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St. Thomas Aquinas Catechetical Instructions IntraText CT - Text |
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CHIEF WORKS OF ST. THOMAS
More than sixty separate works, some of great length and some brief, came from the fertile mind of the Angelic Doctor. 6 Most important and, one would wish, most familiar of all his writings is the "Summa Theologica." This is a complete scientific exposition of theology and at the same time a summary of Christian philosophy. St. Thomas considered this work simply as a manual of Christian Doctrine for the use of students. He thus announced its division: "Since the chief aim of this sacred science is to give a knowledge of God, not only as He is in Himself, but also as He is the Beginning of all things and the End of all, especially of all rational creatures - we shall treat first of God; secondly, of rational creatures' advance towards God; thirdly, of Christ who as Man is the Way by which we tend to God." These are the leading ideas of his "Summa," and upon them he based the three Parts of this great work.
The "Summa contra Gentiles," whose full title is "Treatise on the truth of the Catholic Faith against Unbelievers" (1258-1261), is the most profound and doubtless the most powerful apologetically work ever written. It is St. Thomas' "Summa philosophica," taking philosophy in the modern sense. The long list of Commentaries on the Sacred Scriptures are exhaustive, of great depth, and of permanent value. The "Perfection of the Spiritual Life" is one of the classics in the field of ascetical and mystical theology, and together with pertinent parts of the "Summa" forms a complete explanation of the Christian higher life. 7 St. Thomas also wrote the admirable "Office for the Feast of Corpus Christi" with its familiar prayers and hymns. 8
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6. For a complete list of St. Thomas' writings: Cayre, "loc. cit."; Maritain, "The Angelic Doctor," pp. 179-183' Catholic Encyclopedia," XIV, 666 sqq.
7. Cf. Hugh Pope, O. P., "On Prayer and the Contemplative Life by St Thomas" (Benziger Bros., 1914).
8. It contains the "Pangua lingu" with "Tantum ergo" among its verses, "Sacris Solemnis" with the lines of "Panis angelicus," "Verbum supernum" with its concluding verse, "O salutaris hostia." The antiphon of the Office is the beautiful "O Sacrum Convivium." The Prayer said by the celebrant at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, "Deus qui nobis sub Sacramento mirabili, etc.," is also a part of this Office. The Eucharistic poem, "Adoro te devote," is also probably by St. Thomas, who is rightly called the Doctor of the Eucharist.
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