Emery - Essentialism or Personalism on the Treatise on God in Saint Thomas Aquinas
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Transcript of Saint thomas aquinas
SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS
By:Niala, Francis
Tommaso d'Aquino,OP
“St. Thomas Aquinas” an Italian Dominican Friar and Catholic Priest an immensely influential Philosopher,
Theologian and Jurist in the tradition of Scholasticism
Also known as “Doctor Angelicus” and “Doctor Communis”
Foremost classical proponent of Natural Theology
“Father of Thomism” A Saint, A Model teacher Doctor of the Church (Catholic Church’s
greatest Theologian & Philosopher)
“Before St. Thomas Aquinas was born, a holy hermit shared a prediction with his mother, foretelling that her son would enter the Order of Friars Preachers, become a great learner and achieve unequaled sanctity.”
Early Life
Born on January 28, 1225 in Roccasecca, Kingdom of Sicily(Lazio Region), Italy
Landulph –his father, a count of Aquino Theodora- his Mother, a countess of Teano Youngest among 8 siblings
Early education at the age of 5 in the Abbey of Monte Casino to train among the Benedictine monks
“A witty child who had received a good soul”(Wisdom 8:19)
“ What is God to His Benefactors?” C. 1239 he was enrolled in University of
Naples wherein he was introduce to the works of Aristotle, Averroes and Maimonides
At 19yrs old he secretly joined the Dominican Order (John of St. Julian)
On his way to Rome, He was kidnapped by his brothers and held him as captive in the fortress of San Giovanni Campano
Attempts to deprogram Thomas from his new Beliefs
Education
St. Thomas Aquinas continued to pursue his studies on 1245 to 1252, with the Dominicans in Naples, Paris and Cologne and subsequently earned his Doctorate in Theology under the tutelage of Albertus Magnus
In 1250, He was Ordained in Cologne, Germany and went on to teach Theology in University of Paris.
He proved an exemplary scholar, though, ironically, his modesty sometimes led his classmates to misperceive him as dim-witted (stupid/silly).
St. Albert the Great on Thomas’s thesis, "We call this young man a dumb ox, but his bellowing in doctrine will one day resound throughout the world!"
Education
“The Christian Apostle”- After completing education, St. Thomas devoted himself to a life of traveling, writing, teaching, public speaking and preaching
The Medieval thought on Theology and Philosophy1. Averroes’s “Theory of Double Truth”2. St Thomas’s opposed and rejected this by
asserting that, “ Both kinds of knowledge ultimately come from God” and were therefore compatible and could work in collaboration-“he believed that revelation could guide reason and prevent it from making mistakes while reason could clarify and demystify faith.”
Theology & Philosophy
Theology & Philosophy
St. Thomas proposed 5 positive statements about the divine qualities or the nature of God:
God is simple, without composition of parts, such as body and soul, or matter and form.
God is perfect, lacking nothing. God is infinite, and not limited in the ways that
created beings are physically, intellectually, and emotionally limited.
God is immutable, incapable of change in repect of essence and character.
God is one, such that God's essence is the same as God's existence.
St. Thomas’s 5 ways to prove God’s existence Observing Movement in the world as proof of God,
“the Immovable Motor” Observing the Cause and Effect and identifying God
as the cause of everything Concluding that the impermanent nature of beings
proves the existence of a necessary being, God, who originates only from within himself
Noticing varying levels of human perfection and determining that a supreme, perfect being must therefore exist
Knowing that natural beings could not have intelligence without it being granted to them it by God.
Theology & Philosophy
St Thomas on appropriate Social behavior towards God.
“He believed that the laws of the state were in fact a natural product of human nature, and were crucial to social welfare. By abiding to social laws of the state people can earn eternal salvation of their souls after life. “
Theology & Philosophy
St. Thomas’s 3 Types of Laws Natural law –prompts a man to
act in accordance with achieving his goals and governs mans sense of right or wrong
Positive law- is the law of the state or government
Eternal law- rational beings depend on reason and is put into action through free will which also works toward the accomplishment of man’s spiritual goals
Theology & Philosophy
60 known works ranging in length from short to tome-like
Handwritten copies of his works were distributed to libraries across Europe
Works and Writings
Scriptum super libros Sententiarium or Comentary on the Sentences” - a lengthy commentary on Peter Lombard’s “ Four Books of Sentences (became the standard textbook of Theology),
De ente et essentia, or On Being and Essence, -for the Dominican monks in Paris.
Impugnantes Dei cultum et religionem, or Against Those Who Assail the Worship of God and Religion,- 1256, while serving as regent master in theology at University of Paris as a treatise defending mendicant orders that William of Saint – Amour had criticized.
Summa Theologica-written in 1265-1274- is largely philosophical in nature
e. Summa Contra Gentiles- still philosophica in nautre, and came across to many critics as apologetic of the beliefs he expressed in his earlier works
Works and Writings
Summa Contra Gentiles- is more apologetic in tone, as it was written to explain and defend the "Christian truth" in hostile situations against unbelievers, with arguments adapted to fit the intended circumstances of its use, each article refuting a certain heretical belief or proposition
Summa Theologica- written in 1265-1274- is largely philosophical in nature It was a compendium of all of the main theological teachings of the Catholic church. It presents the reasoning for almost all points of Christian theology in the West.
Later Life & DeathSt Thomas’s mystical vision that made writing seem unimportant to him“ at a mass during the feast of St Nicolas in 1273, he reportedly heard a voice coming from a crucifix that said, “Thou hast written well of me, Thomas; what reward wilt thou have? “ His reply is “None other than thyself.”
Father Reginald of Piperno (his Confessor), urged him to keep writing however, “ I can do no more. Such secrets have been revealed to me that all I have written now appears to be of little value.”-St. Thomas Aquinas
And he never wrote again………..
January 1274, St Thomas embarked on a trip to Lyon France, on foot to serve the Second Council But never made it there.
Along the way, he fell ill at the Cistercian Monastery Fossanova, Italy. The monks wanted St. Thomas Aquinas to stay at the castle, but, sensing that his death was near, Thomas preferred to remain at the monastery, saying, "If the Lord wishes to take me away, it is better that I be found in a religious house than in the dwelling of a layperson.“
St. Thomas Aquinas died at the Monastery of Fossanova on March 7, 1274.
St Thomas Aquinas last words were,
“This is my rest forever and ever: Here will I dwell for I
have chosen it (Psalm 131:14)
St Thomas Aquinas was canonized by Pope John XXII in 1323
He is the Patron Saint of: academics, against lightning, booksellers, learning, philosophers, scholars, theologians, against storms, apologists, chastity, pencil makers, publishers, students, lightning
References:
http://www.biography.com/people/st-thomas-aquinas-9187231#later-life-and-death
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Aquinas http://www.philosophybasics.com/
philosophers_aquinas.html
*Accessed August 21, 2015