
released 6/3/2025
In this lecture from September 2007, Oliver O’Donovan completes his explanation of the journey of moral thought from waking to admiring to resolving. He raises several key questions involved in the task of taking concrete and practical action toward a recognized moral good. Drawing on St. Paul’s exhortation to be transformed by the renewal of our minds, O’Donovan discusses the role that reason plays in clarifying for each of us our understanding of the differentiated works that God has prepared for us to do. Our reasoning can go awry when we are taken captive to the world’s reasoning, or by over-idealizing certain goods that are not realizable for us to achieve. We must focus our ideals into practical action, which involves compromise as we recognize the reality of our constraints. Good ideals and good compromises exist in a synergetic relationship, O’Donovan explains, being grounded in reality. He concludes this lecture series by declaring that the perfection of moral wakefulness is to awake to action together in community.
This series of lectures — titled “Morally Awake: Admiration and Resolution in the Light of Christian Faith” — is provided courtesy of the New College, at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. Listen to the first lecture here and the second lecture here.
63 minutes
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