Pints With Aquinas - Surrender Your Will! #catholic #christian #jesus #fyp #foryou #inspiration #motivation #trending
Episode Date: September 18, 2024💌 Support The Show: https://mattfradd.locals.com Fr Pine attempts to teach the entire Summa Theologiae! 📖 Fr. Pine's Book: https://bit.ly/3lEsP8F 🖥️ Website: https://pintswithaquinas.com/ �...��� Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/pintswithaquinas 👕 Merch: https://shop.pintswithaquinas.com 🚫 FREE 21 Day Detox From Porn Course: https://www.strive21.com/ 🔵 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mattfradd 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattfradd
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Hello, my name is Father Gregory Pine and I'm a Dominican friar of the province of St. Joseph.
I teach at the Dominican House of Studies and I work for the Thomistic Institute,
and this is Pines of the Aquinas. My version of the Summa Theologiae is almost 3,000 pages long,
but I'm going to try to summarize it in 15 minutes. Here we go.
St. Thomas teaches that theology is a science.
That is, a kind of knowledge, certain knowledge, through causes.
How is that possible?
Well, by the light of faith, we can share in the knowledge of God and of the Blessed.
And so we can come to certain conclusions in reasoning upon revealed doctrines, which
is wild.
Okay, so in the practice of theology, what are we going to think about?
We're going to think about about God because it's theology. And in a certain sense, we can
spend all of our time thinking about God. So St. Thomas will first show that God
exists, and these are the famous five ways. So he shows on the basis of
observations of the created world that there must be a cause whereby to
account for it and its intelligibility. This he says, we call God.
Now having shown that God exists, he then shows how God is not.
That is to say, he rules out certain limitations or imperfections and goes ahead proving that
God is simple and perfect and good, that God is unchanging and eternal, infinite, omnipresent,
one, etc.
And then he'll spend some time saying, listen, we have to purify our speech so that way we
don't bring creaturely limitations into the discourse about God, so be conscious of that.
And also we need to orient our discourse so that it reflects the grandeur of God.
And then he'll proceed further to describe God's knowledge and the divine ideas, God's will, the divine love and mercy and justice, and even
predestination and things besides. So you might be interested in such like. But
St. Thomas will go on to say there are certain things that we can never reason
to by our own resources. There are certain things that simply need to be
revealed if we're going to have any knowledge about them. So, the Trinity would be one example.
So after having described the one God, he goes on to describe the Triune God.
To be clear, same God. Okay, just under different aspects.
So we know that God reveals himself as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
So the Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God.
But, they're distinct in that the Father is not the Son, the Son is not the Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit is not the Father.
St. Thomas has a sweet way whereby to account for this.
So he'll say, look at how the scriptures describe the origins of the persons.
The Father begets the Son, and the Father and the Son breathe forth the Holy Spirit.
He says, on the basis of these processions, we can identify relations.
The Father relates to the Son after the manner of
paternity. The Son relates to the Father after the manner of sonship. And here's the wild step that
he next takes. He says the Father just is subsisting paternity. The Son just is subsisting filiation or
sonship. So that's a kind of revolutionary doctrine. And then he'll go on to describe various other ways
whereby to think about the Most Blessed Trinity, which is great. And then he'll go on to describe various other ways whereby to think about the Most Blessed
Trinity, which is great.
And then you might think, we're done, because we've studied God.
But on account of the fact that God chooses to create, we can study His creation in light
of Him.
So St. Thomas will clarify, like, what is creation in the first place?
And he'll say, it's a relation of dependence.
It's not so much a beginning point
in time as it is a kind of dependence upon God for our being, for creation's being. And so I'll
identify God as the cause, not just in the sense of bringing it into being, but constituting the
pattern on which it is formulated and the term towards which it is oriented. For those of you who have the sweet vocabulary, God is the efficient, exemplar, and final cause of creation.
So, now having described creation in its rough outlines, we can describe the different facets of creation.
He'll start by describing angels.
Now, angels we know are pure intelligences. They don't have bodies.
There's really only two moments to their existence.
The moment of their creation, so they're created in grace, oriented towards God, from God and
for God, but then they have a second moment, the moment of their choice, during which they
have to choose to be from God and for God in the way that God wills, that is, as a gift.
Some angels choose for God, and we call them angels.
Some angels choose against God.
We call them demons.
Now, St. Thomas thinks it's interesting to consider angels just in themselves, but also
it's helpful for clarifying where we stand in the order of material creation. Before
getting to us though, St. Thomas talks about creation below us. So angels are above us,
and then there's creation below us, like rocks and plants and animals. But he's not especially interested
because all these things proceed as a matter of course towards their end. Rocks by gravity,
plants by biology, animals by instinct. They're not free. In order to find freedom, we need to look
further up. So we, as men and women, are made to the image and likeness of God. That is to say,
we have spiritual powers patterned on God and oriented towards God, which find their fulfillment in God. So the drama of
our lives is to know our end, who is God, and to proceed towards our end freely." And so,
St. Thomas will kind of clarify the different principles that work in our lives, the various
powers through which our souls act, as he gestures towards the various virtues which will perfect
those powers.
And so, the first part ends with a description of how God governs all things strongly and
sweetly.
Passing on then to the second part of the Summa Theologiae, which is divided into the
prima secundae and the secunda secundae, St. Thomas will describe how we, as creatures,
return towards God in the moral life.
So in the first part of the Summa, he described God, the exemplar.
In the second part of the Sumi, he describes us, the image patterned on the
exemplar and oriented towards the exemplar.
He begins the prima secundae by describing beatitude, that term of our
striving towards which we proceed in this life, and he'll rule out all
created goods as sufficient.
He'll say only the uncreated good who is God is sufficient to complete our mind's inquiry and our will's striving. So we will only ever be satisfied
by God. And so then he zooms in on our human freedom as that principle whereby we choose
for God as God, whereby we choose our beatitude as such. Now, he'll clarify further how human
acts unfold, but that's getting into the weeds. So then he'll pass next to the acts, the human acts, or the acts of a human person, which we
share with the animals. We call these passions or emotions. He identifies 11.
Love, desire, joy, hatred, aversion, sorrow, hope, and despair, fear, and daring, and
anger. He'll say these are things that we share with the beast, but ultimately we
want to incorporate them in a human culture.
We want to humanize them, and we do so by introducing them into the life of reason.
So then he passes on to a consideration of habits.
Habits are stable dispositions of our soul that inform our soul's powers so that they
can act stably or reliably towards their good and proceed to do so easily, promptly, and joyfully.
Now there are two main kinds of habits. There are virtues which are good habits
and vices which are bad habits. St. Thomas is principally concerned with
those good habits, that is, virtues, and he identifies the moral virtues which are
the virtues of the appetites, the intellectual virtues which are the
virtues of the mind, and then the theological virtues which are the virtues of the mind, and then the theological virtues, which are the virtues which orient us
towards God, or which actually get us to God.
He'll clarify further that virtues in one sense are acquired and in another sense they're infused.
That is to say, we can build up virtues by repeated action,
but there are certain virtues which only ever come to us from on high.
Nevertheless, in both cases, we can seek to cultivate or cooperate and build up what
is at work in our interior life. So then St. Thomas spends some time describing sin and vice. We won't
pause too terribly much there. And then at the end of the prima secundae, he describes those
exterior principles whereby we as human beings are perfected. And he treats law and grace.
Law, he says, it is an ordinance of reason for the common good given by the
one responsible and promulgated.
So he identifies four main kinds of law, eternal law, which is the
law as it exists in God, natural law, which is the law as it exists in us.
And then divine law, which would be like divine positive law.
So the Mosaic law, the old covenant, or the evangelical law, which would be like divine positive law, so the Mosaic law, the Old Covenant, or the evangelical law, the New Covenant, which he says is just the grace of the Holy
Spirit poured into our hearts, and then human law, which are the ways that we elaborate
the natural law for our particular time and place and circumstances.
And then when he describes grace, he has in mind sanctifying grace for the most part,
which is a habit of being that puts us right with God and orders all the parts of our supernatural organism. But then he'll clarify also actual graces, which are kind of
pinpricks of grace, and sacramental graces, those attached to the sacraments for particular things
in life, and then charismatic graces, which don't so much make us good as testify to the power
at work within the life of the church. We pass then to the secundi secunde, in which he describes
the principal virtues getting into the nitty-gritty of how we are saved in the moral life.
He describes first faith, which gives us access to God who is first truth and who speaks truly.
So we believe on the basis of divine testimony, we adhere to what he reveals with certainty because he is neither deceived nor does he deceive.
Now, there are two acts of faith.
Interior act is belief,
exterior act is confession. But we would also say that belief is a virtue. It's
something that lives in us. It's something that we can cooperate with,
something that we can cultivate. So then, passing on to the next virtue, whereas
faith lives in the mind, the next virtue lives in the will or in the heart. We
call this hope. Hope is a kind of trust that God,
who is omnipotent and merciful, will deliver on his promises. What is it that hope looks for? It
looks for God as beatitude. We trust that God will give us himself because he has promised to give us
himself. And there's a kind of certainty to hope. It's not the certainty of faith, which is a
speculative certainty, but it's like a participated certainty or a certainty of tendency. There's
another, though, a theological virtue that lodges in the will which we call charity,
which is just the love of God poured into our hearts whereby we love God with His own
love and our neighbor with the same.
So charity is the substance of Christian perfection because it completes all the virtues and giving
them their final shape, their final form, directing them to their final term, who is
God.
So we can do all manner of virtuous things, but they're only whole and complete at the
point where they are for the love of God.
So charity seeks union both with those who are close and far off, but it recognizes that
it's for union, and so we're more responsible for those who are close than for those who
are far off.
So then, we pass from the theological virtues to the cardinal virtues, the first of which is an
intellectual virtue, a practical virtue called prudence, and the next three are moral virtues,
right? We said virtues of the appetites, that be justice, fortitude, and temperance. Prudence
is right reason and things to be done, a right practical reason. It conceives of and directs us
toward what is to be done in human life in responsible fashion.
The prudent person works through stages of counsel and judgment and command to
carry out the good work, which corresponds to healthy appetites. So
prudence is like the general which surveys the field of battle and then
sends in the infantry and the cavalry and all manner of detachments besides
because it can conceive of the whole, because it's reasonable.
So prudence is filled out by a memory of past things, a docility to those who are wiser,
a kind of shrewdness, a kind of heightened reasoning ability, an understanding of the
principles, a foresight into the future, a circumspection, and a caution which keep us
alert to what might change in a moral situation.
We pass then to justice, which renders to another what is his due, and as a virtue it does so with a constant and perpetual will.
So justice comes in various forms, but we can identify two main species, what we call general justice or legal justice,
you may have heard it called social justice, which is what we owe to the common good or to the polity or to the church.
And then there's particular justice, which we divide further into distributive justice,
which is what the common good or the polity owes to each, and then commutative justice,
which is what we owe to each other in exchange and things like that.
So with this, we have what orders the kind of social and political good in such a way
that it's equitable.
And you can identify justice in various registers. So like justice towards God we call religion, justice towards our
country and our parents we call piety, justice towards our superiors we call
observance, but then there are other kinds of justice claims which govern our
polity or govern our society in less exact ways. So like gratitude or
liberality or even vindication are all bound up with justice. We pass then to
fortitude, which is a kind of steadfastness of soul, whereby we moderate our fear and daring and persevere in the good despite that difficulty,
despite the fear that wells up within or the daring that might not be sufficient.
Now, we can see in it a kind of confidence and magnificence, a kind of patience and perseverance,
but effectively what we're talking about here is ordering our appetites, ordering our passions so they don't deflect us.
Something similar is at stake with temperance. Here we're talking about a moderation of simple sense goods, specifically food, drink, and sexual intercourse.
It's a matter of remaining reasonably before those things which are most instinctual, and as a result of which the desires of which, or the desires for which, are most tinged by the effects of original sin.
St. Thomas ends the secundus secundae with a description of charismatic graces, kinds
of lives, and states of perfection, but I'm running out of time.
Finally, he treats Christ and the sacraments in the third part.
Having described the exemplar and then the image, he now describes Christ, who is the
exemplar image.
Christ didn't have to come, but he did come.
Why? Well, we don't know, but the sacred scripture seems to suggest that he came to save us from our image. Christ didn't have to come, but he did come. Why? Well, we don't
know, but the sacred scripture seems to suggest that he came to save us from our
sins. Whether he would have come otherwise, we don't know. Yet, on account
of the fact that he did come, we can appreciate how excellent it is that he
did come, because it helps to enlighten our faith and to embolden our hope and
to kindle our charity, to give us an example, to divinize us as human beings, and even more to set aside those obstacles and
hindrances which keep us from Him, satisfying for the penalties
attached to our sin and reconciling us to God and putting the devil in his
place. So it's awesome. It's incredible. Now, Christ is the Son of God, the only
begotten Son of God, who assumes a human nature in his person, in his apostasis. Now, God doesn't change, but the creature does change, or creation does change.
His human nature has become the instrument of his Godhead, that most sublime and intimate of
instruments. We identify in Christ three graces, what we call the grace of union, which is just
that grace whereby his human nature is united to his Godhead,
habitual grace, which is that grace which fills his humanity, and capital grace, which
is just that habitual grace considered as Christ as the head of the church, as it issues
into his members or among his members, and that'd be us.
We also identify in Christ different knowledges, all right, so his divine knowledge as God,
but then we have further knowledges as man.
So his beatific knowledge as he gazes upon God in the heights of his soul, infused knowledge
as the highest of prophets, and acquired knowledge as he evinces that knowledge proper to his
age at every state.
So then, Christ assumes our whole humanity from top to bottom.
So that means a human soul, a human intellect, a human will, human passions or emotions,
and even the defects associated with human sin in addition to a human body.
So Christ assumes all those defects that come from human sin without assuming sin or ignorance
because they would get in the way of salvation.
And he does that as an expression of solidarity so that we can believe in him who has come
to save us and incline towards the salvation which He mediates.
So, Christ has a real humanity. So too, Christ lives our whole life, not only from top to bottom, from start to finish.
He is, from the moment of His conception to His reigning in glory, Christ is saving us. All of His deeds and sufferings
save. And He invests certain mysteries along the way with an especially potent power because he curates his life after the manner of a story which rises to a culmination or a climax in his Paschal mystery. So we associate salvation
especially with his passion, death, and resurrection. From Christ flows the power
of the sacraments. Faith puts us in contact with his mysteries in a
spiritual way, and sacraments put us in contact with his mysteries in a spiritual way, and sacraments put us in contact with his mysteries
in a corporeal way.
A sacrament is a sign of a sacred thing
which makes us holy, says St. Augustine.
So they cause in us grace.
Now we can identify how there's a first effect
and a final effect of each sacrament
with grace being associated with the final effect.
And sacraments are the ordinary means for giving grace.
Now, God does not bind himself to giving grace through the sacraments. He can do
so through other means. But again, they are the ordinary means for giving of
grace, and so they're necessary for salvation. Baptism opens the door to
salvation, penance reconciles us to the salvation which we may have lost by
mortal sin, etc. So then, certain sacraments impart a character, that'd be baptism, confirmation, and holy
orders, and a character is a participation in Christ's priesthood which capacitates
us for worship.
Sacraments will work through the minister as he uses the form and matter instituted
by Christ or appointed by Christ according to the mind of the church or with the intention
of the church.
So then, when we look at baptism, as St. Thomas does briefly, he says, you've got the pouring of water and the pronouncing of the sacramental
form. I baptize you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. As
its first effect, it causes character, which capacitates the person to receive the rest
of the sacraments in their proper order, and it causes a grace whereby sin is remitted
and its eternal and temporal effects, whereby one is regenerated unto grace, constituted an adopted son or daughter of God, filled with grace, virtues,
gifts of the Holy Spirit, beatitudes, fruits of the Spirit, all manner of good things besides."
St. Thomas touches briefly on confirmation, which also causes a character, a more active
carer for witness or testimony, and a grace which equips us for spiritual soldiery and
mission.
And then he passes on to the Eucharist, focusing on the principal signs of past, present, and
future. By the two-fold consecration we signify the sacrifice of Christ which is
thereby made present. By the present signification seen in bread and wine.
Ordinary kind of nourishment, we see that it supplies us with grace and especially
the grace of charity. And then on account of the fact that out of many grains constitute one loaf, and out of
many grapes constitute one chalice, we see in those elements themselves a sign of the
future effect of eternal life as we are constituted, the one worshipping body of Christ.
St. Thomas started in on the treatise on penance, but on December 6, 1273, he set his pens down,
having seen something compared to which all
of which he had written was straw.
Not in that it was unimportant, but in that his desire for heaven was so great that he
had to hasten hence.
Alright folks, that is the Summa Theologiae in 15 minutes.
I apologize for its excesses and defects, and for the rate of speech as we arrived at
the end.
But cheers to you!
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