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On Love and Charity: Readings from the Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (Thomas Aquinas in Translation)
by Saint Thomas Aquinas
edited and translated by Peter A. Kwasniewski translated by Thomas Bolin, O.S.B. and Joseph Bolin Catholic University of America Press, 2008 Paper: 978-0-8132-1525-9 | eISBN: 978-0-8132-2026-0 Library of Congress Classification BX1749.P373T4613 2008 Dewey Decimal Classification 230.2
ABOUT THIS BOOK | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
No description available TABLE OF CONTENTS
Notice to the Reader The Full Introduction (a fuller version of the one published herein), extensive commentary in the form of ?webnotes,? and a bibliography are all available at the website of the Catholic University of America Press (http://cuapress.cua.edu). This printed volume contains an abbreviated introduction and brief notes on the text, as explained below. Contents Acknowledgments ### Brief Introduction ### Abbreviations ### 1. In I Sententiarum Distinction 1 [in part] ### Question 1: On enjoyment and use ### Article 1: Whether to enjoy is an act of intellect ### Distinction 17 (Paris version, 1252?1256) ### Question 1: On charity as something created in the soul ### Division of the text ### Article 1: Whether charity is something created in the soul ### Article 2: Whether charity is an accident ### Article 3: Whether charity is given according to natural capacity ### Article 4: Whether he who has charity can know for certain that he has it ### Article 5: Whether charity is to be loved from charity ### Notes on the text ### Question 2: On charity?s increase and decrease ### Division of the text ### Article 1: Whether charity admits of increase ### Article 2: Whether charity increases by way of addition ### Article 3: Whether charity is increased by any act of charity ### Article 4: Whether charity?s increase has a limit ### Article 5: Whether charity admits of decrease ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 17 (Lectura romana, 1265?1266) ### Question 1: On charity as something created in the soul ### Article 1: Whether a supernatural light is required in order to love God ### Article 2: Whether that [supernatural gift] is something created or uncreated ### Article 3: Whether that [supernatural gift] is an accident ### Article 4: Whether a man can know for certain that he has charity ### Question 2: On charity?s increase and decrease ### Article 1: Whether charity admits of increase ### Article 2: How much charity can increase ### Article 3: Whether charity grows by way of addition ### Article 4: Whether charity admits of decrease ### 2. In II Sententiarum Distinction 3 [in part] ### Question 4: Whether angels in that natural state, granting that they had not been created in grace, would have loved God above themselves and more than themselves ### Distinction 38 [in part] ### Article 1: Whether there is only a single end of right wills ### Article 2: Whether beatitude or charity is the common and single end of right wills ### 3. In III Sententiarum Distinction 23 [in part] ### Question 1: On virtues in general ### Article 4: On the division of virtues into intellectual, moral, and theological ### Subquestion 3: Whether theological virtues ought to be distinguished from both kinds of virtue ### Article 5: Whether there are more than three theological virtues ### Question 3: On the formation of faith ### Article 1: The formation of faith through charity ### Subquestion 1: Whether faith is formed through charity ### Subquestion 2: Whether unformed faith is a virtue ### Subquestion 3: Whether formed and unformed faith differ in species ### Article 4: The change from unformed faith to formed faith ### Subquestion 1: Whether unformed faith is emptied out at the coming of charity ### Subquestion 2: Whether the act of unformed faith is emptied out at the coming of charity ### Subquestion 3: Whether unformed faith becomes formed at the coming of charity ### Distinction 27: Love and Charity in Themselves ### Division of the text ### Question 1: On love in general ### Article 1: What is love? ### Article 2: Whether love is only in the concupiscible power ### Article 3: Whether love is the first and foremost affection of the soul ### Article 4: Whether knowledge is higher than love ### Question 2: On charity ### Article 1: What is charity? ### Article 2: Whether charity is a virtue ### Article 3: Whether reason is the subject of charity ### Article 4: Whether charity is one virtue or many ### Subquestion 1: Whether charity is a single virtue ### Subquestion 2: Whether charity is distinct from other virtues ### Subquestion 3: Whether charity is the form of the other virtues ### Subquestion 4: Whether there can be an unformed charity ### Question 3: On the act of charity for God ### Article 1: Whether God can be immediately loved by wayfarers ### Article 2: Whether God can be totally loved ### Article 3: Whether the love by which we love God has any measure ### Article 4: Whether the mode of loving specified in the commandment can be fulfilled in the wayfaring state ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 28: Objects of Charity ### Division of the text ### Article 1: Whether virtues should be loved from charity ### Article 2: Whether irrational creatures are to be loved from charity ### Article 3: Whether angels are to be loved from charity ### Article 4: Whether we ought to have charity for evil people ### Article 5: Whether demons are to be loved from charity ### Article 6: Whether man ought to love himself from charity ### Article 7: Whether our bodies are to be loved from charity ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 29: The Order of Charity ### Division of the text ### Article 1: Whether charity has an order ### Article 2: Whether the order of charity is to be looked to regarding affection or effect ### Article 3: Whether God is to be loved above all things from charity ### Article 4: Whether the love of God permits consideration of a wage ### Article 5: Whether from charity a man ought to love himself more than his neighbor ### Article 6: Whether from charity a man ought to love strangers more than those who are close to him ### Article 7: Concerning the order of charity to be observed among those who are close to us ### Article 8: Concerning charity?s perfection and degrees ### Subquestion 1: Whether the degrees of charity are fittingly distinguished ### Subquestion 2: Whether all are bound to perfect charity ### Subquestion 3: Whether one who has attained perfect charity is bound to everything that belongs to perfection ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 30: The Commandment of Charity ### Division of the text ### Article 1: Whether all are bound to love enemies ### Article 2: Whether all are bound to show signs of friendship to enemies ### Article 3: Whether it is of greater merit to love a friend or an enemy ### Article 4: Whether to love one?s neighbor is more meritorious than to love God ### Article 5: Whether merit consists chiefly in charity ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 31: Charity?s Duration ### Division of the text ### Question 1: On the emptying out of charity through sin ### Article 1: Whether one who has charity can lose it ### Article 2: On the Book of Life ### Subquestion 1: Whether the Book of Life is something created ### Subquestion 2: Whether the Book of Life has to do with God ### Subquestion 3: Whether anything can be said to be erased from the Book of Life ### Article 3: Whether any charity can resist any temptation ### Article 4: On the charity with which a man rises up from sin ### Subquestion 1: Whether a man always rises up from sin with less charity than before ### Subquestion 2: Whether a man always rises up from sin with greater charity than before ### Subquestion 3: Whether a man rises up from sin with a charity at least equal to that which he had before ### Responses to subquestions 1?3 ### Question 2: On the emptying out of charity through glory ### Article 1: Whether faith and hope are emptied out in the fatherland ### Subquestion 1: Whether faith is emptied out in the state of glory ### Subquestion 2: Whether hope is emptied out in the state of glory ### Subquestion 3: Whether anything of faith and hope remains in the state of glory ### Article 2: Whether the charity of the wayfaring state will be emptied out in the fatherland ### Article 3: Whether the order of love obtaining in this life is also to be found in Christ or in the saints who are in the fatherland ### Subquestion 1: ?with regard to love of enemies ### Subquestion 2: ?with respect to love of self and neighbor ### Subquestion 3: Whom Christ loved more, Peter or John ### Article 4: Whether the knowledge that we have here below will be entirely taken away in the fatherland ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 32: God?s Love for Creatures ### Division of the text ### Article 1: Whether it accords with God?s nature that he love a creature ### Article 2: Whether God loves every creature ### Article 3: Whether God has loved creatures from eternity ### Article 4: Whether God loves all things equally ### Article 5: On the comparison of things loved by God ### Subquestion 1: Whether God loves the now-just man foreknown to be lost more than the sinner predestined to be saved ### Subquestion 2: Whether God loves the penitent more than the innocent ### Subquestion 3: Whether God loves man more than angel ### Subquestion 4: Whether God loves the human race more than he loves Christ ### Notes on the text ### Distinction 36 [in part] ### Article 6: Whether a commandment contains the requirement that it be fulfilled charitably ### 4. IN IV SENTENTIARUM Distinction 49 [in part] ### Question 1: On beatitude ### Article 1: On that in which beatitude consists ### Subquestion 1: Whether beatitude consists in goods of the body ### Subquestion 2: Whether beatitude consists more in things belonging to will or in things belonging to intellect ### Subquestion 3: Whether beatitude consists in an act of the practical or of the speculative intellect ### Subquestion 4: Whether beatitude can be had in this life ### Article 2: On beatitude as created and uncreated ### Subquestion 1: Whether beatitude is something uncreated ### Subquestion 2: Whether happiness is an act ### Subquestion 3: Whether man?s beatitude is the same thing as eternal life ### Subquestion 4: Whether beatitude is the same thing as peace ### Subquestion 5: Whether beatitude is the same thing as the kingdom of God ### Article 3: On appetite for beatitude ### Subquestion 1: Whether all have appetite for beatitude ### Subquestion 2: Whether someone can have appetite for misery ### Subquestion 3: Whether one merits by having appetite for beatitude ### Subquestion 4: Whether everything is willed for the sake of beatitude ### Article 4: On participation in beatitude ### Subquestion 1: Whether the beatitude of the saints is going to be greater after the last judgment than it was before ### Subquestion 2: Whether beatitude will be equally participated in by all ### Subquestion 3: Whether the degrees of beatitude ought to be called ?dwelling places? ### Subquestion 4: Whether diversity of dwelling places follows upon different degrees of charity ### Appendix I: Scriptum and ST Parallels on Love and Charity in General Appendix II: English Translations of the Scriptum Index of Names ### Index of Scriptural Citations ### See other books on: Commentary | God | Middle Ages, 600-1500 | Readings | Translation See other titles from Catholic University of America Press |
Nearby on shelf for Christian Denominations / Catholic Church / Theology. Doctrine. Dogmatics:
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On Love and Charity: Readings from the Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (Thomas Aquinas in Translation)
Catholic University of America Press, 2008 Paper: 978-0-8132-1525-9 | eISBN: 978-0-8132-2026-0 Library of Congress Classification BX1749.P373T4613 2008 Dewey Decimal Classification 230.2
ABOUT THIS BOOK | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
No description available See other books on: Commentary | God | Middle Ages, 600-1500 | Readings | Translation See other titles from Catholic University of America Press |
Nearby on shelf for Christian Denominations / Catholic Church / Theology. Doctrine. Dogmatics:
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