postID: 6766; title: Hilda of Whitby, Abbess, 680
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Hilda of Whitby, Abbess, 680
O God of peace, by whose grace the abbess Hilda was endowed with gifts of justice, prudence, and strength to rule as a wise mother over the nuns and monks of her household: Raise up these gifts in us, that we, following her example and prayers, might build up one another in love to the benefit of thy church; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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There are many questions that Christians rightly ask themselves about faith. For instance, does faith have an object, and if so, what is it? That is to say, is the object of faith God himself, or rather something like a definition of God (that he is one Being in three Persons, say)? Or is faith an attitude of our mind, or a movement of our heart, or a habit of our being? Or is it all of these?
In Thomas Aquinas’s Summa theologiae, the second part of the second part takes up the seven ‚Äúvirtues‚Äù or ‚Äúexcellences‚Äù of the Christian. And Aquinas starts his discussion at the top: not with temperance, courage, justice, or prudent wisdom, nor with hope and love, but with faith. Why does he do that? Is faith greater than hope and love? Do we need faith in order to be temperate and courageous and just and wise?
Over these class sessions, Father Austin guides us into Aquinas’s discussion through a close reading of short selections from this part of the Summa theologiae: II-II, qq. 1-7. No advance reading will be expected, nor is a particular translation required. An old translation of the first question is available free on the web here. The New Blackfriars edition, while expensive, has good notes. You can see it on amazon.
- September 16, 2014 6:30pm
- September 23, 2014 6:30pm
- September 30, 2014 6:30pm
- October 7, 2014 6:30pm
- October 28, 2014 6:30pm
- November 18, 2014 6:30pm
- November 25, 2014 6:30pm
- December 2, 2014 6:30pm