When celebration becomes a form of worship instead of escape, joy turns holy. Clement of Alexandria urges believers to keep their feasts free from the noise of self-indulgence and to fill them instead with psalms and thanksgiving. Augustine, writing tenderly to Jerome, shows that truth without love is hollow—real theology must be held in friendship. And Aquinas, ever precise, dissects the inner motion of anger, teaching that wrath, ill-will, and rancor are not three tempers but one passion at different stages of decay.
Readings:
Clement of Alexandria, The Instructor, Book 2, Chapter 4 – How to Conduct Ourselves at Feasts
Augustine, Letter 67 – To Jerome, My Brother in Christ
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part 2–2, Question 46, Article 8 – Whether the Species of Anger Are Suitably Assigned
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