"Blessedness consists in the accomplishment of our desires, and in our having only regular desires"
About this Quote
Augustine’s line looks, at first glance, like a tidy self-help aphorism: be happy by getting what you want, and wanting the right kinds of things. But the tension in his phrasing gives away the real agenda. “Accomplishment of our desires” sounds like satisfaction, even triumph. Then he tightens the noose: “only regular desires.” Not bigger desires, not more refined tastes - regulated desire, desire put on a leash.
That word “regular” is doing heavy theological work. Augustine is writing out of a world where the human will is not a neutral engine of choice but a compromised faculty, bent by disordered love. For him, the problem isn’t that we fail to achieve our goals; it’s that our goals are often the symptom. Desire is a moral compass, and in fallen condition it points reliably toward substitutes: status, pleasure, control, the illusion of self-sufficiency. “Blessedness” (beatitudo) is not a mood; it’s a stable state, a life oriented toward the highest good. So regularity here implies alignment: wanting what is proportionate, rightly ordered, ultimately tethered to God.
The subtext is almost psychological in its realism. Augustine anticipates the modern treadmill of wanting: attainment doesn’t cure restlessness if the wanting itself is chaotic. His move is to redefine “freedom” away from unlimited appetite and toward disciplined love. Happiness, in this view, isn’t the absence of desire but its conversion - getting what you want by learning to want what can actually hold.
That word “regular” is doing heavy theological work. Augustine is writing out of a world where the human will is not a neutral engine of choice but a compromised faculty, bent by disordered love. For him, the problem isn’t that we fail to achieve our goals; it’s that our goals are often the symptom. Desire is a moral compass, and in fallen condition it points reliably toward substitutes: status, pleasure, control, the illusion of self-sufficiency. “Blessedness” (beatitudo) is not a mood; it’s a stable state, a life oriented toward the highest good. So regularity here implies alignment: wanting what is proportionate, rightly ordered, ultimately tethered to God.
The subtext is almost psychological in its realism. Augustine anticipates the modern treadmill of wanting: attainment doesn’t cure restlessness if the wanting itself is chaotic. His move is to redefine “freedom” away from unlimited appetite and toward disciplined love. Happiness, in this view, isn’t the absence of desire but its conversion - getting what you want by learning to want what can actually hold.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
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