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AngryAtheist8
Guest
This is true. However, Aquinas relied on a faulty understanding of science to inform his philosophical conclusions. No one uses Aquinas’ understanding of human generation to explain anything!
Does that mean that the Church is wrong, here? Well, you’d have to make the claim that theologians speak for the Church by virtue of their work (or by virtue of their own membership in the Church, or in a religious order, or university). Of course, that isn’t the case at all – in fact, it’s backward! Theologians do their thing, and the Church decides whether to incorporate their thought in Church teaching. If it worked the way you are asserting it does, then you could say “the U.S. should attack country X”, and by virtue of the fact that you’re American, you’re claiming that this becomes the policy of the U.S. …! (Substitute “Colin Powell” or “Rick Santorum” or “Al Gore” for you in the example, and you have the same argument: no matter who you are, unless you speak from a position of authority and responsibility, you don’t speak for the organization. Now, the organization can clearly listen to you and later decide, “you know, they’re right. we should attack country X”, but that’s a completely different scenario. as far as I can tell, you’re not asserting that this line of thought by Aquinas is official Church doctrine. Are you…?)
No one – whether saint or Doctor of the Church – automatically speaks for the Church, and no one has the charism of infallibility except the Magisterium.
**So, saying that “Aquinas got it wrong”, or “Augustine’s interpretation of Christian anthropology has defects” doesn’t say “the Church’s take on women’s ordination is wrong”./**QUOTE]
Your forgetting something important.
Saint Aquinas was named a Doctor of the Church, because of his large contribution to Catholic doctrine. So were a number of other rather misogynistic saints (such as Saint Augustine).
The Catholic Encyclopedia itself backs me up on this (link to source: newadvent.org/cathen/05075a.html).
