heh thinking outloud is OK… Since you identify with Thomist, could you perhaps give us a quick summary of it since I was not to knowledgeable on it?
Thanks for asking–my friends have already let me know they don’t want to hear any more about Thomas Aquinas, especially since I usually don’t wait for them to ask.
“Thomism” covers a huge variety of topics, but here’s a general summary of Aquinas’s views: He thought there was no real division between the “revealed” truth known by faith and the general, “natural” revelation known by reason; truth itself is a unity, since ultimately the same God authors all that is true. Grace does not destroy nature, but rather perfects it (one of his most famous and often-repeated sentences); consequently, supernatural revelation certainly will go beyond natural revelation, but will not contradict it. For example, one may know of God’s existence simply because the Bible declares it, but one may also know of God’s existence rationally by the famous “Five Ways” (motion, causality, contingency, degrees of perfection, and teleology). By reason one may also know some of God’s attributes, such as his unity and perfection.
On the other hand, some aspects of God, such as his Trinitarian nature, may be known only by faith.
Likewise, moral laws may be known directly by God’s commands, but are also accessible to all by the “natural law” written in the human heart. This is why arguments against abortion, gay marriage, and so on, are not necessarily “religious” arguments.
In general, Aquinas is what Aristotle would have been if Aristotle were Christian, Catholic, and saintly. There actually are a lot of Protestant Thomists around; for example, there’s the book “Thomas Aquinas for Evangelicals,” written by Norman Geisler, a Protestant theologian. My favorite Catholic Thomists are Chesterton (of course), Peter Kreeft, Ralph McInerny, and J. Budziszewski. Any of their books are good–McInerny is by far the most technical of them and can be a difficult read, but the others are quite non-technical.