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Aquinas on Prophecy: Wisdom and Charism in the Summa Theologiae [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 272 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-May-2023
  • Kirjastus: The Catholic University of America Press
  • ISBN-10: 0813236797
  • ISBN-13: 9780813236797
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 272 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-May-2023
  • Kirjastus: The Catholic University of America Press
  • ISBN-10: 0813236797
  • ISBN-13: 9780813236797
Teised raamatud teemal:
Aquinas on Prophecy: Wisdom and Charism in the Summa Theologiae argues that a lacuna exists (especially among Anglophone scholars of Aquinas) that neglects to identify his most famous work as a prophetic witness to the transformative effect of Christian theology. Through a detailed examination of Aquinas's treatment of prophecy in the Summa Theologiae (II-II, QQ.171- 174), Paul Rogers reveals how prophetic testimony is central to the understanding of Christian revelation, faith, and theology, since it presents an initial (and historically-rooted) model for a Christian pedagogy that attempts to affect intellectual and moral transformation through communicating knowledge about God.

The theologian thus conceived by Aquinas exercises analogously a prophetic, and hence social, function among Christian believers that has a special care for their spiritual and moral guidance. In contrast to readings of Aquinas that portray him as overly reliant on Aristotelian gnoseology (e.g., Jenkins 1997), Rogers lays out a reading more in line with recent 'ressourcement' Thomistic interpreters that identifies in his account of prophecy a creative adaptation of Arabic-Aristotelian gnoseology in the service of clarifying difficulties that had arisen in the thirteenth century surrounding the reception of a patristic (and predominantly Augustinian) tradition of prophetic illumination or vision. In the hands of Aquinas, the traditional Augustinian theory of prophetic illumination was re-envisioned and reinvigorated, which in turn allowed him to reassert confidently prophecy's status as certain knowledge (scientia) that required its own distinct 'light', comparable to the light of natural reason and the lights of faith and glory.

Highlighting prophecy in Aquinas's thought helps especially to refocus today's readers on how knowledge of the final end as revealed was for Aquinas the ultimate moral objective shared by both the prophet and theologian: a point that is best appreciated when his account of prophecy is related back to his understanding of sacred doctrine and faith as a wholethe book's central task.
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xi
Introduction 1(18)
Setting Out a Structural Reading and Earlier Scholarly Approaches to Prophecy in Thomas
2(7)
Judeo-Arabic Prophetology in Thomas
9(4)
A Structural and Synthetic Reading of the Summa theologiae
13(6)
1 Sacred Doctrine and Its First Principles
19(36)
Sacra doctrina as "Science"
19(14)
The Prologue and Intention of the Summa theologiae
33(15)
Article One: Sacred Doctrine's Existence and the "Need" for Another Doctrine
48(4)
Can "Singulars" Be the Object of Sacred Doctrine?
52(2)
Toward Human Happiness and the Moral Part of the Summa
54(1)
2 Happiness and the Human Final End
55(28)
Keeping Faith and Prophecy Distinct
56(12)
Happiness and Human Salvation: Entry Points
68(5)
Faith as Revealing Happiness and the Human Final End
73(3)
The Necessity of the End: The Moral Part as the Nexus for Faith and Prophecy
76(6)
How "Human" Is an Act? The Human Act's Proximity to Beatitude
82(1)
3 Faith, Happiness, and the Final End
83(38)
The Prologue to the Secunda secundae
84(1)
The Questions on Faith
85(1)
Question One: The Object of Faith Is God as First Truth
86(22)
Question Two: Faith's Interior Act and the Kind of Thinking Involved in Faith
108(11)
Conclusion
119(2)
4 Prophecy as a Gratuitous Grace and Entry into Ecclesial Faith and Wisdom
121(42)
Situating the Questions on Prophecy in the Secunda secundae
122(6)
Q 171, a. 1--Prophecy Is Ordered to Supernatural Knowledge ofthe Final End
128(5)
Q 171, a. 2--Whether Prophecy Is a Habitus
133(17)
Q 171, a. 3--Prophecy and Future Contingents: Prophecy's Unity Revisited
150(4)
Q 171, a. 4--Do Prophets Know Everything That Can Be Prophesied?
154(4)
Conclusion
158(5)
5 Prophetic Knowledge, Judgment, and Wisdom's Ordering to Salvation
163(46)
Thomas and Judgment
164(1)
Prophetic Vision versus Beatific Vision
165(4)
God's Knowledge: A Closer Look
169(10)
Prophecy and Judgment
179(16)
Comparing Prophecy to Wisdom as a Gift of the Holy Spirit
195(10)
Prophecy's Mirroring of Wisdom
205(4)
Conclusion 209(6)
Bibliography 215(12)
Index 227