- It was St Thomas Aquinas who developed the so called “5 ways” of knowing/proving the existence of God (Motion, Efficient Cause, Necessity, Gradation/Degree, Design)
- It was St Thomas Aquinas who developed our understanding of the full human person as a body and soul. Not a soul caged in a body, but an embodied soul. A body that cannot exist without a soul and a soul that cannot exist without a body - embodied soul and ensouled body. Personhood requires both, body and soul to be fully human.
- It was St Thomas Aquinas who helped us to understand that if God is truth, then whatever is true can only lead is to God. Therefore there is no opposition between faith and reason. Through reason and the study of things (science) we can come to knowledge of reality, however that can only allow us to under understand things to a degree. So ultimately reason needs the illumination of Faith to be elevated to understand ultimate Truth which is God.
- It was St Thomas Aquinas who formulated the famous phrase of “grace builds upon nature”. This means that nature (our physical body, dispositions etc) is good, and reflects the goodness of God in creation. However due to sin we are not able to have union with God, we need grace. So grace is what elevates and perfects us, so we can share in the friendship of God and have union with God. So the spiritual life requires development of the virtues and respecting the goodness of creation, that then through grace is elevated and perfected.
- It was St Thomas Aquinas himself who helped developed the teaching and understanding of the mystery of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist - what we call Transubstantiation.
Saturday, January 28, 2023
The Angelic Doctor
Saturday, January 21, 2023
Fortitude as a gift of the Holy Spirit
The Catechism defines Fortitude as follows CCC #1808
Fortitude is the moral virtue that ensures firmness in difficulties and constancy in the pursuit of the good. It strengthens the resolve to resist temptations and to overcome obstacles in the moral life. The virtue of fortitude enables one to conquer fear, even fear of death, and to face trials and persecutions.
So fortitude is to remain constant in the face of difficulties. It requires, courage, strength and even at times an act of faith. We have to choose to follow the Holy Spirit and the Gospel even when everything else is telling us we don't have to. So this act of faith, of still choosing to follow God no matter what, is what we call fortitude. In my own spiritual life, I have renamed this as "holy stubborness". This is because at times I have to be so stubborn in my faith, that I have to choose to love God and follow him even inspite of all my sins, failings and weaknesses. But constantly relying on the mercy of God to say "Lord I know you love me, help me to love you more", then getting up and continuing to move forward in faith.
Fortitude is linked to the 7th Beatitude - those who suffer and are persecuted. It is not possible to suffer for the faith, be persecuted and remain faithful to Jesus without the gift of fortitude. This is linked to what I call the empowerment we receive from the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:8) to strengthen us. We receive this initially in Confirmation, and then everyday we can pray for an infilling of this grace from the Holy Spirit.
We can see the gift of fortitude fulfilled by Our Lord in the agony in Garden of Gethsemani (Luke 22:39-46, Mark 14:32-42, Matthew 26:36-46). He says that his soul is sorrowful unto death, but still says that he chooses the Will of the Father - this is Fortitude and Holy Stubborness!
To choose to follow God and to love him requires an act of the will. This is why St John of the Cross teaches us: “Love consists not in feeling great things but in having great detachment and in suffering for the Beloved.” It requires an act of the will, strength, courage, determination to act contrary to how we may feel, and still choose to love God, to follow Him - this is Holy Stubborness, the Gift of Fortitude that we receive from the Holy Spirit who empowers, strengthens and comforts us in the spiritual life.
Wednesday, January 11, 2023
Holy Spirit as the Gift of Christmas
Now that the New Year has begun and the festivities of Christmas have settled down or ended, I wanted to reflect on the Holy Spirit as the Gift of Christmas.
For most of us, we associate Christmas with presents, spending time with family, nativity scenes, Midnight Mass and the infant Jesus. But for most of us the Holy Spirit is not something we associate with Christmas .
The Holy Spirit is the ultimate Gift, the one given to us by the Father and the Son. The Holy Spirit is also the one that empowers us, sanctifies us and gives is the grace to make our life a gift back to the Father through the Son. The Holy Spirit is the gift that enables the Church to continue the sacraments, that gives power and efficacy to them (CCC #739). The Holy Spirit is the soul of the Church that continues to vivify her and all of us as members of the Mystical Body of Christ, the Church. The Holy Spirit also gives us the grace to grow in charity - the divine love we are called to by virtue of our baptism.
St Bernard of Clairvaux referred to the Holy Spirit as the "kiss between the Father and the Son'. What a beautiful image! With this Augustinian understanding of the Holy Trinity, the Holy Spirit is the mutual love between the Father and the Son. So we can also say that the Holy Spirit is the intimacy of the Trinity itself!
At Christmas we celebrate the mystery of the Incarnation, the Word made flesh - Emmanuel, God is with us! This new level of intimacy with God is the gift we are all offered. To be children of the Father, through union with the Son. Jesus became man, to elevate our humanity and unite it with the Trinity. This is what the Church Fathers all taught, and so if we develop this further - we can also see that the Holy Spirit is the additional gift of Christmas.
The Holy Spirit is the gift given to us to enable and empower us to live our calling as Christians. In baptism we are united to and reborn in Christ, becoming one with him. So too, we also become temples of the Holy Spirit. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit enables us to call God "Abba, Father" (Romans 8:15) and to also be sons in the Son. The Holy Spirit is the one who teaches us to pray (Romans 8:26), to understand the teachings of Jesus (John 14:26), He heals us of our woundedness and sin, and is the one who comforts us and advocates for us (John 14:15, John 14:26)
The Holy Spirit is the gift of intimacy that we receive as our birthright as Christians. Marked, signed and sealed by the Spirit (Ephesians 1:13), we are led by the Spirit and given the freedom of the children of God (2 Corinthians 3:17). How can this not make us exclaim in wonder and joy? The Holy Spirit gives us freedom, joy and love! (Galatians 5:22-23)
So this Christmas, let us remember the gift that Jesus us given us - the Holy Spirit. The bond of the Trinity, the kiss between the Father and the Son, the intimacy of the Trinity itself. This is our gift we have received and can call upon everyday! The Lord the giver of Life - the Paraclete, our Comforter and Advocate is the gift of love that helps us to experience and know the love of God (Romans 5:5), the intimacy of the Holy Trinity.
This is invitation we have from the Holy Spirit himself this New Year, and every moment of our lives -
"The Spirit and the bride say, “Come!” And let the one who hears say, “Come!” Let the one who is thirsty come; and let the one who wishes take the free gift of the water of life." (Revelation 22:17).
Will you accept the invitation and the gift?
Sunday, January 8, 2023
The manifestation of God - hidden glory revealed
Wednesday, January 4, 2023
The Humanity of Christ as bait that destroyed death from within
Faith alone grasps these mysteries. Faith alone is truly the substance and foundation of all that exceeds knowledge and understanding.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
The Name above all names
Today we celebrate the Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus.
As Christians, our faith, our hope and our love is based entirely on the person Jesus Christ. No one else.
In all of our prayers as Catholics, we finish our requests with the formula: "we ask this in Jesus' name" or "we ask this through Our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, God forever and ever". This is based on what Jesus Himself commanded us John 15:7 and John 15:16 who tells us our prayers will be answered when asked in His Name.
But why is His name so important?
In scripture, a person's name is not only a part of their identity. It also reveals something about them. Names have meaning - for example the Patriarch Abram is given a new name by God in Genesis 17:15. His name is changed to "Abraham" which means the "father of many". Later when he has his son with his wife Sarah, they give him the name of Isaac meaning "laughter" or "he who laughs". We are told in Genesis 21:1-7 that Isaac is given his name because Sarah says that anyone who hears that she is now pregnant as an elderly woman, will laugh at her!
There are many places in the bible where names have meaning that are connected to their identity, their mission from God or an aspect of how God is working through them ie... Elijah means "Yahweh is my God". His mission as a prophet was to bring the people back to true worship of the God of Israel instead of their idolatry to Baal and false gods. The name Yahweh was important to the people of Israel as this was the personal name that God revealed to Moses in Exodus 3:14.
So in Matthew 1:21 we are told that Jesus received his name because he will save the people from their sins. Etymologically the name Jesus means "Yahweh saves" or the "Salvation of Yahweh". Because Jesus is the Saviour, therefore we can also claim salvation in His Name. This is based on the idea in the Bible of "calling on the name of the Lord" - to invoke him, call for help , to be rescued or saved.
This is why we are told Acts 4:12 that there is no other name by which to be saved. Jesus is the salvation of God in the flesh, just as He and the Father are one. So too the Name of Jesus also has the power to saver, because it contains the identity of God - Yawheh Saves.
Jesus himself in the Gospel of John reveals His identity to the Jews by claiming the Divine Name of Yahweh Himself - “I AM” (John 8:54-57, John 28:6). This is why the soldiers in the garden fell down (John 18:6) when they heard the Divine Name. No one was allowed to say the Name of God apart from the High Priest once a year in the Temple, so to hear it out loud and to hear Jesus proclaim he was Yahweh was such a shock ti they they fell into the ground.
St Paul in Philippians 2:9-11 further elaborates on this when he boldly proclaims :
“Therefore God also highly exalted him and gave him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father”
This is a fulfillment of the prophecy in Isaiah 45:23. To bend the knee and bow down we’re signs of subservience, obedience and an acknowledgment of authority of a ruler. So St Paul is showing that Jesus is the Davidic Messiah King who has the authority of God as the Annointed One (Christ is Greek for Messiah), but also he himself is the Lord that is also God. So to bow down to Jesus is the same as bowing down to God Himself (Psalm 72:11) - all the kings of the earth have to acknowledge the King of King and Lord of Lords (Revelation 19:16).
The Holy Name of Jesus contains His identity and power, it manifests who He is - it saves and can be called upon for salvation because “Yahweh saves”. When we call upon the name of Jesus we reaffirm our own salvation and proclaim the offer of salvation to all who are willing to hear it and call upon it (John 1:12 Acts 2:38-39, Acts 4:2, Romans 10:9).
The Name of Jesus is our hope and salvation. It is the Name above all names, when we call upon Him we are saved. There is power in the Name of Jesus because it contains the mystery of God Himself.
Sunday, January 1, 2023
Mary, Mother of God - Christological and Apostolic
“Marvelous is the mystery proclaimed today: man’s nature is made new as God becomes man; he remains what he was and becomes what he was not. Yet each nature stays distinct and for ever undivided.”
1. If anyone does not confess that Emmanuel is God in truth, and therefore that the holy virgin is the mother of God (for she bore in a fleshly way the Word of God become flesh, let him be anathema.
2. If anyone does not confess that the Word from God the Father has been united by hypostasis with the flesh and is one Christ with his own flesh, and is therefore God and man together, let him be anathema.
Antiphon #1
O wonderful exchange! The Creator of human nature took on a human body and was born of the Virgin. He became man without having a human father and has bestowed on us his divine nature.
Antiphon #2
You were born of the Virgin in a mysterious manner of which no man can speak; you fulfilled the scriptures; like rain falling gently on the earth you came hither to save the human race. We praise you: you are our God.
Antiphon #3
Moses saw the thorn bush that was on fire yet was not burnt up. In it we see a sign of your virginity, which all must honour. Mother of God, pray for us.