Previously, we discussed St. Thomas Aquinas’ article
on ‘whether it is lawful to curse anyone?’ We went step by step
with St. Thomas to better understand his manner of debate throughout
his
Summa Theologica. Some complained that the plodding, and the
scarcity of practical examples, put them to sleep. Others,
however, were able to take something home.
One man summed it, “so Father, basically, I can curse anyone just so
long as he deserves it.”
This is true, but one must be certain a curse is truly deserved and is
truly good and not simply a way to get even. We may NEVER desire
evil under the aspect of evil, but only under the aspect of the
good. The Church curses with “anathema sit” (let him be accursed)
in order to draw a heretic back to God and His Church; the prophets
cursed to inspire sinners to repent; the virtuous man may curse a
sinner with sickness or some inconvenience so that he return to God or
at least cease from harming the common good.
So suppose a certain pro-abort politician runs for office. We may
desire he get laryngitis before his next debate. We may curse him
with this physical evil; we may not hand him a poison drink. Cursing
wills some physical evil to another; results of that evil are left to
God.
Now we present, in brief, St. Thomas Aquinas’ three last articles on
cursing.
Whether it is lawful to curse an
irrational creature?
St. Thomas first presents that our Lord cursed the fig tree (Mt 21:19);
and Job cursed the day he was born. (Job 3:1)
Next, St. Thomas observes that blessing (bene dicere) and cursing (male
dicere), properly speaking, regard things to which good or evil may
happen, namely, to rational creatures, while good or evil are said to
happen to things (irrational creatures) in so far as they affect a
rational creature.
St. Thomas lists three ways that cursing irrational creatures may
relate to rational creatures.
First, by way of ministration, wherein things relate to the service
mankind, as when the Lord told Adam, “Cursed is the earth in thy
labor,”so that its barrenness would be a punishment for Adam’s
sin.
Second, by way of signification, wherein things represent something
else, as when our Lord cursed the fig tree to signify the cursing of
Judea.
Third, by way of time or place, wherein these relate to some
misfortune, as when Job cursed the day of his birth on account of
original sin which he contracted in birth and consequent
suffering.
However, to curse irrational creatures considered as creatures of God
is a sin of blasphemy; and to curse them considered in themselves is
idle and vain and, therefore, unlawful.
Whether cursing is a mortal sin?
St. Thomas says here we only consider the evil words as uttered against
someone by way of command or desire.
To wish or to command evil to another for evil’s sake is against
charity wherein we ought to will good to all men. Consequently,
cursing in the strict sense is a mortal sin; it is also a greater
mortal sin to curse someone who is owed more love and respect, “He that
curses his father or his mother, dying let him die.” (Lv 20:9).
Sometimes cursing is only venial sin because of the slightness of the
evil invoked, or because the sentiments of the curser reduce the crime
as when someone curses in a heated moment, in jest, in hastiness, in
thoughtlessness, or other cause which diminishes the intention to curse
strictly.
Whether cursing is a graver sin than
backbiting?
St. Thomas reminds us that evil is divided two ways, there is evil of
fault and evil of punishment. To speak evil of fault
is worse than to speak evil of punishment. Reviling, backbiting,
and derision all speak evil of fault whereas he who curses does so to
punish someone or something. Moreover, the way of speaking is not
the same. Evil of fault is asserted as being present whereas with
cursing the evil is commanded or merely wished.
Speaking of someone’s fault is a sin in as much as it inflicts an
injury to him; and it is more injurious to inflict an injury than to
wish to inflict it, other things being equal.
Hence, backbiting is more grievous than cursing which expresses only
desire; BUT cursing by way of command, since it has an aspect of a
cause, will be more or less grievous than backbiting according as it
injures more or less than backbiting or the blackening of a man’s good
name.
Of course, what has been said regards things in their essential
aspects; there may be other incidental points which make more or less
grave the differences between these vices i.e., scandal.
Now that finishes St. Thomas’s tract on cursing.
Now here are some practical applications.
If we curse people, it will be unlikely that we do so in the formal
sense. Likely, we are simply blowing off steam. And
although this be perhaps only a venial sin, it is still unworthy of
heaven.
It is never licit to desire evil under the aspect of evil. Even in a
heated moment we must ultimately desire heaven for our adversary whom,
at that moment, may even be our spouse.. Even now, before any
heated moment should arrive, we should prepare our response, “Oh, go to
heaven! And the quicker the better,” and not that other phrase which
may too easily come mind.
If we curse things, it will be unlikely that we do so because we hate
the things that God has made, but rather because these things are not
serving us in the manner we want them to and so we curse them in
themselves.
When I was a young boy there lived next door a neighbor who was a great
curser of things. Often he piddled around his back yard doing
this and that, mowing, tree clipping, reading a newspaper. If it
was too hot, he’d curse the sun; if the rain was unwanted, he’d curse
the rain; if the garden was weedy, the greenery got cursed; and if a
bee decided to sting him, he’d sting the bee with a string of
curses. (If there had been fire ants I am sure he would have
cursed them too.) And so, in this way, a litany of curses flowed
over the fence and into our small backyard. This is the vain and
idle cursing which St. Thomas calls unlawful.
To avoid this same pitfall, before the time comes when some creature of
God sours our day, we may plan our response, “Oh, rue the day,
that sin entered the world!... and which now finds me sunburned,
shivering wet, and stung by a bee!”
Such an exercise should leave us longing more and more for heaven where
curses never resound as being both unnecessary and not even possible in
that most happy place.