Virtue's Value Owes To its High Degree Of Difficulty

“Virtue,” said Lady Marguerite Blessington, “like a dowerless beauty, has more admirers than followers.”

The 19-century English author, who had a penchant for stating paradoxes, was not being cynical. She was merely observing a fact, one that raises the embarrassing question: “Why is it that we human beings do not imitate what we admire — if not most of the time, at least more often than we do?”

We praise virtue because of its excellence. But we also praise it for its difficulty. Saintliness, the fullness of virtue, is as rare as it is beautiful.

“O glorious virtue!” wrote St. Catherine of Siena. “Who would not give himself to death a thousand times, and endure any suffering through desire, to win you? You are a queen who possesses the entire world; you inhabit the enduring life; for the soul that is arrayed in you is yet mortal, you make it abide by force of love with those who are immortal.”

The scene is a park in Calgary, Alberta, on a cold November day. An automobile has broken through a fence, rolled over an embankment and plunged into the frigid waters of the Bow River. The driver, a 22-year-old woman by the name of Shannon Roberts, lost control of her vehicle due to a diabetic shock.

Startled onlookers yell to the woman, imploring her to get out of her car. Recognizing that their advice is not being heeded, and sizing up the gravity of the situation, one of them — a man with the unlikely name of Jeff Liberty — goes into action. He strips down to his boxers and dives into the numbing water.

Very quickly, Liberty comes in contact with the sinking car. He tries to open the door, but his efforts are in vain. He bangs on the car window and motions the woman to roll it down. She manages to get the window sufficiently lowered so that Liberty can open it the rest of the way. He then proceeds to unfasten her safety belt and eases her through the open window and out to safety.

The ordeal lasted approximately five minutes. The water was deep enough that Liberty never touched bottom.

During his life-saving rescue, he recognized that the woman had gone into a deep state of shock as the water began flooding into the car. He realized that he would have to shoulder the burden of the rescue.

When he surfaced and carried the woman to shore, the onlookers along the bank of the river applauded the hero, as did Canadians across the country once they heard about his daring exploits.

Saintliness, the fullness of virtue, is as rare as it is beautiful.

Liberty's act, visibly and unmistakably, had all the qualities of courage. Despite the dangers he faced, he remained attentive and in control.

It was a case of “grace under pressure,” as Ernest Hemingway once defined courage. There was the element of selflessness, as he focused on the needs of the endangered woman. And there was decisiveness. He knew what needed to be done and he did it — freely, effectively and without hesitation.

Almost instantly, Jeff Liberty became a national hero. “What was it like diving into the frigid Bow River, and how could you function so well under such adverse conditions?” He was obliged to answer this question again and again.

“I guess my adrenaline kind of set in and I didn't really notice the cold anymore,” was his modest response.

God equips us with remarkable capacities for doing extraordinary things under difficult circumstances. Our stress response in a time of crisis is far greater than we realize.

Courage in practice releases abilities within ourselves that lie dormant deep within us. Courage mobilizes them and we surprise ourselves, even “out-do” ourselves, so to speak. Like other virtues, courage transforms us into better, larger, more capable human beings. Unbidden by courage, extraordinary human powers remain latent, unexercised, unknown.

Jeff Liberty's story has two further pieces of information that add immeasurably to its charm. He is an Olympic swimmer who represented Canada at the Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, in the year 2000. The woman was in the first trimester of her pregnancy (the accident has not appeared to harm either her or her unborn child).

Canadian readers have feasted on the story.

It will be a while before the child, now sleeping quietly in its mother's womb, will be able to appreciate it all. But what a story mom has stored in her heart to tell her child one day!

It's better than any fairy tale — how courage and a stranger with the improbable name of Liberty, on the day after Remembrance Day, saved both their lives and provided them with the conviction that virtue should be imitated in addition to being admired.

Donald DeMarco teaches philosophy at St. Jerome's University in Waterloo, Ontario.