| 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 |