glorious Virgin, our Lady,
who, being elevated from the beginning [of her life] to
this lofty state, had never the form of any creature
impressed on her, nor was moved by such, but was always
moved by the Holy Spirit."
But there is a danger: a soul could mistake its own
desires for action of the Gifts, since the reasons are
not clear to it. Two points must be kept in mind: 1) The
full and apparent action of these gifts does not appear
until one is well advanced in the spiritual life (hidden
assistance by them can come earlier). 2) Ordinarily an
inspiration via the Gifts leaves the soul not fully
certain--a signal to consult a director or superior.
Uncommonly they will give certitude, but only when a
decision must be made on the spot, and there is no time
to consult.
When a soul acts with usual actual graces God is the
most important actor, yet the faculties of the human do
churn out the result--hence it is easy to suppose the
work is done basically by that soul. But under the action
of the Gifts, the soul is more passive, and its own
faculties contribute even less.