GraciousCall.org - St. Thomas Aquinas (c. 1225-1274)
St. Thomas Aquinas (c.1225-1274)
St. Thomas Aquinas was born in Aquino, a town in southern Italy from
which he takes his surname. In his masterwork,
Summa
Theologica
, he represents the pinnacle of scholasticism, the philosophical
and theological school that flourished between 1100 and 1500 and attempted
to reconcile faith with reason and the works of Aristotle with the scriptures.
The family of Thomas Aquinas was a noble one, his parents, the Count
of Aquino and Countess of Teano, were related to Emperors Henry VI and
Frederick II, as well as to the Kings of Aragon, Castile, and France. During
his early education, Thomas exhibited great acumen in the medieval trivium
of grammar, rhetoric, and logic. Because of his high birth, Thomas' entry
into the Dominican order in the early 1240s was very surprising. His family
employed various means to dissuade him from his vocation, including imprisoning
him for two years.
After a stint as a student in Paris, Thomas made his way to Cologne
to teach, receiving ordination to the priesthood in 1250. Soon after this,
he was assigned to teach at Paris, where he also worked toward his degree
of Doctor of Theology, which he received in 1257, with his friend St. Bonaventure,
after some intramural political difficulty. The remainder of his life was
spent in prayer, study, and writing his great
Summa Theologica
,
a systematic attempt to present the findings of scholasticism. Although
Thomas is sometimes perceived simply as an analytical and methodical writer,
he was, especially in his later years, given to periods of mystical ecstasy.
During one such experience, on December 6, 1273, he resigned from his writing
project, indicating that he had perceived such wonders that his previous
work seemed worthless.
The
Summa Theologica
was left unfinished, proceeding only as
far as the ninetieth question of the third part. St. Thomas Aquinas died
a few months later, on March 7, 1274. He was canonized in 1323 by John
XXII. Although interest in Scholasticism in general and Thomism in particular
waned during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Leo XIII's encyclicai
Aeterni Patris
in 1889 reestablished Thomism as the leading theological
school of the Catholic church. Today, Thomist theology stands at the center
of the Roman Catholic tradition.
The Catholic Encyclopedia includes a lengthy article regarding @St.
Thomas Aquinas
.
An Encyclopedia Britannica
article
(9th edition) is also available.
This text copyright 1997, @Mark
Browning
. Permission is granted for all noncommercial use of this article.
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