Volume 96, Issue 3, Summer 2022
Agust¨ªn Echavarr¨ªa
Pages 381-402
https://doi.org/10.5840/acpq202259253
Can a Metaphysically Perfect God Have Moral Virtues and Duties? Re-reading Aquinas
Contemporary philosophers of religion usually depict God as a responsible moral agent with virtues and obligations. This picture seems to be incompatible with the metaphysically perfect being of classical theism. In this paper I will defend the claim, based on a reading of Thomas Aquinas¡¯s thought, that there is no such incompatibility. I will present Aquinas¡¯s arguments that show that we can attribute to God not only moral goodness in general, but also some moral virtues in a strict sense, such as justice and mercy. I will show why for Aquinas we can say that God has moral duties toward Himself and toward creatures. I will explain how for Aquinas God¡¯s moral duties are not absolute, but conditionally necessitated. Finally, I will show how on Aquinas¡¯s view there is no contradiction in saying that every act of God is, simultaneously, an act of justice and a supererogatory act of mercy.