Aquinas for all?

Leonardo De Chirico  |  Features  |  evangelicals & catholics
Date posted:  1 Jul 2024
Share Add       
Aquinas for all?

Thomas Aquinas

Thomas Aquinas died on 7 March, 1274, 750 years ago. This year and next (the eighth centenary of his birth) there will be special occasions to reckon with his legacy.

To approach Thomas Aquinas (1225– 1274) is to encounter one of the all-time giants of theology. Thomas is second only to Augustine in his influence on Western Christianity.

More specifically, for centuries, Roman Catholicism has regarded Thomas as its champion, the highest, most resounding, most complete voice of Roman Catholic thinking and believing. Canonised by John XXII as early as 1323 only 49 years after his death, he was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church by Pius V in 1567 as the quintessential Catholic theologian whose thinking would defeat the Reformation. During the Council of Trent, the Summa theologiae was symbolically placed next to the Bible as evidence of its primary importance in formulating the Tridentine decrees and canons against justification by faith alone. In the 17th century, Thomas was considered the defender of the Catholic theological system by Robert Bellarmine, the greatest anti-Protestant controversialist who influenced entire generations of Roman Catholic apologists.

Share
< Previous article| Features| Next article >
Read more articles by Leonardo De Chirico >>
Features
Should evangelicals pray with Roman Catholics?

Should evangelicals pray with Roman Catholics?

As I speak at conferences on Roman Catholicism worldwide and how Evangelicals should relate to it, a question often arises: …

Features
Relic religiosity

Relic religiosity

The veneration of relics is tragically alive and well. This September, a relic of the heart of Saint Pio (Padre …

About en

Our vision, values and history.

Read more

Give a subscription

🎁 Get 20% off a subscription for a friend this Christmas!

Tell me more