Resolutions Ordered to the Good: A Thomistic Guide to the New Year
Opening: Joy evangelizes (and kids teach us)
- The “joyful demeanor” that opens doors to talking about Jesus (without getting weird).
- A godfather breakfast on a baptism anniversary becomes a living lesson in evangelization.
- “Five seconds” theology: most of our daily encounters are brief—so what do we do with them?
The Thomistic pivot: Why life feels like a blur
- Time accelerates as you age; “someday” becomes a trap.
- Many men feel stuck for 10–15 years—spiritually, vocationally, relationally, and in work.
- The antidote isn’t bigger ambition—it’s better order.
Aquinas on happiness: What won’t satisfy
Aquinas method: name the end (happiness), then rule out false ends.
- Wealth: money is a means, not a final end.
- Honor / reputation: depends on others; happiness must be stable and interior.
- Power: instrumental, addictive, and easily disguised as “leadership.”
- Pleasure: real and good, but cannot be the end—pleasure perfects an act, it doesn’t define the goal.
The positive claim: What happiness actually is
- Perfect happiness is the vision of God (beatific vision).
- We can’t fully attain it in this life, but we can live an imperfect happiness by ordering our lives toward it.
- Key shift: beatitude, not optimization.
Hierarchy of goods (practical framework for 2026)
Three filters for any resolution:
- Is it ordered toward the highest good? (God, truth, contemplation)
- Does it support your vocation? (husband/father, priest, etc.)
- Does it treat lesser goods as means? (money, status, comfort serve the mission)
Concrete resolutions (small, durable, lifelong)
- “Not huge shifts—small profitable habits that stick.”
- Guarding silence and adding a few more minutes of contemplative prayer.
- A reminder: you can “succeed” without prayer, but not in the way a Christian wants to succeed.
The closing medicine: Gratitude slows time
- Gratitude grounds you in the present and breaks the “always next” mindset.
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