Dogmatic Theology

                         Dogmatic theology is that part of theology which treats of the theoretical truths of
                         faith concerning God and His works (dogmata fidei), whereas moral theology has
                         for its subject-matter the practical truths of morality (dogmata morum). At times,
                         apologetics or fundamental theology is called "general dogmatic theology",
                         dogmatic theology proper being distinguished from it as "special dogmatic
                         theology". However, according to present-day usage, apologetics is no longer
                         treated as part of dogmatic theology but has attained the rank of an independent
                         science, being generally regarded as the introduction to and foundation of
                         dogmatic theology. The present article shall deal first with those questions which
                         are fundamental to dogmatic theology and then briefly review its historical
                         development due to the acumen and indefatigable industry with which the
                         theologians of every civilized country and of every century have cultivated and
                         promoted this science.

                                 I. DEFINITION AND NATURE OF DOGMATIC THEOLOGY

                         To define dogmatic theology, it will be best to start from the general notion of
                         theology. Considered etymologically, theology (Gr. Theologia, i.e. peri Theou
                         logos) means objectively the science treating of God, subjectively, the scientific
                         knowledge of God and Divine things. If defined as the science concerning God
                         (doctrina de Deo), the name of theology applies as well to the philosophical
                         knowledge of God, which is cast into scientific form in natural theology or
                         theodicy. However, unless theodicy is free from errors, it cannot lay claim to the
                         name of theology. For this reason, pagan mythology and pagan doctrines about
                         the gods, must at once be set aside as false theology. The theology of heretics
                         also, so far as it contains grave errors, must be excluded. In a higher and more
                         perfect sense we call theology that science of God and Divine things which,
                         objectively, is based on supernatural revelation, and subjectively, is viewed in the
                         light of Christian faith. Theology thus broadens out into Christian doctrine
                         (doctrina fidei) and embraces not only the particular doctrines of God's
                         existence, essence, and triune personality, but all the truths revealed by God.
                         The Patristic era did not, as a rule, take theology in this wide sense. For the
                         earlier Fathers, strictly limiting the term theology to doctrine about God,
                         distinguished it from the doctrine of His external activity, especially from the
                         Incarnation and Redemption, which they included under the name of the "Divine
                         economy". Now, if God is not only the primary object but also the first principle of
                         Christian theology, then its ultimate end likewise must be God; that is to say it
                         must teach, effect, and promote union with God through religion Consequently, it
                         lies in the very essence of theology to be the doctrine not only of God and of
                         faith, but also of religion (doctrina religionis). It is this triple function which gave
                         rise to the old adage of the School: Theologia Deum docet, a Deo docetur, ad
                         Deum ducit (Theology teaches of God, is taught by God, and leads to God).

                         However, neither supernatural theology in general nor dogmatic theology in
                         particular is sufficiently specified by its material object or its end, since natural
                         theology also treats of God and Divine things and shows that union with God is a
                         religious duty. What essentially distinguishes the two sciences is the so-called
                         formal principle or formal object. Supernatural theology considers God and Divine
                         things solely in the supernatural light of external revelation and internal faith,
                         analyzes them scientifically, proves them and penetrates as far as possible into
                         their meaning. From this it follows that theology comprehends all those and only
                         those doctrines which are to be found in the sources of faith, namely Scripture
                         and Tradition, and which the infallible Church proposes to us. Now, among these
                         revealed truths there are many which reason, by its own natural power, can
                         discover, comprehend, and demonstrate, especially those that pertain to natural
                         theology and ethics. These truths, however accessible to unaided reason, receive
                         a theological colouring only by being at the same time supernaturally revealed
                         and accepted on the ground of God's infallible authority. The act of faith being
                         nothing else than the unconditional surrender of human reason to the sovereign
                         authority of the self-revealing God, it is plain that Catholic theology is not a purely
                         philosophical science like mathematics or metaphysics; it must rather, of its very
                         nature be an authoritative science, basing its teachings, especially of the
                         mysteries of faith, on the authority of Divine revelation and the infallible Church
                         established by Christ; for it is the Divine mission of the Church to preserve intact
                         the entire deposit of faith (depositum fidei), to preach and explain it
                         authoritatively. There are, it is true, many non-Catholics and even some Catholics
                         who are irritated at seeing Catholic theology bow before an external authority.
                         They take offence at conciliar decrees, papal decisions ex cathedra, the censure
                         of theological opinions, the index of forbidden books, the Syllabus, the oath
                         against Modernism. Yet all these ecclesiastical regulations flow naturally and
                         logically from the formal principle of Christian theology: the existence of Divine
                         revelation and the right of the Church to demand, in the name of Christ, an
                         unwavering belief in certain truths concerning faith and morals. To reject the
                         authority of the Church would be equivalent to abandoning supernatural
                         revelation, and contemning God himself, who can neither deceive nor be
                         deceived, since He is Truth itself, and who speaks through the mouth of the
                         Church. Consequently, theology as a science, if it would avoid the danger of
                         error, must ever remain under the tutelage and guidance of the Church. To a
                         Catholic, theology without the Church is as absurd as theology without God.
                         Dogmatic theology, then, may be defined as the scientific exposition of the entire
                         theoretical doctrine concerning God Himself and His external activity, based on
                         the dogmas of the Church.

                                      II. DOGMATIC THEOLOGY AS A SCIENCE

                         Considering that theology depends essentially on the Church, a serious difficulty
                         arises at once. How, one may ask, can theology claim to be a science in the
                         genuine sense of the word? If the aim and result of theological investigation is
                         settled in advance by an authority that attributes to itself infallibility and will brook
                         no contradiction, if the line of march is, as it were, clearly mapped out and
                         strictly prescribed, how can there be any question of true science or of scientific
                         freedom? Are not the dogmatic proofs, supposed to demonstrate an infallible
                         dogma, after all mere dialectical play, sham science, reasoning made to order?
                         Prejudice against Catholic theology, prevalent in the world at large, is beginning
                         to bear fruit; in many countries the theological faculties, still existing in the state
                         universities, are looked upon as so much useless ballast, and the demand is
                         being made to relegate them to the episcopal seminaries, where they can no
                         longer injure the intellectual freedom of the people. The downright unfairness of
                         this attitude is obvious when one considers that the universities sprang up and
                         developed in the shadow of the Church and of Catholic theology; and that,
                         moreover, the exaggeration of scientific freedom may prove fatal to the profane
                         sciences as well. Unless It presuppose certain truths, which can no more be
                         demonstrated than many mysteries of faith, science can achieve nothing; and
                         unless it recognize the limits that are set to investigation, the boasted freedom
                         will degenerate into lawless and arbitrary anarchy. As the logician starts from
                         notions, the jurist from legal texts, the historian from facts, the chemist from
                         material substances as things which demand no proof in his case, so the
                         theologian receives his material from the hands of the Church and deals with it
                         according to the rules which the scientist applies in his own branch.

                         The view, moreover, that scientific research is absolutely free and independent of
                         all authority is fanciful and distorted. To the freedom of science, the authority of
                         the individual conscience, and of human society as well, sets an impassable
                         limit. Even the civil power would have to exercise its authority in the form of
                         punishment if a university professor, presuming on the freedom of scientific
                         thought and research, should teach openly that burglary, murder, adultery,
                         revolution, and anarchy are permissible. We may concede that the Catholic
                         theologian, being subject to ecclesiastical authority, is more closely bound than
                         the professor of the secular sciences. Yet the difference is one of degree only,
                         inasmuch as every science and every investigator is bound by the moral and
                         religious duty of subordination. Some Scholastics, it is true, e. g. Durandus and
                         Vasquez, denied to Christian theology a strictly scientific character, on the
                         ground that the content of faith is obscure and incapable of demonstration. But
                         their argument does not carry conviction. At most it proves that dogmatic
                         science is not of the same kind and order as the profane sciences. What is
                         essential to any science is not internal evidence, but merely certainty of its first
                         principles.

                         There are many profane sciences which borrow unproved from a superior science
                         their highest principles; these are the so-called lemmata, subsidiary
                         propositions, which serve as premises for further conclusions. The theologian
                         does the same. He, too, borrows the first principles of his science from the
                         higher knowledge of God without proving them. Every subaltern science
                         supposes of course in the superior discipline the power to give a strict
                         demonstration of the assumed premises. But all scientific axioms rest ultimately
                         on metaphysics, and metaphysics itself is unable to prove strictly all its
                         principles all it can do is to defend them against attack. It is plain then that every
                         science without exception rests on axioms and postulates which, though certain,
                         yet admit of no demonstration. The mathematician is aware that the existence of
                         geometry, the surest and most palpable of all sciences, depends entirely on the
                         soundness of the postulate of parallels. Nevertheless, this very postulate is far
                         from being demonstrable. In fact, since no convincing proof of it was forthcoming,
                         there has arisen since the time of Gauss a more general, non-Euclidean
                         geometry, of which the Euclidean is only a special case. Why, then, should
                         Catholic theology, because of its postulates, lemmata, and mysteries, be denied
                         the name of a science? Apart from the domain of dogma proper, the theologian
                         may approach the numerous controversial questions and more intricate problems
                         with the same freedom as is enjoyed by any other scientist. One thing, however,
                         must never be lost sight of. No science is at liberty to upset theorems which
                         have been established once and for all; they must be regarded as unshaken
                         dogmas upon which the entire structure is based. Similarly, the articles of faith
                         must not be looked upon by the theologian as troublesome barriers, but as
                         beacon-lights that warn the mariner, show him the true course, and preserve him
                         from shipwreck.

                                      III. METHODS OF DOGMATIC THEOLOGY

                         Whereas other sciences, as, for instance, theodicy, begin with proving the
                         existence of God, it lies beyond the scope of theology to discover dogmatic
                         truths. The subject-matter with which the student of theology has to deal is
                         offered to him in the deposit of faith and, reduced to its briefest form, is to be
                         found in the Catechism. If the theologian is content with deriving the dogmas from
                         the sources of faith and with explaining them, he is occupied with "positive"
                         theology. Guided by the doctrinal authority of the Church, he calls history and
                         criticism to his aid to find in Scripture and Tradition the genuine unalloyed truth. If
                         to this positive element is joined a polemic tendency, we have "controversial"
                         theology, which was carried to its highest perfection in the seventeenth century
                         by Cardinal Bellarmine. Positive theology must prove its theses by conclusive
                         arguments drawn from Scripture and Tradition; hence it is closely related to
                         exegesis and history. As exegete, the theologian must first of all accept the
                         inspiration of the Bible as the Word of God. But even when elucidating its
                         meaning, he will always bear in mind the unanimous interpretation of the Fathers,
                         the hermeneutical principles of the Church, and the directions of the Holy See. In
                         his character as historian, the theologian must not lay aside his belief in the
                         supernatural origin of Christianity and in the Divine institution of the Church, if he
                         is to give a true and objective account of tradition, of the history of dogma, and of
                         patrology. For, just as the Bible, being the Word of God, was written under the
                         immediate inspiration of the Holy Ghost, so Tradition was, and is, guided in a
                         special manner by God, Who preserves it from being curtailed, mutilated, or
                         falsified.

                         Consequently, he who from the outset declares the Bible to be an ordinary book,
                         miracles and prophecies impossible and old-fashioned, the Church a great
                         institution for deadening thought, the Fathers of the Church pious prattlers, is
                         quite incapable, even from a purely scientific standpoint, of understanding God's
                         momentous dispensations to mankind. From this we may conclude how
                         unecclesiastical and at the same time how unscientific are those historians who
                         prefer to explain the works of the Fathers without due regard for ecclesiastical
                         tradition, which was the mental environment in which they lived and breathed. For
                         it is only when we discover the living link which bound them to the Apostolic
                         Tradition of which they are witnesses, that we shall understand their writings and
                         establish the heterodoxy of some passages, as for instance, the Origenistic
                         apocatastasis in the writings of Gregory of Nyssa. When Pius X, by his Motu
                         Proprio of 1 Sept., 1910, solemnly obliged all priests to adhere to these
                         principles, he did more than recall to our minds the time-hallowed rules of
                         Christian faith; he freed history and criticism from those baneful excrescences
                         which impeded the growth of true science.

                         When the dogmatic material with the help of the historical method has been
                         derived from its sources, another momentous task awaits the theologian: the
                         philosophical appreciation, the speculative examination and elucidation of the
                         material brought to light. This is the purpose of the "scholastic" method from
                         which "scholastic theology" takes its name.

                         The scope of the scholastic method is fourfold:

                              to open up completely the content of dogma and to analyze it by means
                              of dialectics;
                              to establish a logical connection between the various dogmas and to unite
                              them in a well-knit system;
                              to derive new truths, called "theological conclusions" from the premises
                              by syllogistic reasoning;
                              to find reasons, analogies, congruous arguments for the dogmas;

                         But above all to show that the mysteries of faith, though beyond the reach of
                         reason, are not contrary to its laws, but can be made acceptable to our intellect.
                         It is evident that the ultimate purpose of these philosophical speculations cannot
                         be to resolve dogma finally into mere natural truths, or to strip the mysteries of
                         their supernatural character, but to explain the truths of faith, to provide for them
                         a philosophical basis, to bring them nearer to the human mind. Faith must ever
                         remain the solid rock-bottom on which reason builds up, and faith in its turn
                         strives after understanding (fides quoerens intellectum). Hence the famous axiom
                         of St. Anselm of Canterbury: Credo ut inlellegam. However highly one may
                         esteem the results of positive theology, one thing is certain: the scientific
                         character of dogmatic theology does not rest so much on the exactness of its
                         exegetical and historical proofs as on the philosophical grasp of the content of
                         dogma. But in attempting this task, the theologian cannot look for aid to modern
                         philosophy with its endless confusion, but to the glorious past of his own
                         science. What else are the modern systems of philosophy, sceptical criticism,
                         Positivism, Pantheism, Monism, etc., than ancient errors cast into new moulds?
                         Rightly does Catholic theology cling to the only true and eternal philosophy of
                         common sense, which was established by Divine Providence in the Socratic
                         School, carried to its highest perfection by Plato and Aristotle, purified from the
                         minutest traces of error by the Scholastics of the thirteenth century.

                         This is the Aristotelo-scholastic philosophy, which has gained an ever stronger
                         foothold in ecclesiastical institutions of learning. Guided by sound pedagogical
                         principles, Popes Leo XIII and Pius X officially prescribed this philosophy as a
                         preparation for the study of theology, and recommended it as a model method for
                         the speculative treatment of dogma. While in his famous Encyclical "Pascendi"
                         of 8 Sept., 1907, Pius X praises positive theology and frankly recognizes its
                         necessity, yet he sounds a note of warning not to become so absorbed in it as to
                         neglect scholastic theology, which alone can impart a scientific grasp of dogma.
                         These papal rescripts were probably inspired by the sad experience that any
                         other than Scholastic philosophy, instead of elucidating and clarifying, only
                         falsifies and destroys dogma, as is clearly shown by the history of Nominalism,
                         the philosophy of the Renaissance, Hermesianism, Güntherianism, and
                         Modernism. The development also of Protestant theology, which, entering into
                         close union with modern philosophy, swayed to and fro between the extremes of
                         faith and unfaith and did not even recoil from Pantheism, is a warning example for
                         the Catholic theologian. This does not mean that Catholic theology has received
                         no stimulus whatever from modern philosophy since the days of Kant (d. 1804).
                         As a matter of fact, the critical tendency has quickened the critico-historical
                         sense of Catholic theologians in regard to method and demonstration, has given
                         more breadth and depth to their statement of problems, and has shown fully the
                         value of the "theoretical doubt" as the starting-point of every scientific
                         investigation. All these advances, as far as they mark real progress, have exerted
                         a salutary influence on theology also. But they can never repair the material
                         damages caused to sacred science, when, abandoning St. Thomas Aquinas, it
                         went hand in hand with Kant and other champions of our age. But since the
                         Aristotelo-scholastic philosophy also is capable of continual development, there
                         is reason to expect for the future a progressive improvement of speculative
                         theology.

                         Another method of arriving at the truths of faith is mysticism, which appeals
                         rather to the heart and the feelings than to the intellect, and sensibly imparts a
                         knowledge of Divine things through pious meditation. As long as mysticism
                         keeps in touch with scholasticism and does not exclude the intellect completely,
                         it is entitled to existence for the simple reason that faith lays hold on the whole
                         man, and penetrates his thoughts, desires, and sentiments. The greatest
                         mystics, as Hugh of St. Victor, Bernard of Clairvaux, and Bonaventure, were at
                         the same time distinguished Scholastics. A heart that has preserved the faith
                         and simplicity of its childhood, takes delight even now in the writings of Henry
                         Suso (d. 1365). But whenever mysticism emancipates itself from the guidance of
                         reason and makes light of the doctrinal authority of the Church, it readily falls a
                         prey to Pantheism and pseudo-mysticism, which are the bane of all true religion.
                         Meister Eckhart, whose propositions were condemned by Pope John XXII in
                         1329, is a warning example. There is little in the present trend of thought that
                         would be favourable to mysticism. The scepticism which has poisoned the minds
                         of our generation, the uncontrolled greed for wealth, the feverish haste in
                         commercial enterprises, even the dulling habit of reading the daily papers -- all
                         these are only too apt to disturb the serene atmosphere of Divine contemplation,
                         and play havoc with the interior life, the necessary conditions under which alone
                         the tender flower of mystical piety can blossom. Modernism claims to possess in
                         its immediate and immanent sense of God a congenial soil for the growth of
                         mysticism; this soil, however, does not receive its waters from the undefiled
                         fountain-head of Catholic piety, but from the cisterns of Liberal Protestant
                         pseudo-mysticism, which are tainted, either confessedly or secretly, by
                         Pantheism.

                            IV. RELATION OF DOGMATIC THEOLOGY TO OTHER DISCIPLINES

                         At first, it was a thing altogether unknown to have different theological branches
                         as independent sciences. Dogmatic theology was the only discipline, and
                         comprised apologetics, dogmatic and moral theology, and canon law. This
                         internal unity was also marked externally by the comprehensive name of science
                         of faith (scientia fidei), or sacred science (scientia sacra). First to assert its
                         independence was canon law, which, together with dogmatic theology, was the
                         chief study in the medieval universities. But since the underlying principles of
                         canon law, as the Divine constitution of the Church, the hierarchy, the power of
                         ordinations, etc., were at the same time doctrines of faith to be proved in
                         dogmatic theology, there was little danger that the internal connection with and
                         dependence on the principal science would be broken. Far longer did the union
                         between dogmatic and moral theology endure. They were treated in the medieval
                         "Books of Sentences" and theological "Summæ" as one science. It was not until
                         the seventeenth century, and then only for practical reasons, that moral theology
                         was separated from the main body of Catholic dogma. Nor did this division
                         degenerate into a formal separation of two strictly co-ordinated disciplines. Moral
                         theology has always been conscious that the revealed laws of morality are as
                         much articles of faith as the theoretical dogmas, and that the entire Christian life
                         is based on the three theological virtues, which are part of the dogmatic doctrine
                         on justification. Hence the superior rank of dogmatic theology, which is not only
                         the centre around which the other disciplines are grouped, but also the main
                         stem from which they branch out. But the necessity of a further division of labour
                         as well as the example of non-Catholic methods led to the independent
                         development of other disciplines: apologetics, exegesis, church history.

                         The relation existing between apologetics, or fundamental theology as it has
                         been called of late, and dogmatic theology is not that of a general to a particular
                         science; it Is rather the relation of the vestibule to the temple or of the foundation
                         to its superstructure. For both the method and the purpose of demonstration
                         differ totally in the two branches. Whereas apologetics, intent upon laying the
                         foundation of the Christian or Catholic religion, uses historical and philosophical
                         arguments, dogmatic theology on the other hand makes use of Scripture and
                         Tradition to prove the Divine character of the different dogmas. Doubt could only
                         exist as to whether the discussion of the sources of faith, the rule of faith, the
                         Church, the primacy, faith and reason, belongs to apologetics or to dogmatic
                         theology. While a dogmatic treatment of these important questions has its
                         advantages, yet from the practical standpoint and for reasons peculiar to the
                         subject, they should be separated from dogmatic theology and referred to
                         apologetics. The practical reason is that the existing denominational differences
                         demand a more thorough apologetic treatment of these problems; and again, the
                         subject-matter itself contains nothing else than the preliminary and fundamental
                         questions of dogmatic theology properly so called. A branch of the greatest
                         importance, ever since the Reformation, is exegesis with its allied disciplines,
                         because that science establishes the meaning of the texts necessary for the
                         Scriptural argument. As the Biblical sciences necessarily suppose the dogma of
                         the inspiration of the Bible and the Divine institution of the Church, which alone,
                         through the assistance of the Holy Ghost, is the rightful owner and authoritative
                         interpreter of the Bible, it is manifest that exegesis, though enjoying full liberty in
                         all other respects, must never lose its connection with dogmatic theology. Not
                         even church history, though using the same critical methods as profane history,
                         is altogether independent of dogmatic theology. As its object is to set forth the
                         history of God's kingdom upon earth, it cannot repudiate or slight either the
                         Divinity of Christ or the Divine foundation of the Church without forfeiting its claim
                         to be regarded as a theological science. The same applies to other historic
                         sciences, as the history of dogma, of councils, of heresies, patrology,
                         symbolics, and Christian archæology. Pastoral theology, which embraces
                         liturgy, homiletics, and catechetics, proceeded from, and bears close
                         relationship to, moral theology; its dependence on dogmatic theology needs,
                         therefore, no further proof.

                         The relation between dogmatic theology and philosophy deserves special
                         attention. To begin with, even when they treat the same subject, as God and the
                         soul, there is a fundamental difference between the two sciences. For, as was
                         said above, the formal principles of the two are totally different. But, this
                         fundamental difference must not be exaggerated to the point of asserting, with
                         the Renaissance philosophers and the Modernists, that something false in
                         philosophy may be true in theology, and vice versa, The theory of the "twofold
                         truth" in theology and history, which is only a variant of the same false principle,
                         is therefore expressly abjured in the anti-Modernist oath. But no less fatal would
                         be the other extreme of identifying theology with philosophy, as was attempted
                         by the Gnostics, later by Scotus Eriugena (d. about 877), Raymond Lullus (d.
                         1315), Pico della Mirandola (d. 1463), and by the modern Rationalists. To
                         counteract this bold scheme, the Vatican Council (Sess. III, cap. iv) solemnly
                         declared that the two sciences differ essentially not only in their cognitive
                         principle (faith, reason) and their object (dogma, rational truth), but also in their
                         motive (Divine authority, evidence) and their ultimate end (beatific vision, natural
                         knowledge of God). But what is the precise relation between these sciences?
                         The origin and dignity of revealed theology forbid us to assign to philosophy a
                         superior or even a co-ordinate rank. Already Aristotle and Philo of Alexandria, in
                         determining the relation of philosophy to that part of metaphysics which is
                         directly concerned with God, pronounced philosophy to be the "handmaid" of
                         natural theology. When philosophy came into contact with revelation, this
                         subordination was still more emphasized and was finally crystallized in the
                         principle: Philosophia est ancilla theologioe. But neither the Church nor the
                         theologians who insisted on this axiom, ever intended thereby to encroach on the
                         freedom, independence, and dignity of philosophy, to curtail its rights, or to lower
                         it to the position of a mere slave of theology. Their mutual relations are far more
                         honourable. Theology may be conceived as a queen, philosophy as a noble lady
                         of the court who performs for her mistress the most worthy and valuable services,
                         and without whose assistance the queen would be left in a very helpless and
                         embarrassing position. That the Church, in examining the various systems,
                         should select the philosophy which harmonized with her own revealed doctrine
                         and proved itself to be the only true philosophy by acknowledging a personal
                         God, the immortality of the soul, and the moral law, was so natural and obvious
                         that it required no apology. Such a philosophy, however, existed among the
                         pagans of old, and was carried to an eminent degree of perfection by Aristotle.

                                 V. DIVISION AND CONTENT OF DOGMATIC THEOLOGY

                         Not only for non-Catholics, but also for Catholic laymen it may be of interest to
                         take a brief survey of the questions and problems generally discussed in
                         dogmatic theology.

                         A. God (De Deo uno et trino)

                         As God is the central idea around which all theology turns, dogmatic theology
                         must begin with the doctrine of God, essentially one, Whose existence,
                         essence, and attributes are to be investigated, While the arguments, strictly so
                         called, for the existence of God are given in philosophy or in apologetics,
                         dogmatic theology insists upon the revealed doctrine that God may be known
                         from creation by reason alone, that is, without external revelation or internal
                         illumination by grace. >From this it follows at once that Atheism must be
                         branded as heresy and that Agnosticism may not plead mitigating
                         circumstances. Nor can Traditionalism and Ontologism be reconciled with the
                         dogma of the natural knowableness of God. For if, as the Traditionalists assert,
                         the consciousness of God's existence, found in all races and ages, is due solely
                         to the oral tradition of our forefathers and ultimately to the revelation granted in
                         Paradise, the knowledge of God derived from the visible creation is at once
                         discounted. The same must be said of the Ontologists, who fancy that our mind
                         enjoys an intuitive vision of God's essence, and is thus made certain of His
                         existence. Likewise, to assume with Descartes an inborn idea of God (idea Dei
                         innata) is out of the question; consequently, the knowableness of God by mere
                         reason, means in the last analysis that His existence can be demonstrated, as
                         the anti-Modernist oath prescribed by Pius X expressly affirms. But this method
                         of arriving at a knowledge of God is toilsome; for it must proceed by way of
                         denying imperfection in God and of ascribing to Him in higher excellence
                         (eminenter) whatever perfections are found in creatures; nor does the light of
                         revelation and of faith elevate our knowledge to an essentially higher plane.
                         Hence all our knowledge of God on this earth implies painful deficiencies which
                         will not be filled except by the beatific vision.

                         The metaphysical essence of God is generally said to be self-existence, which
                         means, however, the fullness of being (Gr. autousia), and not merely the negation
                         of origin (ens a se--ens non ab alio). The so-called positive aseity of Prof. Schell,
                         meaning that God realizes and produces Himself must be as uncompromisingly
                         rejected as the Pantheistic confusion of ens a se with the impersonal ens
                         universale. The relation existing between God's essence and His attributes may
                         not be called a real distinction (theoretical Realism, Gilbert de La Porrée), nor yet
                         a purely logical distinction of the mind (Nominalism). Intermediary between these
                         two objectionable extremes is the formal distinction of the Scotists. But the
                         virtual distinction of the Thomists deserves preference in every regard, because it
                         alone does not jeopardize the simplicity of the Divine Being. If self-existence is
                         the fundamental attribute of God, both the attributes of being and of operation
                         must proceed from it as from their root. The first class includes infinity,
                         simplicity, substantiality, omnipotence, immutability, eternity, and immensity; to
                         the second category belong omniscience and the Divine will. Besides, many
                         theologians distinguish from both these categories the so-called moral attributes:
                         veracity, fidelity, wisdom, sanctity, bounty, beauty, mercy, and justice.
                         Monotheism is best treated in connection with God's simplicity and unity. The
                         most difficult problems are those which concern God's knowledge, especially His
                         foreknowledge of free future actions. For it is here that both Thomists and
                         Molinists throw out their anchors to gain a secure hold for their respective
                         systems of grace, the former for their proemotio physica, the latter for their
                         scientia media. In treating of the Divine will, theologians insist on God's freedom
                         in His external activity, and when discussing the problem of evil, they prove that
                         God can intend sin neither as an end nor as a means to an end, but merely
                         permits it for reasons both holy and wise. while some theologians use this
                         chapter to treat of God's salvific will and the allied questions of predestination and
                         reprobation, others refer these subjects to the chapter on grace.

                         Being the cornerstone of the Christian religion, the doctrine of the Trinity is
                         thoroughly and extensively discussed, all the more because the Liberal theology
                         of the Protestants has relapsed into the ancient error of the Antitrinitarians. The
                         dogma of God's threefold personality, traces of which may be found in the Old
                         Testament, can be conclusively proved from the New Testament and Tradition.
                         The combat which the Fathers waged against Monarchianism, Sabellianism, and
                         Subordinationism (Arius, Macedonius) aids considerably in shedding light on the
                         mystery. Great importance attaches to the logos-doctrine of St. John; but as to
                         its relation to the logos of the Stoic Neoplatonists, the Jewish Philonians, and
                         the early Fathers, many points are still in an unsettled condition. The reason why
                         there are three Persons is the twofold procession immanent in the Godhead: the
                         procession of the Son from the Father by generation, and the procession of the
                         Holy Ghost from both the Father and the Son by spiration. In view of the Greek
                         schism, the dogmatic justification of the addition of the Filioque in the Creed
                         must be scientifically established. A philosophical understanding of the dogma of
                         the Trinity was attempted by the Fathers, especially by St. Augustine. The most
                         important result was the cognition that the Divine generation must be conceived
                         as a spiritual procession from the intellect, and the Divine spiration as a
                         procession from the will or from love. Active and passive generation, together with
                         active and passive spiration, lead to the doctrine of the four relations, of which,
                         however, only three constitute persons, to wit, active and passive generation
                         (Father, Son), and passive spiration (Holy Ghost). The reason why active
                         spiration does not result in a distinct (fourth) person, is because it is one and the
                         same common function of the Father and the Son. The philosophy of this
                         mystery includes also the doctrine of the Divine properties, notions,
                         appropriations, and missions. Finally, with the doctrine of circuminsession which
                         summarizes the whole theology of the Trinity, the treatment of this dogma is
                         brought to a fitting conclusion.

                         B. Creation (De Deo creante)

                         The first act of God's external activity is creation. The theologian investigates
                         both the activity itself and the work produced. With regard to the former, the
                         interest centres in creation out of nothing, around which, as along the
                         circumference of a circle, are grouped a number of secondary truths: God's plan
                         of the universe, the relation between the Trinity and creation, the freedom of the
                         Creator, the creation in time, the impossibility of communicating the creative
                         power to any creature. These momentous truths not only perfect and purify the
                         theistic idea of God, they also give the death-blow to heretical Dualism (God,
                         matter) and to the Protean variations of Pantheism. As the beginning of the world
                         supposes creation out of nothing, so its continuation supposes Divine
                         conservation, which is nothing less than a continued creation. However, God's
                         creative activity is not thereby exhausted. It enters into every action of the
                         creature, whether necessary or free. What is the nature of God's universal
                         co-operation with free rational beings? On this question Thomists and Molinists
                         differ widely. The former regard the Divine activity as a previous, the latter as a
                         simultaneous, concursus. According to Molinism, it is only by conceiving the
                         concursus as simultaneous that true freedom in the creature can be secured,
                         and that the essential holiness of the Creator can be maintained, the fact of sin
                         notwithstanding. The crowning achievement of God's creative activity is His
                         providence and universal government which aims at the realization of the ultimate
                         end of the universe, God's glory through His creatures.

                         The work produced by creation is divided into three kingdoms, rising in tiers one
                         above another: world; man; angel. To this triad correspond dogmatic cosmology,
                         anthropology, angelology. In discussing the first of these, the theologian must be
                         satisfied with general outlines, e. g. of the Creator's activity described in the
                         hexaemeron. Anthropology is more thoroughly treated, because man, the
                         microcosm, is the centre of creation. Revelation tells us many things about
                         man's nature, his origin and the unity of the human race, the spirituality and
                         immortality of the soul, the relation of soul and body, the origin of individual
                         souls. Above all, it tells us of supernatural grace with which man was adorned
                         and which was intended to be a permanent possession of the human race. The
                         discussion of man's original state must be preceded by a theory of the
                         supernatural order without which the nature of original sin could not be
                         understood. But original sin, the willful repudiation of the supernatural state, is
                         one of the most important chapters. Its existence must be carefully proved from
                         the sources of faith; its nature, the mode of its transmission, its effects, must be
                         subjected to a thorough discussion. The fate of the angels runs in many respects
                         parallel to that of mankind: the angels also were endowed with both sanctifying
                         grace and high natural excellences; some of them rose in rebellion against God,
                         and were thrust into hell as demons. While the devil and his angels are inimical
                         to the human race, the faithful angels have been appointed to exercise the office
                         of guardians over mankind.

                         C. Redemption (De Deo Redemptore)

                         As the fall of man was followed by redemption, so the chapter on creation is
                         immediately followed by that on redemption. Its three main divisions: Christology,
                         Soteriology, Mariology, must ever remain in the closest connection. [For the first
                         of these three (Christology) see the separate article.]

                         1. Soteriology

                         Soteriology is the doctrine of the work of the Redeemer. As in Christology the
                         leading idea is the Hypostatic Union, so here the main idea is the natural
                         mediatorship of Christ. After having disposed of the preliminary questions
                         concerning the possibility, opportuneness, and necessity of redemption, as well
                         as of those regarding the predestination of Christ, the next subject to occupy our
                         attention is the work of redemption itself. This work reaches its climax in the
                         vicarious satisfaction of Christ on the cross, and is crowned by His descent into
                         limbo and His ascension into heaven. From a speculative standpoint, a thorough
                         and comprehensive theory of satisfaction remains still a pious desideratum,
                         though promising attempts have often been made from the days of Anselm down
                         to the present time. It will be necessary to blend into one noble whole the hidden
                         elements of truth contained in the old patristic theory of ransom, the juridical
                         conception of St. Anselm, and the ethical theory of atonement. The Redeemer's
                         activity as Mediator stands out most prominently in His triple office of high priest,
                         prophet, and king, which is continued, after the ascension of Christ, in the
                         priesthood and the teaching and pastoral office of the Church. The central
                         position is occupied by the high-priesthood of Christ, which manifests the death
                         on the cross as the true sacrifice of propitiation, and proves the Redeemer to be
                         a true priest.

                         2. Mariology

                         Mariology, the doctrine of the Mother of God, cannot be separated either from the
                         person or from the work of the Redeemer and therefore has the deepest
                         connection with both Christology and Soteriology. Here the central idea is the
                         Divine Maternity, since this is at once the source of Mary's unspeakable dignity
                         and of her surpassing fullness of grace. Just as the Hypostatic Union of the
                         Divinity and humanity of Christ stands or falls with the truth of the Divine
                         Maternity, so too is this same maternity the foundation of all special privileges
                         which were accorded to Mary on account of Christ's dignity. These singular
                         privileges are four: her Immaculate Conception, personal freedom from sin,
                         perpetual virginity, and her bodily Assumption into heaven. For the three former
                         we have doctrinal decisions of the Church, which are final. However, though
                         Mary's bodily Assumption has not yet been solemnly declared an article o faith,
                         nevertheless the Church has practically demonstrated such to be her belief by
                         celebrating from the earliest times the feast of the Assumption of the Mother of
                         God. Two more privileges are connected with Mary's dignity: her special
                         mediatorship between the Redeemer and the redeemed and her exclusive right to
                         hyperdulia. Of course, it is clear that the mediatorship of Mary is entirely
                         subordinate to that of Her Divine Son and derives its whole efficacy and power
                         therefrom. In order the better to understand the value and importance of Mary's
                         peculiar right to such veneration, it will be well to consider, by way of contrast,
                         the dulia paid to the saints and, again, the doctrine concerning the veneration
                         paid to relics and images. For the most part, dogmatic theologians prefer to treat
                         these latter subjects under eschatology, together with the Communion of Saints.

                         3. Grace (De gratia)

                         The Christian idea of grace is based entirely upon the supernatural order. A
                         distinction is made between actual and sanctifying grace, according as there is
                         question of a supernatural activity or merely the state of sanctification. But the
                         crucial point in the whole doctrine of grace lies in the justification of the sinner,
                         because, after all, the aim and object of actual grace is either to lay the
                         foundation for the grace of justification when the latter is absent, or to preserve
                         the grace of justification in the soul that already possesses it. The three qualities
                         of actual grace are of the utmost importance: its necessity, its gratuitousness,
                         and its universality. Although on the one hand we must avoid the exaggeration of
                         the Reformers, and of the followers of Baius and Jansenius, who denied the
                         capability of unaided nature altogether in moral action, yet, on the other hand,
                         theologians agree that fallen man is quite incapable, without the help of God s
                         grace, of either fulfilling the whole natural law or of resisting all strong
                         temptations. But actual grace is absolutely necessary for each and every
                         salutary act, since all such acts bear a causal relation towards the supernatural
                         end of man. The heretical doctrines of Pelagianism and Semipelagianism are
                         refuted by the Church's doctrinal decisions based upon Holy Scripture and
                         Tradition. From the supernatural character of grace flows its second quality:
                         gratuitousness. So entirely gratuitous is grace that no natural merit, no positive
                         capability or preparation for it on the part of nature, nor even any purely natural
                         petition, is able to move God to give us actual grace. The universality of grace
                         rests fundamentally upon the absolute universality of God's salvific will, which, in
                         regard to adults, simply means His antecedent will to distribute sufficient grace
                         to each and every person, whether he be already justified or in the state of sin,
                         whether he be Christian or heathen, believer or infidel. But the salvific will, in as
                         far as it is consequent and deals out just retribution, is no longer universal, but
                         particular, for the reason that only those who persevere in justice, enter heaven,
                         whereas the wicked are condemned to hell. The question of the predestination of
                         the blessed and the reprobation of the damned is admittedly one of the most
                         difficult problems with which theology has to deal, and its solution is wrapped in
                         impenetrable mystery. The same may be said of the relation existing between
                         grace and the liberty of the human will. It would be cutting the Gordian knot
                         rather than loosing it, were one to deny the efficacy of grace, as did Pelagianism,
                         or again, following the error of Jansenism, deny the liberty of the will. The
                         difficulty is rather in determining just how the acknowledged efficacy of grace is
                         to be reconciled with human freedom. For centuries Thomists and Molinists,
                         Augustinians and Congruists have been toiling to clear up the matter And while
                         the system of grace known as syncretic has endeavoured to harmonize the
                         principles of Thomism and Molinism, it has served but to double the difficulties
                         instead of eliminating them.

                         The second part of the doctrine on grace has to do with sanctifying grace, which
                         produces the state of habitual holiness and justice. Preparatory to receiving this
                         grace, the soul undergoes a certain preliminary process, which is begun by
                         theological faith, the "beginning, root and foundation of all justification", and is
                         completed and perfected by other supernatural dispositions, such as contrition,
                         hope, love. The Protestant conception of justifying faith as a mere fiducial faith is
                         quite as much at variance with revelation as is the sola fides doctrine. Catholics
                         also differ from Protestants in explaining the essence of justification itself. while
                         Catholic dogma declares that justification consists in a true blotting-out of sin
                         and in an interior sanctification of the soul, Protestantism would have it to be
                         merely an external cloaking of sins which still remain, and a mere imputation to
                         the sinner of God's or Christ's justice. According to Catholic teaching, the
                         forgiveness of sin and the sanctification of the soul are but two moments of one
                         and the same act of justification, since the blotting-out of original and mortal sin
                         is accomplished by the very fact of the infusion of sanctifying grace. Although we
                         may, to a certain extent, understand the nature of grace in itself, and may define
                         it philosophically as a permanent quality of the soul, an infused habit, an
                         accidental and analogous participation of the Divine nature, yet its true nature
                         may be more easily understood from a consideration of its so-called formal
                         effects produced in the soul. These are: sanctity, purity, beauty, friendship with
                         God, adopted sonship. Sanctifying grace is accompanied by additional gifts, viz.,
                         the three theological virtues, the infused moral virtues, the seven gifts of the Holy
                         Ghost, and the personal indwelling of the Holy Ghost in the soul of the justified.
                         This latter it is that crowns and completes the whole process of justification. We
                         must also mention three qualities special to justification or sanctifying grace: its
                         uncertainty, its inequality, and the possibility of its being lost. All of them are
                         diametrically opposed to the Protestant conception, which asserts the absolute
                         certainty of justification, its complete equality, and the impossibility of its being
                         lost. Finally, the fruits of justification are treated. These ripen under the
                         beneficent influence of sanctifying grace, which enables man to acquire merit
                         through his good works, that is to say, supernatural merit for heaven. The
                         doctrine on grace is concluded with the proof of the existence, the conditions,
                         and the objects of merit.

                         4. Sacraments (De sacramentis)

                         This section is divided into two parts: the treatise on the sacraments in general
                         and that on the sacraments in particular. After having defined exactly what is
                         meant by the Christian sacraments, and what is meant by the sacrament of
                         nature and the Jewish rite of circumcision as it prevailed in pre-Christian times,
                         the next important step is to prove the existence of the seven sacraments as
                         instituted by Christ. The essence of a sacrament requires three things: an
                         outward, visible sign, i.e. the matter and form of the sacrament; interior grace;
                         and institution by Christ. In the difficult problem as to whether Christ himself
                         determined the matter and form of each sacrament specifically or only
                         generically the solution must be sought through dogmatic and historical
                         investigations. Special importance attaches to the causality of the sacraments,
                         and an efficacy ex opere operato is attributed to them. Theologians dispute as to
                         the nature of this causality, i. e. whether it is physical or merely moral. In the
                         case of each sacrament, regard must be had to two persons, the recipient and
                         the minister. The objective efficacy of a sacrament is wholly independent of the
                         personal sanctity or the individual faith of the minister. The only requisite is that
                         he who confers the sacrament intend to do what the Church does. As regards
                         the recipient of a sacrament, a distinction must be made between valid and
                         worthy reception; the conditions differ with the various sacraments. But since the
                         free will is required for validity, it is evident that no one can be forced to receive a
                         sacrament.

                         Furthermore, as regards the sacraments in particular, the conclusions reached
                         with reference to the sacraments in general of course hold good. Thus in the
                         case of the first two sacraments, baptism and confirmation, we must prove in
                         detail the existence of the three requisites mentioned above, as well as the
                         disposition of both the minister and the recipient. The question whether their
                         reception is absolutely necessary or only of precept must also be examined.
                         More than ordinary care is called for in the discussion of the Eucharist, which is
                         not only a sacrament, but also the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Everything
                         centres of course around the dogma of the Real Presence of Christ under the
                         appearances of bread and wine. His presence there is effected by means of the
                         transubstantiation of the Eucharistic elements and lasts as long as the accidents
                         of bread and wine remain incorrupt. The dogma of the totality of the Real
                         Presence means that in each individual species the whole Christ, flesh and
                         blood, body and soul Divinity and humanity, is really present. The Holy Eucharist
                         is, of course, a great mystery, one that rivals that of the Holy Trinity and of the
                         Hypostatic Union. It presents to us a truth utterly variance with the testimony of
                         our senses, asking us, as it does, to assent to the continued existence of the
                         Eucharistic species without their subject, a sort of spiritual existence, unconfined
                         by space, yet of a human body, and, again, the simultaneous presence of Christ
                         in many different places. The sacramental character of the Eucharist is
                         established by the presence of the three essential elements. The outward sign
                         consists in the Eucharistic forms of bread and wine and the words of
                         consecration. Its institution by Christ is guaranteed both by the promise of Christ
                         and by the words of institution at the Last Supper. Finally, the interior effects of
                         grace are produced by the worthy reception of Holy Communion. As Christ is
                         wholly present in each species, the reception of the Eucharist under one species
                         is sufficient to obtain fully all the fruits of the sacrament. Hence the chalice need
                         not be communicated to the laity, though at times the Church has so allowed it
                         to be, but not in any sense as though such were necessary. Not everyone is
                         capable of pronouncing the words of consecration with sacramental effect, but
                         only duly ordained bishops and priests; for to them alone did Christ communicate
                         the power of transubstantiation in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. A distinct
                         phase of the Eucharist is its sacrificial character. This is proved not only from the
                         oldest Fathers and the liturgical practice of the early Christian Church, but also
                         from certain prophecies of the Old Testament and from the Gospel narrative of
                         the Last Supper. To find the physical essence of the Sacrifice of the Mass, we
                         must consider its essential dependence on, and relation to, the bloody sacrifice
                         of the Cross; for the Mass is a commemoration of the latter, its representation,
                         its renewal, and its application. This intrinsically relative character of the sacrifice
                         of the Mass does not in the least destroy or lessen the universality and oneness
                         of the sacrifice on the Cross, but rather presupposes it; likewise the intrinsic
                         propriety of the Mass is shown precisely in this, that it neither effects nor claims
                         to effect anything else than the application of the fruits of the sacrifice of the
                         Cross to the individual, and this in a sacrificial manner. The essence of the
                         sacrifice is generally thought to consist neither in the Offertory nor in the
                         Communion of the celebrant, but in the double consecration. Widely divergent
                         are the views of the theologians as to the metaphysical essence of the sacrifice
                         of the Mass, that is to say, as to the question how far the idea of a real sacrifice
                         is verified in the double consecration. A concurrence of opinion on this point is all
                         the more difficult owing to the fact that the very idea of sacrifice is involved in no
                         little obscurity. As regards the causality of the sacrifice of the Mass, it has all
                         the effects of a true sacrifice: adoration, thanksgiving, impetration, atonement.
                         Most of its effects are ex opere operato, while some depend on the co-operation
                         of the participants.

                         The Sacrament of Penance presupposes the Church's power to forgive sins, a
                         power clearly indicated in the Bible in the words with which Christ instituted this
                         sacrament (John, xx, 23). Moreover, this power is abundantly attested both by
                         the patristic belief in the Church's power of the Keys and by the history of the
                         ancient penitential system. As at the time of Montanism and Novatianism it was
                         a question of vindicating the universality of this power, so nowadays it is a matter
                         of defending its absolute necessity and its judicial form against the attacks of
                         Protestantism. These three qualities manifest at the same time the intrinsic
                         nature and the essence of the Sacrament of Penance. The universality of the
                         power to forgive sins means that all sins without exception, supposing, of course,
                         contrition for the same, can be remitted in this sacrament. Owing to its absolute
                         necessity and its judicial form, however, the sacrament really becomes a tribunal
                         of penance in which the penitent is at once plaintiff, defendant, and witness,
                         while the priest acts as judge. The matter of the sacrament consists in the three
                         acts of the penitent: contrition, confession, and satisfaction while the priestly
                         absolution is its form. To act as judge in the Sacrament of Penance, the
                         confessor needs more than priestly ordination: he must also have jurisdiction
                         which may be restricted more or less by the ecclesiastical superiors. As the
                         validity of this sacrament, unlike that of the others, depends essentially on the
                         worthiness of its reception, great attention must be paid to the acts of the
                         penitent. Most important of all is contrition with the purpose of amendment,
                         containing, as it does, the virtue of penance. The opinion, held by many of the
                         early Scholastics, that perfect contrition is required for the validity of the
                         absolution, is quite irreconcilable with the ex opere operato efficacy of the
                         sacrament; for sorrow, springing from the motive of perfect love, suffices of itself
                         to free the sinner from all guilt, quite antecedent to, and apart from, the
                         sacrament, though not indeed without a certain relation to it. According to the
                         mind of the Council of Trent, imperfect contrition (attrition), even when actuated
                         by the fear of hell, is sufficient for the validity of the sacrament, though we
                         should, of course, strive to call in nobler motives. Therefore the addition of a
                         formal caritas initialis to attrition, as the Contritionists of today demand for the
                         validity of absolution, is superfluous, at least so far as validity is concerned. The
                         contrite confession, which is the second act of the penitent, manifests the
                         interior sorrow and the readiness to do penance by a visible, outward sign, the
                         matter of the sacrament. Since the Reformers rejected the Sacrament of
                         Penance great care must be bestowed upon the Biblical and patristic proof of its
                         existence and its necessity. The required satisfaction, the third act of the
                         penitent, is fulfilled in the penances (prayers, fasting, alms) which, according to
                         the present custom of the Church, are imposed by the confessor immediately
                         before the absolution. The actual fulfillment of such penances is not essential to
                         the validity of the sacrament, but belongs rather to its integrity. The Church's
                         extra-sacramental remission of punishment due to sin is called indulgence. This
                         power of granting indulgences, both for the living and the dead, is included in the
                         power of the Keys committed to the Church by Christ.

                         Extreme Unction may be considered as the complement of the Sacrament of
                         Penance, inasmuch as it can take the place of the latter in case sacramental
                         confession is impossible to one who is unconscious and dangerously ill.

                         While the five sacraments of which we have treated so far were instituted for the
                         welfare of the individual, the last two Holy Orders and Matrimony, aim rather at
                         the well-being of human society in general. The Sacrament of Holy Orders is
                         composed of various grades, of which those of bishop, priest, and deacon are
                         certainly of a sacramental nature, whereas that of subdeacon and the four minor
                         orders are most probably due to ecclesiastical institution. The decision depends
                         on whether or no the presentation of the instruments is essential for the validity of
                         ordination. In the case of the subdiaconate and the minor orders this presentation
                         indeed occurs, but without the simultaneous imposition of hands. The common
                         opinion prevalent today holds that the imposition of hands, together with the
                         invocation of the Holy Ghost, is the sole matter and form of this sacrament. And
                         since this latter obtains only in the case of the consecration of a bishop, priest,
                         or deacon, the conclusion is drawn that only the three hierarchical grades or
                         orders confer ex opere operato the sacramental grace, the sacramental
                         character, and the corresponding powers. The ordinary minister of all orders,
                         even those of a non-sacramental character, is the bishop. But the pope may
                         delegate an ordinary priest to ordain a subdeacon, lector, exorcist, acolyte, or
                         ostiarius. Beginning with the subdiaconate, which was not raised to the rank of a
                         major order until the Middle Ages, celibacy and the recitation of the Breviary are
                         of obligation.

                         Three disciplines treat the Sacrament of Matrimony: dogmatic theology, moral
                         theology, and canon law. Dogmatic theology leads the way, and proves from the
                         sources of faith not merely the sacramental nature of Christian marriage, but also
                         its essential unity and indissolubility. In the case of a consummated marriage
                         between Christians the marriage bond is absolutely indissoluble; but where there
                         is question of a consummated marriage between pagans the bond may be
                         dissolved if one of the parties is converted to the Faith, and if the other conditions
                         of what is known as the "Pauline Privilege" are fulfilled. The bond of a
                         non-consummated marriage between Christians may be dissolved in two cases:
                         when one of the parties concerned makes the solemn profession of religious
                         vows, or when the pope, for weighty reasons, dissolves such a marriage. Finally,
                         the grounds of the Church's power to establish diriment impediments are
                         discussed and thoroughly proved.

                         5. Eschatology (De novissimis)

                         The final treatise of dogmatic theology has to do with the four last things.
                         According as we consider either the individual or mankind in general, there is
                         seen to be a double consummation of all things. For the individual the last things
                         are death and the particular judgment, to which corresponds, as his final state
                         and condition, either heaven or hell. The consummation of the human race on
                         doomsday will be preceded by certain indications of the impending disaster, right
                         after which will occur the resurrection of the dead and the general judgment. As
                         for the opinion that there will be a glorious reign of Christ upon earth for a
                         thousand years previous to the final end of all things, suffice it to remark that
                         there is not the slightest foundation for it in revelation, and even a moderate form
                         of Chiliasm must be rejected as untenable.

                         Definition and Nature: KUHN, Einleitung in die katholische Dogmatik (2nd ed., Tübingen, 1859);
                         SCHRADER, De theologia generatim (Freiburg, 1861); HUNTER, Outlines of Dogmatic Theology, I,
                         (London, 1894); 1 sqq.; WILHELM AND SCANNELL, A Manual of Catholic Theology Based on
                         Scheeben's Dogmatik, I (London, 1899), 1 sqq.; VAN NOORT, De fontibus revelationis necnon de
                         fide divina (2nd ed., Amsterdam, 1911); PICCIRELLI, De catholico dogmate universim. Disquisitio
                         theologica contra Modernistas (Rome, 1911); POHLE, God: His Knowability, Essence and
                         Attributes, tr. PREUSS, (St. Louis, 1911), pp. 1-14; SCHEEBEN, Die Mysterien des Christentums
                         (3rd ed., Freiburg, 1912); SCHANZ in Kirchenlexikon, s. v. Theologie.--From the Anglican
                         standpoint: HALL, Introduction to Dogmatic Theology (New York, 1907).

                         Dogmatic Theology as a Science: SCHANZ, Ist die Theologie eine Wissenschaft? (Tübingen,
                         1900); BRAIG, Freiheit der philosophischen Forschung in kritischer u. christlicher Fassung
                         (Freiburg, 1894); VON HERTLING, Das Princip des Katholicismus u. die Wissenschaft (4th ed.,
                         Freiburg, 1899); PERTNER, Voraussetzungslose Forschung, freie Wissenschaft u. Katholicismus
                         (Vienna, 1902); DONAT, Freiheit der Wissenschaft (Innsbruck, 1910); FÖRSTER, Autoriät u. Freiheit
                         (Kempten, 1910); COHAUSS, Das moderne Denken oder die moderne Denkfreiheit u. ihre Grenzen
                         (Cologne, 1911).--About the anti-Modernist oath cf. REINHOLD, Der Antimodernisteneid u. die
                         Freiheit der Wissenschaft (Vienna, 1911); BAUR, Klarheit u. Wahrheit. Eine Erklärung des
                         Antimodernisteneids (Freiburg, 1911); MARX, Der Eid wider den Modernismus u. die
                         Geschichtsforschung (Trier, 1911); MAUSBACH, Der Eid wider den Modernismus (Cologne, 1911);
                         VERWEYEN, Philosophie u. Theologie im Mittelalter. Die historischen Voraussetzungen des
                         Antimodernismus (Bonn, 1911).

                         The Methods: DE SMEDT, Principes de la critique historique (Liege, 1883); LANGLOIS ET
                         SEIGNOBOS, Introduction aux études historiques (3rd ed., Paris, 1905); BERNHEIM, Lehrbuch der
                         historischen Methode u. Geschichtsphilosophie (5th ed., Leipzig, 1908).--On the Scholastic method
                         cf. KLEUTGEN, Theologie der Vorzeit, V (2nd ed., Münster, 1874), 1 sq.; WOLFF, Credo ut
                         intelligam: Short Studies in Early Greek Philosophy and its Relation to Christianity (London, 1891);
                         RICKABY, Scholasticism (London, 1909); GRABMANN, Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, I,II
                         (Freiburg, 1909-11). On Neoscholasticism cf. TALAMO, Il rinnovamento del pensiere tomistico
                         (Siena, 1878); BERTHIER, L'étude de la Somme théologique de St. Thomas (Fribourg, 1893); DE
                         WULF, Introduction à la philosophie néoscolastique (Louvain, 1904).--Subsidiary to these are:
                         SIGNORIELLO, Lexicon peripateticum philosophico-theologicum (Naples, 1872); SCHÜTZ,
                         Thomas-Lexikon (2nd ed., Paderborn, 1895); GARCIA, Lexicon schoIasticum, in quo definitiones,
                         distinctiones et effata a Joanne Duns Scoto exponuntur (Quaracchi, 1910).--Periodicals: Divus
                         Thomas (Piacenza, 1879); Jahrbuch für Philosophie u. spekulative Theologie by COMMER
                         (Paderborn, 1887---); Philosophisches Jahrbuch der Görresgesellschaft (Fulda, 1888---); Revue
                         thomiste (Fribourg, 1893---); Revue néo-scolastique (Louvain, 1894---); Rivista di Filosofia
                         neo-scholastica (Florence, 1908---); Ciencia tomista (Madrid, 1909---).---On Mysticism cf.
                         SANDREAU, Les degrés de la vie spirituelle (2 vols., Angers, 1897); IDEM, La vie d'union à Dieu
                         (Angers, 1900); IDEM, L'état mystique (Paris, 1903); IDEM, Les faits extraordinaires de la vie
                         spirituelle (Angers, 1908); POULAIN, Des Grâces d'oraison (5th ed., Paris, 1906), tr. YORKE
                         SMITH, the Graces of Interior Prayer (London, 1910); ZAHN, Einführung in die christliche Mystik
                         (Paderborn, 1908); SHARPE, Mysticism: Its True Nature and Value (London, 1910).

                         Relation to other Sciences: STAUDENMEIER, Encyklopädie der Theologie (Freiburg, 1834-40):
                         WIRTHMÜLLER, Encyklopädie der katholischen Theologie (Landshut, 1874); KIHN, Encyklopädie
                         u. Methodologie der Theologie (Freiburg, 1892); KRIEG, Encyklopädie der theologischen
                         Wissenschaft nebst Methodenlehre (2nd ed., Freiburg, 1910); NEWMAN, Idea of a University
                         (London, 1893); CLEMENS, De Scholasticorum sententia Philosophiam esse Theologioe ancillam
                         (MÜnster, 1857); KNEIB, Wissen u. Glauben (2nd ed., Mainz, 1902); CATHREIN, Glauben u.
                         Wissen (5th ed., Freiburg, 1911); WILLMANN, Geschichte des Idealismus (3 vols., Brunswick, 1908);
                         HEITZ, Essai historique sur les rapports entre la Philosophie et la Foi de Bérenger à St. Thomas
                         (Paris, 1909). Division and Contents: POHLE, Christlich-katholische Dogmatik in Die Kultur der
                         Gegenwart by HINNEBERG (Leipzig, 1909), I, IV, 2, p. 37 sqq.; HETTINGER, Timothy, or Letters to
                         a Young Theologian, tr. STEPKA (St. Louis, 1902); HOGAN, Clerical Studies (Philadelphia, 1896);
                         SCANNELL, The Priest's Studies (London, 1908).

                         J. POHLE
                         Transcribed by Douglas J. Potter
                         Dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ

                                           The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIV
                                        Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
                                        Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
                                      Nihil Obstat, July 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
                                     Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York