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Why Are You Doing It

Episode Transcript
One
Mexican Bishop
Some years ago, one of the bishops of Mexico showed his integrity by forbidding any of his priests from accepting money donated by the drug cartels. Now, a lot of people might not understand why the bishop would make such a policy. After all, that drug money was going to go somewhere. Why not let it go to the Church, where it might be used for good? And, after all, even if the donors were wicked people in other ways, giving money to the Church is a good thing, right? So why turn down the cartel members when they’re actually trying to do something good for a change?
Well, the answer, of course, is that even if giving money to the Church is a good action, there’s a good chance that the motivations behind giving the money were bad, that they’re trying to bribe Church officials not to speak out against the evil of the cartels.
What this shows is that it’s not enough to look at “what” you’re doing. You also have to look at “why” you’re doing it.
Two
End/Motivation
The Church says that the first thing you have to look at, when you’re morally evaluating an action, is the object. It’s “what” the person is choosing to do. But after you look at the object, the “what,” you have to go on and ask another question, the “why?” Why am I doing this? What’s my motivation, my intention? What is the projected state of affairs that originally prompted me to pursue this course of action? The Catechism (1750) calls this the “end in view or the intention” of an act.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said, “'The lamp of the body is the eye. It follows that if your eye is sound, your whole body will be filled with light. But if your eye is diseased, your whole body will be all darkness.” Augustine, Jerome, and Thomas Aquinas all said the eye refers to your intention. Not only do our actions have to be good, but also our intentions.
Three
A Good Intention Can’t Justify an Evil Action
The first thing to get clear is that good intentions can’t justify an evil action. It doesn’t matter if I have the best of intentions; I can’t go around fornicating or blaspheming or killing people. Even if my motivation is to spare people pain and suffering, I can’t kill an elderly person, a baby in the womb, or people with severe head traumas who need basic care. Because no matter what the end, the means of abortion and euthanasia are always wrong.
So too, even if my motivation is to encourage and support somebody, I can’t condone that person’s homosexual relationship. Because no matter what the intention, saying that a bad thing is really a good thing is always wrong.
So, a good intention can’t justify a bad action. But a bad intention can corrupt an act that would otherwise be good.
Four
The End can corrupt a good or Neutral Object
As we just saw in the case of cartel members giving money to the Church with nefarious motives, a bad intention can turn an otherwise good act into something immoral. Our motivations matter. The intention matters. So, for instance, there’s nothing wrong, in itself, with saying something true. But why are you saying it? Are you saying it out of arrogance, bitterness, or jealousy?
If so, then your motivations are bad, and maybe you shouldn’t be speaking that particular truth right now. And there’s nothing wrong, in itself, about bringing up a coworker or a mutual acquaintance in conversation. But why are you bringing up this third party? Is it so that you and your conversation partner can enjoy a good gossip session, verbally ripping this poor third party to shreds?
And maybe there’s nothing wrong, in itself, about having a meal or a long conversation with an attractive member of the opposite sex who isn’t your spouse. But why are you doing it? Is it because you find them attractive, and you find their attention flattering? Probably. So go have lunch and a conversation with somebody else.
The Church tells us to be conscientious about whether what we’re doing is objectively right or not. That’s why the first thing to look at in our behavior is the object. But the Church also wants us to be aware of what’s going on subjectively within ourselves. She wants us to be honest with ourselves about our motives. That’s why we also have to look at our intentions.
Five
Why are we doing what we’re doing?
In order to determine if something is good morally, we must look at three things: the object, what we are choosing to do; the intention, why we are doing it; and the circumstances. All three must be good for the action to be good. So, as a resolution, let’s really pay attention to our motivations, our intentions. Why are we doing what we do?
Because there are a lot of times in which we are motivated by bad intentions like pride, envy, anger, greed, or lust, so on and so forth. Jesus is calling us to purify our intentions to not only do good things but to do them with the right motivation.
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