B
benedictus2
Guest
I am not sure that Aquinas was working within a set of boundaries that the Catholic Church has set.What you really need to ask yourself, though, is what you make of it when the boundaries set by the CC change over time. For example, there was a certain set of boundaries that Aquinas was working within, and they were different from the boundaries that you are working within…surely you can appreciate the fact that he couldn’t reach the same conclusions as you because they fell outside the bounds of Catholic teaching at the time? But then again, he was personally responsible for marking those boundaries more clearly for the Latin church of the West. He largely reaffirmed what Augustine did, and Banez, in turn, largely affirmed what Aquinas did.
The premises that I found most constricting in both Thomas and Augustine were not set by the Church.
Besides the Church cannot make declarations that will conflict with previous teachings. It can only proclaim developments that line up with previously declared doctrine.
And then Molina affirmed the necessity of protecting free will in a way that wasn’t done before, and he succeeded (!!!) in changing the boundaries of Catholic teaching on this matter.
He didn’t change the boundaries of Catholic Teaching. He just addressed it from the opposing angle. His doing this actually gave a good counterbalance to Thomism so we can hope for greater clarity.
Well no. Molina did not change the boundaries. He just highlighted what he saw as a flaw in the the Thomist system and tried to come up with a solution. It is not about boundaries.Bringing it into the present day, you not only affirm the act of changing those boundaries, but you also believe he was right while his predecessors (and those who follow them) were wrong.
Well since they both have short comings, as we come to greater clarity through the guidance of the Holy Spirit then we hope to see a dogmatic pronouncement by the Church regarding this.Since the end of the 16th century, Molinism has been one of the views that falls within the bounds of Catholic teaching…but so do a half-dozen other ones. I think I understand what you’re doing, though- you acknowledge that they all fall within the boundaries, but you’re looking for the ideal one that’s closer to perfection than any of the others.
At the moment all we see are what you call defining the boundaries as she rejects those that are irreconcilable with what we know about God through His revelation.
I have discounted the Augustinian system because of its closeness to Calvinism. Pete Holter tried to explain the nuances of this system but to me it still sounds like a God who creates people just to damn them.That reminds me, though- why look at just Thomism and Molinism? Have you discounted other candidates like Augustinianism without seriously considering them?
Maybe I am reading it wrong but no one has been able to elucidate it enough for me to be able not to come up with this conclusion. But then again it’s probably that I am just really stupid so I it’s evading my grasp. And that is something I do not discount in any of my assessment of these system, that my brain is just not up to it.
Although when I come to think of it my brain is really not up to it. It’s only through God’s little flashes of insight that I comprehend any of this at all.
I think I’ll tell you my experience with regards Predestination but I’ll put that in a separate post.