Why Telling the Truth Matters
In this episode, we trace the theology of lying from Genesis 3 to neuroscience: Satan as the father of lies (Jn 8:44), St. Augustine's two treatises insisting lying is *always* wrong, St. Thomas Aquinas on jocose, officious, and malicious lies, John Paul II's reading of the original sin as rooted in a lie about who God is, and what brain imaging at University College London now confirms about how each lie gets easier than the last. Dostoevsky's Father Zosima warns where it ends: "Above all, don't lie to yourself." The remedy isn't just *stop lying* — it's Aquinas's virtue of *veracitas*, practiced in the one place we're invited to speak without disguise: the confessional.
Episode Transcript
Welcome to episode 28 of the St. John the Baptist Catholic Parish Podcast.
All right, I want to highlight the traveling chalice program at St. John the Baptist. It's a really simple, beautiful idea. A family takes the chalice home for a week and prays daily for vocations to the priesthood and religious life. That's it. You keep it in a place of honor in your home, and it becomes a little anchor for prayer that whole week. If that's something you'd like to take part in, just reach out to the parish office to sign up.
You know, we all tell ourselves we're honest people. Most of us would never commit perjury or slander someone in public. But then there are the small ones. The, I'm fine, when we're not. The resume that stretches a little. The story we reshape so we come out looking better. We treat those like they don't count.
The Catholic tradition says they count more than we think. The very first lie in scripture isn't told by a human being. It's told by Satan. You will not die, he says to Eve in Genesis chapter 3. A direct contradiction of what God had said. And Christ names him plainly in John's Gospel chapter 8 verse 44. The devil is a liar and the father of lies. There is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language. That's a striking phrase. His native language. It means every lie we tell, no matter how small, is a sentence spoken in the tongue of the enemy. We don't like hearing that. But the tradition is clear on it. St. Augustine wrote two entire treatises on this. On lying, around 395. And against lying, around 420. His position is absolute. Lying is always wrong. No exceptions. Not to save a life. Not to spare feelings. Not to advance the faith.
He defines a lie as speech against the mind. Using the gift of language to convey what you know to be false. And because God is truth itself, and we're made in his image, that gift of truthful speech is part of what makes us who we are. To lie is to deface the image of God in yourself. That's St. Augustine's argument, and the Church has never walked it back. St. Thomas Aquinas refines it in the Summa. He sorts lies into three kinds.
Jocose lies, told for amusement.
Officious lies, told for some useful purpose. And malicious lies, told to harm. All three are sinful. They differ in gravity, not in kind. Thomas Aquinas agrees with St. Augustine that lying is intrinsically evil. Good intentions don't fix it. But he's careful to distinguish lying from silence. Not every concealment is a lie. Sometimes prudence means holding your tongue. The sin is in the false assertion, not in the decision to say nothing. Pope St. John Paul II took this deeper. He argued that the original sin wasn't just disobedience. It was rooted in a lie about who God is. The serpent presented God as a rival. A jealous power withholding knowledge. John Paul called this the anti-truth. A falsification of God's character that made the human act of disobedience possible. Every lie since participates in that original distortion.
When we lie, we're not just breaking a rule. We're reenacting the fall. And lying doesn't just affect us spiritually. Here's what the neuroscience now confirms. Researchers at University College London found through brain imaging that the amygdala, the part of the brain that fires when something feels wrong, responds strongly to the first lie. The liar feels guilty. But with repetition, that response fades. The brain adapts. Each lie gets easier and bigger.
Aquinas would not have been surprised. He taught that vice, like virtue, is built through habit. Once you justify dishonesty in small things, the range of what feels acceptable expands until dishonesty becomes your settled disposition. Whoever is dishonest in a very little, Christ warns in Luke 16, is dishonest also in much.
The famous writer Fyodor Dostoevsky saw where this leads. In his famous book The Brothers Karamazov, the character Father Zosima warns, Above all, don't lie to yourself. The man who lies to himself and listens to his own lie comes to a point that he cannot distinguish the truth within him, or around him, and so loses all respect for himself and for others. That's the real danger. Not the single lie, but the habit of lying that eventually blinds you to truth altogether. The Catechism calls this a darkening of conscience. You lose the instrument you'd need to find your way back. So what do we do about it?
The Catholic answer isn't just, stop lying. It's the cultivation of the virtue of truthfulness, what Aquinas calls verazitas. Truthfulness is a part of justice. We owe the truth to others. But it's also the precondition for every other virtue, because without an honest account of yourself, you can't practice real humility, real courage, or real charity. And the Church gives us a place to practice radical honesty, the confessional. That's where the anti-truth of the serpent meets the mercy of Christ, where we speak without disguise and are restored. St. Irenaeus said the glory of God is a human being fully alive. We can't be fully alive while living a lie, not even a small one. The truth will set us free. But we have to be willing to speak it first. First. Thank you.
