The
results of revelation he found in the Holy Scriptures and in the
writings of the fathers and the great theologians of the church; and his
method was to proceed backwards. He began with Peter of Lombardy (who
had reduced to theological order, in his famous book on the
Sentences, the various authoritative statements of the church
upon doctrine) in his
In Quatuor Sententiarum P. Lombardi libros.
Then came his deliverances upon undecided points in theology, in his
XII. Quodlibeta Disputata, and his
Quaestiones Disputatae.
His
Catena Aurea next appeared, which, under the form of a
commentary on the Gospels, was really an exhaustive summary of the
theological teaching of the greatest of the church fathers. This side of
his preparation was finished by a close study of Scripture, the results
of which are contained in his commentaries,
In omnes Epistolas Divi
Apostoli Expositio, his
Super Isaiam et Jeremiam, and his
In Psalmos. Turning now to the other side, we have evidence, not
only from tradition but from his writings, that he was acquainted with
Plato and the mystical Platonists; but he had the sagacity to perceive
that Aristotle was
the great representative of philosophy, and
that his writings contained the best results and method which the
natural reason had as yet attained to. Accordingly Aquinas prepared
himself on this side by commentaries on Aristotle's
De Inter
pretatione, on his
Posterior Analytics, on the
Metaphysics, the
Physics, the
De Anima, and on
Aristotle's other psychological and physical writings, each commentary
having for its aim to lay hold of the material and grasp the method
contained and employed in each treatise. Fortified by this exhaustive
preparation, Aquinas began his
Summa Theologiae, which he
intended to be the sum of all known learning, arranged according to the
best method, and subordinate to the dictates of the church. Practically
it came to be the theological dicta of the church, explained according
to the philosophy of Aristotle and his Arabian commentators. The
Summa is divided into three great parts, which shortly may be
said to treat of God, Man and the God-Man. The first and the second
parts are wholly the work of Aquinas, but of the third part only the
first ninety quaestiones are his; the rest of it was finished in
accordance with his designs. The first book, after a short introduction
upon the nature of theology as understood by Aquinas, proceeds in 119
questions to discuss the nature, attributes and relations of God; and
this is not done as in a modern work on theology, but the questions
raised in the physics of Aristotle find a place alongside of the
statements of Scripture, while all subjects in any way related to the
central theme are brought into the discourse. The second part is divided
into two, which are quoted as
Prima Secundae and
Secunda
Secundae. This second part has often been described as ethic, but
this is scarcely true. The subject is man, treated as Aristotle does,
according to his TE¦os, and so Aquinas discusses all the ethical,
psychological and theological questions which arise; but any theological
discussion upon man must be mainly ethical, and so a great proportion of
the first part, and almost the whole of the second, has to do with
ethical questions. In his ethical discussions (a full account of which
is given under Ethics) Aquinas distinguishes theological from natural
virtues and vices; the theological virtues are faith, hope and charity;
the natural, justice, prudence and the like. The theological virtues are
founded on faith, in opposition to the natural, which are founded on
reason; and as faith with Aquinas is always belief in a proposition, not
trust in a personal Saviour, conformably with his idea that revelation
is a new knowledge rather than a new life, the relation of unbelief to
virtue is very strictly and narrowly laid down and enforced. The third
part of the
Summa is also divided into two parts, but by accident
rather than by design. Aquinas died ere he had finished his great work,
and what has been added to complete the scheme is appended as a
Supplementum Tertiae Partis. In this third part Aquinas discusses
the person, office and work of Christ, and had begun to discuss the
sacraments, when death put an end to his labours.
Continued on page four.
This article is from the 1911 edition of an encyclopedia,
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