No, I don’t believe it does. I already understand that, and it has nothing to do with the discussion at hand.
No, it is not. You are equivocating specific definitions of “sharing” and “participation” with metaphysical senses of the words to which they do not apply. I already provided several sources, among which were some definitive Church statements, to Peter Plato which clarify the meaning of God’s sharing of/our participation in his perfection. For your benefit, I will provide it again:
"Now the gift of grace surpasses every capability of created nature, since it is nothing short of a partaking of the Divine Nature, which exceeds every other nature. And thus it is impossible that any creature should cause grace. For it is as necessary that God alone should deify, bestowing a
partaking of the Divine Nature by a participated likeness."
The key word is likeness. Likeness, not union.
No, it is not. The reason we say that they have a limited participation in the perfection of God is because the essences of all created beings possess degrees of the perfections found in God. Per Aquinas:
The fourth proof arises from the degrees that are found in things. For there is found a greater and a less degree of goodness, truth, nobility, and the like. But more or less are terms spoken of various things as they approach in diverse ways toward something that is the greatest, just as in the case of hotter (more hot) that approaches nearer the greatest heat. There exists therefore something that is the truest, and best, and most noble, and in consequence, the greatest being.
That is what is meant by degrees of perfection. To pursue Aquinas’ analogy, two flames possess different degrees of heat, but it does not follow that their heat flows from a shared source (Heat itself.)
So, no, what you said is not what is meant by degrees of perfection.
No, it is not.
This has nothing to do with degrees of perfection.Degrees are not parts. Degrees are measurements of the intensity of a given property. For example, one animal’s eye may possess a greater degree of vision than another’s. Or one pane of glass may permit a greater degree of penetration by light than another. Similarly, a statement which contains some truth contains a greater degree of truth than a statement which is completely false.
Your equivocation of degrees with components is erroneous.
No, it is not. It is a measurement of the limited presence in creatures of those transcendental properties whose perfections are found in God. That which is more true, more good, etc. is more like God (remember that line from the Cathechism: participated
likeness.) And as God is perfection, that which more closely approaches him in these qualities possesses greater degrees of perfection.
But there is. Aquinas, Gilson, the Magisterium have all done so. But one matter in which there is no escaping the logical implications is that of what the Council at Vatican I said here (another charge you’ve conveniently failed to address):
*4. If anyone says that finite things, both corporal and spiritual … emanated from the divine substance … let him be anathema.
- If anyone does not confess that the world and all things which are contained in it, both spiritual and material, as regards their whole substance <i.e. essence and esse>, have been produced by God from nothing … let him be anathema.*
As you’ve repeatedly said that what you’re presenting here does not contradict Catholic doctrine, I am anxious to hear how you would respond to these statements.
Well said.
Linus2nd