What are the theological virtues (faith, hope, and love)?
The short answer
The theological virtues are faith, hope, and love (charity) — three strengths that God himself pours into the soul, orienting our whole lives directly toward him. Unlike virtues we build by practice, these are gifts: God gives them, God is their object, and God is where they lead.
Full explanation
There is a kind of goodness you can train into yourself, the way you train a muscle — courage, patience, honesty, grown by repetition. But the theological virtues are different in kind. You cannot lift weights until you believe in God, or jog until you love him. These three are infused: planted in the soul by God's own grace, usually beginning at baptism, as the engine that drives the entire Christian life. That is why they are called "theological" — from the Greek word for God. They come from God, they point us to God, and they bring us home to God.
Faith is saying yes to God and trusting what he has revealed — not because we have run the experiments ourselves, but because we trust the One who tells us. Every deep human relationship already works this way: you believe your friend's account of where they were last night not because you tracked them, but because you know them and trust them. Faith is that same kind of personal trust, raised to the God who cannot deceive. Hope is the confident expectation that God will be faithful to his promises — that he really does intend to bring us to himself, and that the help we need to get there will be given. Hope is what keeps a believer leaning forward into the future instead of being crushed by it.
Love, or charity, is the greatest of the three. It is loving God for his own sake, above everything, and loving every neighbour for love of him. Charity is not mainly a warm feeling but a direction of the whole self toward the good of another — willing their flourishing, and acting on it. Saint Paul ranks it first for a reason: faith and hope are for this life and will one day give way to sight, but love never ends, because in heaven faith becomes vision and hope becomes possession while love simply continues, made complete.
It helps to see the three as a single braided cord. Faith opens the eyes to who God is; hope reaches toward him; love unites us to him and binds the whole cord together. Pull on any one and you feel the other two. And because all three are gifts, the proper response is to ask for them and then act on them — praying for deeper faith, exercising hope when life feels hopeless, choosing love when love is costly. Like any living thing, these gifts grow when they are used.
Why this matters
The human virtues make you a good person; the theological virtues make you a friend of God. They are what lift an honest, decent life into a relationship with the living God, reorienting everything you do toward him. They also rescue us from two opposite traps: presumption (assuming heaven is owed to us) and despair (assuming it is out of reach). Hope holds the middle. And because love is the greatest and the most lasting, the theological virtues quietly tell us what the whole point of being human is — not just to behave well, but to love.
Myth Common misunderstanding
A common assumption is that faith means certainty without evidence, hope means crossed-fingers optimism, and love means a feeling that comes and goes. But in Catholic teaching all three are far sturdier than that. Faith is reasoned trust in a trustworthy God, not blind guessing. Hope is confident expectation grounded in God's faithfulness, not wishful thinking. And love is a deliberate commitment to the good of others that can persist even when the feelings have gone quiet — which is exactly why we can be commanded to love.
Scripture connections
- 1 Corinthians 13:13 — names faith, hope, and love together, and declares love the greatest of the three.
- Hebrews 11:1 — describes faith as assurance about what we hope for and conviction about what we cannot yet see.
- Romans 5:1-5 — links faith, hope that "does not disappoint," and God's love poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit.
- 1 John 4:16 — "God is love," and the one who remains in love remains in God.
Church teaching references
Reflect
If faith, hope, and love are gifts to be asked for rather than achievements to be earned, which of the three do you most need to ask God for right now — and what would receiving it change about how you face this week?