ST THOMAS AQUINAS 1225-1274
THE DUMB OX WHO CHANGED THE WORLD
                                    THE ANGELIC DOCTOR                                                                                                                                 WHY SAINTS?
    Born to an Italian aristocratic family in 1225, St Thomas Aquinas was an unassuming figure: rotund, quiet and                The concept of venerating particularly holy or faithful religious figures is one common to almost every religious tradition in the world -
    introverted, his peers in college gave him the moniker the dumb ox. However, beneath this introspective                    Buddhism has bodhisattvas, Judaism and Islam have prophets, and Christianity has saints. Originally from the Latin sanctus, meaning
    exterior lay the greatest theologian the Church has ever known - considered the founder of the branch of                     a blessed or holy person, saints are believed to be holy men or women who have lived godly lives and who are blessed by God. Thus
    apologetics known as natural theology, Aquinas magnum opus, the Summa Theologiae, was one of the most                       the Church does not create saints; they only claim to recognise those who have been sanctified by God. Although different
    influential documents in medieval theology, and continues to be a central point of reference for the Catholic                denominations have different views on the powers of saints, and on whether saints should be venerated at all (for example, some
    Church. In one notable example, the Summa Theologiae was reverenced upon the altar along with the Bible at                   Protestant denominations views are that the veneration of saints and figures like the Virgin Mary can sometimes lead to overexalting
    the famous Council of Trent (1545-1563) as the Council Fathers thought it clarified many questions about                     the departed saints and denigrating God - seen in prayers such as sancta Maria, ora pro nobis), it is clear that, for all Christians,
    Christianity. Furthermore, his influence is still visible today in not just Christian theology but Western thought           saints can be good examples as to how one can live a holy and faithful life. In the Catholic tradition, since the 12th century, the Pope
    as a whole - much of modern philosophy either develops or opposes his ideas on a vast range of subjects                      has formally recognised people who have lived holy lives as saints. This process comprises two parts: beatification and canonisation.
    ranging from metaphysics to law and politics, and he is considered to have been a key proponent of the High                  Beatification, or the process of being proclaimed blessed, can be carried out by the Pope. Sometimes this is followed by canonisation,
    Scholastic movement which gave rise to the type of free-thinking practised in universities today. Through his                or the process of being proclaimed a saint; for this to happen (typically no less than 50 years after the candidates death) the church
    teachings, he has shown that Christians should not be afraid to rationalise their faith and spread it as if it is           must establish that the candidate lived a life in accordance with Catholic teachings (orthodoxy of faith) and that they lived a virtuous
    good to contemplate divine things, it is even better to contemplate and transmit them to others - indeed it is              life in the face of adversity (heroic virtue). Typically they must also have been shown to have performed two miracles after their
    good to contemplate divine things, and rational logical Christians should definitely not be thought of as                    death after having been prayed to (at their intercession) - this is meant to be a sign that God has blessed them and that he regards
    vegetarian butchers.                                                                                                       them as worthy of sainthood.
         The Study of philosophy is not that we may know what men have thought, but what the truth of things is. 
                                                                                                                                                                           CANONISATION AND SAINTHOOD
                                                                                                                                             In the case of St Thomas Aquinas, it is not known who beatified him, but he was canonised in Avignon by Pope John XXII
     EARLY LIFE                                                                                                                              on July 18, 1323. This canonisation is notable in that Aquinas had not performed any miracles before he became a saint.
                                                                                                                                             In the Catholic canonisation process, a canon lawyer with the title promotor fidei (Promoter of the Faith), more commonly
                                                                                                                                             known as the advocatus diaboli (Devils advocate), is appointed to argue against the canonisation of a candidate taking a
     St Thomas Aquinas is believed to have been born in 1225, in the castle of Roccasecca in Aquino, a region in the south                   sceptical viewpoint and picking holes in the evidence. They would argue against the advocatus Dei (Gods advocate), who
     of Italy, to Count Lundulf of Aquino and his wife Theodora. As the youngest son in a family of 8, while his other                       would make an argument in favour of canonisation. During Aquinas canonisation, the advocatus diaboli made exactly this
     brothers pursued military careers, his family intended that he, as was expected of a younger son of nobility at the                     objection. However, one of the cardinals present answered, Tot miraculis, quot articulis - there were as many miracles (in
     time, followed his uncle into the monastery. So, at the age of 5, he was sent to the school at the nearby monastery in                  his life) as there are articles (in the Summa), implying that every article in the Summa is inspired by God and is a miracle in
     Monte Cassino, where he remained until, at the age of 14, in early 1239, a conflict between Emperor Frederick II and                    its own right. After his canonisation, his feast day was appointed as the 7th of March, that being the day of his death.
     Pope Gregory IX meant that he was transferred to the studium generale (university) in Naples. There, he was                             However, in the 1969 revision of the Roman calendar, as this date normally falls within Lent, his feast day was moved to
     immersed in the works of philosophers such as Aristotle, Averroes and Maimonides, some of whose ideas would go                          28th January, the date of the moving of his relics to the Church of the Jacobins in Toulouse.
     on to greatly influence him in later life.
     Also during his studies, he met John of St Julian, an evangelistic Dominican preacher in Naples, who so impressed
     him that, at the age of 19, he decided to join the new, scholastic Dominican order. However, this decision did not
     please his family - they fiercely opposed it as they wanted him to become a financially secure abbot or archbishop,
     rather than taking the vow of poverty required by the mendicant Dominicans. In order to prevent his family influencing
     his decision, the Dominicans arranged to move Thomas to Rome and then to Paris; however, on Theodoras orders,
                                                                                                                                                                                       MINDSET AND PHILOSOPHY - THOMISM
     he was kidnapped by his brothers as he was drinking from a spring and taken back to the castle, where he was held
     prisoner for 15 months. During this time, he managed to memorise nearly all of the Bible. Though his family members                                   After the collapse of the Roman Empire, Europe lapsed into the Dark Ages - monasteries formed some of
     tried to persuade him not to join the Dominicans, he grew ever stronger in his resolve; he even refused an offer from                            the few centres of education, and most of Christian thought in this period tended to be mystical and based on
     his parents to buy him the post of Archbishop of Naples. One day, in an effort to make him give up his vows of                              intuition rather than reason and logic. Theology reigned supreme among the sciences, taking the Scripture-based
     celibacy, two of his brothers hired a prostitute to seduce him; according to legend, Thomas drove her away                                stance that knowledge could only come from Gods revelations. However, after Charlemagne established schools in
     brandishing a poker. That night, it is said that he was visited by angels who strengthened his determination to remain                      every abbey in his empire in 787 AB, learning was revived in the West, and scholars started to study non-Christian
     celibate.                                                                                                                                    rational philosophers like Aristotle, whose works had been largely forgotten in Europe for the past few centuries.
                                                                                                                                              However these began to pose a threat to the Christian worldview at the time as they seemed to be able to explain the
     Once Theodora realised she could not change her sons mind, deciding that allowing him to secretly escape would                                                                                      world by observation rather than through the word of God.
     better preserve the family name than a public acceptance of his decision, she arranged for him to escape from a
     window in 1244. Following his escape, Thomas first went to Rome then, the next year, to the University of Paris where                           Eventually, two rival clerical orders sprung up, with different answers to this pressing question: the Franciscans,
     he met the Dominican scholar Albertus Magnus whom he then followed to the studium generale in Cologne in 1248.                             founded by St Francis of Assisi in 1209, and the Dominicans, founded by St Dominic in 1215. While the Franciscans
     At that university, Thomas seldom spoke, leading his peers to believe that he was unintelligent - as he was also                                 stayed close to the teachings of St Augustine, arguing that reason can discover truth only when illuminated by
     considerably slow and large he was given the unfortunate moniker the dumb ox. However, Magnus prophetically                             religious faith, the Dominicans, of which Aquinas was one, placed great emphasis on the use of reason - he believed
     said, You call him the dumb ox, but in his teaching he will one day produce such a bellowing that it will be heard                            that the study of philosophy is not the study of what men have opined, but of what is the truth (something that
     throughout the world.                                                                                                                                                                     many modern philosophers could greatly benefit from remembering).
                                                                                                                                                     During his lifetime, Aquinas sought to rationalise the works of philosophers like Aristotle with Christian doctrine,
                                                                                                                                                      believing that truth is truth, and should be accepted wherever it is found - in fact, he had such great respect for
                                                                                                                                              Aristotle and his logical reasoning that he referred to him as simply The Philosopher. Furthermore, at the beginning
                                                                                                                                             of his immense work, the Summa Theologiae, he is quick to assert that theology included in sacred doctrine differs in
     LATER LIFE AND DEATH                                                                                                                      kind from that theology which is part of philosophy - that there is no reason why  [things which] can be known by
                                                                                                                                                 natural reason, may not also be taught [to] us by  [divine] revelation, but that philosophy was the handmaiden of
                                                                                                                                             theology (ancilla theologiae). Thus he emphasised that someone analysing the world could deduce that an intelligent
     After leaving university, Aquinas taught in Cologne as an apprentice professor, then in 1252 he returned to Paris to                       creator exists, but they would not necessarily be able to find out more about the creator, or about His values - it [is]
     study for a masters degree in Theology, writing a number of dissertations on the books of the Old Testament. In the                       necessary for divine truth to be delivered to [man] by way of faith, being told to them as it were, by God himself who
     spring of 1256, he was appointed regent master of Theology in Paris, and spent his tenure until 1259 writing several                         cannot lie. More succinctly put, you can know about God, and still not know God. This mindset left a mark on the
     books including the Summa contra Gentiles, written to aid missionaries in defending and spreading the Christian faith                       philosophy of religion for long after Aquinas death; a new philosophical school, Thomism, arose as a legacy of his
     especially in Islamic areas. In 1265 Aquinas was appointed as the papal theologian and summoned by the Dominican                                                  work and thought and the Catholic church adopted a mostly Thomist philosophy from then on.
     Chapter of Agnani to teach at the studium conventuale, the first school to teach a full range of both moral and natural
     philosophical subjects. During this period, he began work on his most famous book, the Summa Theologiae,
     specifically suited to beginners - Because a doctor of Catholic truth ought not only to teach the proficient, but to him
     pertains also to instruct beginners. This notwithstanding, the gargantuan, unfinished tome provides one of the most
     complete and in-depth analyses of Christianity and the Catholic Church, and would definitely not be considered a
                                                                                                                                                                                                                             NON NISI TE, DOMINE
                                                                                                                                                   Towards the end of Aquinas life, in 1273, he visited the chapel of St Nicholas in the Dominican convent in Naples.
     resource for beginners today. After another regency in Paris, in 1273, the Dominicans invited Thomas to set up a
                                                                                                                                                          After Matins, he fell deep in prayer, and it is said that he was seen by the sacristan Domenic of Caserta to be
     university in Naples, where he remained for the rest of his life.
                                                                                                                                                 levitating, tearful, before an icon of the crucified Christ. Before him, he could see all of his works, written throughout
                                                                                                                                                   his life. Christ said to Thomas, referencing all he had done to grow the theological riches of the Church, You have
     In his final days, he was invited by Pope Gregory X to attend the Second Council of Lyon, on 1 May 1274, where his
                                                                                                                                               written well of me, Thomas. What reward would you have for your labour? What Aquinas said next was astoundingly
     work concerning the Greeks, Contra errores graecorum, was to be presented. However, on his way to the Council,
                                                                                                                                                   humble: non nisi te, Domine (None other than You, Lord). This is an amazing example of discipleship: few gifts a
     riding a donkey down the Appian Way, he hit his head on the branch of a fallen tree and fell gravely ill, stopping at the
                                                                                                                                                    human has been given by God have paralleled those of Aquinas - such intellectual greatness and influence could
     Cistercian Fossanova Abbey. The monks nursed him for several days, but to no avail. He died on 7 March 1274 while
                                                                                                                                                 easily have led him to become proud of them. However, he reminds us that we should be humble - just as easily as
     giving a commentary on the Song of Songs.
                                                                                                                                                God can give these gifts, He can take them away at any time. His statement tells us that what God wants of us, and
                                                                                                                                               from all his saints, is that we desire Him above all else - though Aquinas had been diligently serving the Lord, he was
                                                                                                                                                         not doing it out of duty, or out of a desire to become famous or successful, or even a desire to escape eternal
     ALL THAT I HAVE WRITTEN SEEMS LIKE STRAW                                                                                                   damnation: he was simply doing it to be with God. So we too should ask ourselves the question: what do we seek in
                                                                                                                                                                                                      life? I hope we can all answer, as Aquinas did, non nisi te, Domine.
     On 6 December 1273, Aquinas had another religious experience - while celebrating Mass he experienced an unusually
     long ecstasy, about which he refused to write or speak. This is believed by Catholics to be a theophany, but no matter
     what the cause, it is clear that it was a life-changing experience in his life - he abandoned his daily routine and
     refused to dictate to his socius, Reginald of Piperno. When urged to resume work, he replied, Reginald, I cannot,
     because all that I have written seems like straw to me (mihi videtur ut palea), probably after realising that even                                                                                              A STUDENTS PRAYER
     theological arguments pale when faced with the power and glory of the Lord. Thus he left his Summa Theologica                                                                                         Come, Holy Spirit, Divine Creator, true source of light and
     unfinished when he died three months later.                                                                                                                                                           fountain of wisdom! Pour forth your brilliance upon my
                                                                                                                                                                                                           dense intellect, dissipate the darkness which covers me,
                                                                                                                                                                                                           that of sin and of ignorance.
                                                                                                                                       	
         SAINTLY ATTRIBUTES                                                                                                                                                                                Grant me a penetrating mind to understand, a retentive
                                                                                                                                                                                                           memory, method and ease in learning, the lucidity to
Pictures (icons) of saints often show them holding
                                                                                                                                                                                                           comprehend, and abundant grace in expressing myself.
something, or alongside different symbols (attributes).
                                                                                                                                                                                                           Guide the beginning of my work, direct its progress, and
In the Roman Catholic tradition, iconography is used
                                                                                                                                                                                                           bring it to successful completion.
as a concise way of delivering religious messages, so
these attributes help to identify them and tell the                                                                                                                                                        This I ask through Jesus Christ, true God and true man,
viewer more about their lives. Aquinas is often shown                                                                                                                                                      living and reigning with You and the Father, forever and
with his Summa, alongside a sun on his chest (a                                                                                                                                                            ever.
symbol of sacred learning), the robes of a Dominican
friar and a model church (possibly perhaps his
theological insights underpin the majority of Roman
Catholic dogma and therefore the Church as a whole).
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Euan	Ong	Wa4	U4W