Truth be told, we really don’t like thinking about sin, let alone even talking about it. But ignoring it is like trying to deny the existence of death. We can pretend that it doesn’t exist for only so long before we must face the facts. And just as a healthy spiritual life consists in regularly confronting death, so too, despite the vociferous objections of psychologically (as opposed to spiritually) trained clergy, does it include regularly pondering our sins. Not to relive them, but to relieve the damage we do to ourselves because of them. So rather than avoid thinking about them, I would like to suggest we spend some time thinking about our sins of thought.
That we can sin in our thoughts is something many of us unconsciously reject even though we confess publicly that “…I have greatly sinned in my thoughts.” Our Lord too chastised the Pharisees many times for their thoughts—“why do you think evil thoughts in your hearts?” (Mt 9:4). We tend to think of sin as something external, something that must be consummated if you will. We absolve ourselves saying “I can’t help what I think, but I would never do it.” But to even think it is, in a certain sense, to “do it”. As the Book of Wisdom tells us “perverse thoughts separate us from God” (Wis 1:3). Our will may not be fixed strongly enough to actually carry through or we may not do it because we fear the consequences or we may just lack the opportunity. But to think it is to want to do it.
To Think It is to Want to do It
This may seem extremely old fashioned or overly rigid until we realize that the terrain over which spiritual combat with the devil is fought is our minds. Think of the battle between Satan and Our Lord in the desert—the Tempter wanted to change Our Lord’s mind. This is a perfect image because the ongoing battle is between which mind we will garb ourselves in—the mind of Satan or the mind of Christ. And so, we must explicitly make known what we mean when we say “to think it is to want to do it.”
This battle is one that is fought in fog and confusion. Not all of our bad thoughts are equally bad nor are all of the thoughts our “own”. This makes it hard to tell the difference. But in order to lift the fog we must let the Son shine on our thoughts. To help us in doing this, St. Alphonsus Liguori puts before us three moments by which to evaluate what is going on.
First there is the suggestion. This is where the evil thought is presented to the mind. Where it “comes” from is not really that important. The devil can suggest bad thoughts by manipulating our memory and imagination or it can arise “spontaneously” by following a train of thought or our memory running amok. There is obviously no sin at this point, although it is knocking at the door. Next there is the delectation “when the person stops,” St. Alphonsus says, “to look at the bad thought, which by its pleasing appearance causes delight.” We are still not at the point of sin, unless we reach the third moment, consent.
Reversing the Moments
Working backwards we must admit that the exact point of consent is often difficult to decipher. It almost has a “how far can I go” type quality to it. That is why we should flip this around and look at evil thoughts not as a near occasion of sin, but as an opportunity for merit. In doing so, we enter into the workings of Divine Providence in capturing the grace that God made available when he allowed the temptation to arise. This is the mind of Christ Who practiced temptational judo in meriting for us salvation. Ultimately, this is why we do not so much worry about the source of the temptation and see it as coming from the Providential hand of the Father.
It is a relatively short journey for the evil thought to pass from temptation to sin because it is linked by the delectation. The bait covering the hook of sin is always some pleasure and in this regard sins of thought are no different. There is something pleasing in the evil thought—some aspect of revenge, venereal delight, or other guilty pleasure. That is why we cannot remain passive. Sin ultimately is a willingness to pay the price of evil to buy the pleasure attached to it. Therefore we can never be passive in the face of a temptation. Once we have moved to pleasure we have already, in a certain sense gone past the point of no return.
Vigilance then is the key. We must, at the moment the temptation arises, reject it completely. Call it what it is and pray for the grace of perseverance. Go to Our Lord in the desert and capture the grace He won for you for this very moment. Let it not be won in vain.
And this, then, is why reflecting on our sins of thought is so much a part of a healthy spiritual life. These temptations of thought are the building blocks of holiness. Each time we say ‘No’ we are conformed more and more to the image of the Son in the desert. St. Francis de Sales thought that mortifying our thoughts and imagination was one of the keys to holiness. He thought it absolutely necessary to kill any daydreaming or useless trains of thought because it gives us the power to control our own thoughts and recognize temptations for what they truly are the moment they arise.