D
dimentichisimai
Guest
As you and others have said throughout this thread, he had a vision of the divine, like many other saints over the ages.Yes. What did he come to see during that Mass he celebrated a few months before his death?
But St. Thomas never up and denied or discarded all of theology and philosophy. In fact, as far as I know, he died on his way to a conference that was meant to settle the disagreements between the West and the East. He wrote another work called On the Greeks in which he tries to lay a theological bridge for reunification. Unfortunately, he died along the way, but that shows that he didn’t just give up theology because he was given some “Higher Knowledge” only available to a select few that blows all other knowledge up. Such notions are Gnostic and have been condemned since the early early Church.
St. Thomas Aquinas’ claim that his Summa was “straw” was tantamount to someone that studied chocolate chip cookie recipes their whole lives, wrote numerous recipes, then finally one day actually ate a chocolate chip cookie. The recipes are straw compared to the pleasure of eating the cookie, but that doesn’t make the recipes wrong.