Thus
gently sang the Lady Philosophy with dignified mien and grave countenance; and
when she ceased, I, who had not thoroughly forgotten the grief within me,
interrupted her, as she was about to speak further.
“Herald
of true light,” I said, “right clear have been the outpourings of your speech
until now, seeming inspired as one contemplates them, and invincible through
your reasonings. And though through grief for the injustices I suffer, I had
forgotten them, yet you have not spoken of what I knew not at all before.
“But
this one thing is the chief cause of my grief, namely that, when there exists a
good governor of the world, evils should exist at all, or, existing, should go
unpunished. I would have you think how strange is this fact alone.
“But
there is something even stranger attached thereto: ill-doing reigns and
flourishes, while virtue not only lacks its reward, but is even trampled
underfoot by wicked doers, and pays the penalties instead of crime.
“Who
can wonder and complain enough that such things should happen under the rule of
One who, while all-knowing and all-powerful, wills good alone?” . . .
—from
Book 4, Prose 1
It all
seems to have come full circle. Isn’t this exactly where we started?
Not
exactly. Boethius has suddenly recalled his despair, though he is now equipped
with tools he did not have at his disposal in the beginning. He is back to the
same problem, though his perspective has also spiraled upwards.
He has
come to understand that happiness is never in shallow, passing, or incomplete
things, but rather in fundamental, lasting, and complete things.
He has
also come to understand that all of existence is merely an emanation of that
which is Absolute and Perfect.
He has
also come to understand that the object of his own happiness and this Divinity
are really one and the same, that nothing is ever fulfilled without
participating in what is One.
He has
also come to understand that nothing escapes the power of God, the sum of all
that is Good, and that nothing wrong can ever be permitted by the might of what
is right.
Yet how
does this knowledge make the suffering in life any better? Doesn’t it, in fact,
make it all the worse? If God is love, how does the darkest hatred make sense?
If God is justice, how does the constant injustice fit into the plan? If God is
truth, how can there be so many crippling lies?
Wicked
people do wrong, yet they never seem to be punished for their wrongs. They get
away with it, time and time again, and they laugh at the rest of us for being
so foolish and naïve.
It seems
even worse than that. Not only do the vicious escape any penalty, but they also
seem to be rewarded for it, to receive even greater and greater benefits for
their crimes. This makes their ridicule feel all the worse. In the meantime,
virtuous people seem to pay the price for their convictions. They wish to do what
is good, and all they get in return is greater and greater loss and pain.
Having
carefully followed along with the text, I now felt angrier and more depressed
than I had before. Maybe God is just mean-spirited, like so may other bosses,
or maybe I’ve been tricked, and He doesn’t exist at all?
This is,
I have found from my own experience, one of the greatest of problems, if not the greatest, that we must all face. So
many people I have known have been crippled by this worry, that the purpose and
design in things is deeply broken, or that perhaps there is no purpose and design at
all.
And then
so many of us will just give up. We watch the clever poseurs and players,
milking everyone else for their own gain, and we just lower our heads, we lie
down, we are sure there is no hope for us. We bear with it for whatever time we
still have to, crying when no one else is looking, or we opt out of the game
entirely, told at the end that we are cowards for being the losers.
Yikes.
Put it that way, and you might wonder why most of the world even bothers to get
out of bed in the morning.
But I
should look again. Yes, my emotions may run away from me. Yes, it often feels
like there is no way out of the daily grind. Why should I fear Hell, when I
already seem to live in one?
Still, I
am missing something. Everything Lady Philosophy has to this point explained,
and carefully argued through sound reason, already contains my answer. I just
have not yet put the pieces together in the right way.
As I
first came to this this passage, I did indeed feel despair. I also saw
something I may not have seen before, thanks to the previous three books of the
Consolation. Notice how my very definition
of what is good and bad in life, the one by which I assume the world is unfair,
might not actually be the correct sense of what is good and bad in life? What
are the vicious actually gaining, and what are the virtuous actually losing?
Written in 10/2015
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