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Daily Inspiration Quote by Thomas Aquinas

"Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious"

About this Quote

The medieval mind loved a ladder: higher effort, higher holiness, higher reward. Aquinas kicks that ladder sideways. "Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious" is a corrective aimed at a spiritual culture that could easily confuse pain with virtue, spectacle with sanctity. In an era when ascetic feats and rigorous devotions were often treated as proof of moral seriousness, he insists on a more discriminating moral arithmetic: merit isn’t measured by sweat alone.

The line works because it quietly smuggles in Aquinas’s core ethical realism. For him, the moral value of an act turns on its object and its alignment with reason and charity, not on how punishing it feels. Difficulty can come from external obstacles, temperament, bad habits, even poor planning. A task can be hard because it’s ill-chosen. A scruple can be hard because it’s scrupulous. Aquinas’s subtext is almost pastoral: don’t romanticize your own strain. If the goal is union with the good, difficulty is an incidental feature, sometimes even a warning label.

Context matters: Aquinas is writing inside a Christian framework where "merit" has theological stakes, tied to virtue, grace, and intention. He’s also tempering a marketplace of piety where people might chase spiritual "hard modes" to feel advanced. The sentence is a medieval version of a modern critique of hustle culture: effort is not a moral credential. Sometimes the most meritorious act is the one that looks easy because it’s formed by the right habits, directed by clear judgment, and animated by love rather than self-display.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Summa Theologiae (Secunda Secundae), Question 27 (Thomas Aquinas, 1265)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Ad tertium dicendum quod plus facit ad rationem meriti et virtutis bonum quam difficile. Unde non oportet quod omne difficilius sit magis meritorium, sed quod sic est difficilius ut etiam sit melius. (IIª-IIae, q. 27, a. 8, ad 3 (Reply to Objection 3)). This is the closest identifiable PRIMARY-source locus for the popular English quote. It appears in Aquinas’s Summa Theologiae, Secunda Secundae (Part II-II), in the treatise on charity, Question 27, Article 8, Reply to Objection 3. A common English rendering is: “Therefore it does not follow that whatever is more difficult is more meritorious, but only what is more difficult, and at the same time better.” The popular wording “Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious” is a paraphrase/condensation of Aquinas’s point rather than a verbatim line in standard English translations. The composition date of the Summa Theologiae is typically given as c. 1265–1274; the year field here uses c. 1265 as the beginning of composition, since Aquinas’s original medieval work was not ‘published’ in a modern sense.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Aquinas, Thomas. (2026, February 9). Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/not-everything-that-is-more-difficult-is-more-10285/

Chicago Style
Aquinas, Thomas. "Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/not-everything-that-is-more-difficult-is-more-10285/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/not-everything-that-is-more-difficult-is-more-10285/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Thomas Aquinas

Thomas Aquinas (1225 AC - March 7, 1274) was a Theologian from Italy.

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