The Vietnamese Church is working to gather evidence relevant to the cause of beatification of Vietnamese Cardinal Francis Xavier Van Thuan, promoted by the Pontifical Council “Justice and Peaceâ€, of which Van Thuan was President.
As reported to Fides from local sources in the diocese of Hue (Central Vietnam), among the testimonies gathered by the Church of Hue, there are two women (a nun and a lay person) who claim to have been healed through the intercession of the Cardinal.
Fides is able to anticipate briefly the two stories.
Sister Marie Thi Lan, of the Congregation of the Daughters of Mary Immaculate, said that in 2009 she had to undergo a delicate eye surgery. The doctors never gave her assurances that her sight problems would have been resolved and feared the danger of blindnessâ€. I prayed to the Cardinal and my eyes healed without surgery,†says the nun.
Also in the diocese of Hue, a woman of the parish of Thach Han, Mrs. Mary Le Thi Than, aged 70, was bed-ridden for over 40 years because of a severe form of neuralgia. She relied on prayer and intercession of Cardinal Van Thuan and has recently healed, resuming a normal life and daily activities, which for decades was unable to do.
Full Story:Â A nun and a lay healed through the intercession of Cardinal Van Thuan
Source:Â Fides
Article taken from ucanews.com - http://www.ucanews.com
URL to article:Â http://www.ucanews.com/2012/03/22/evidence-found-for-beatification-of-vietnamese-cardinal/
Our liturgical beginning of the season of Lent starts today with Ash Wednesday. It marks the beginning of the time of the year when we are challenged to take a deeper look into ourselves and to examine our lives so that we can work on changing certain habits or actions which do not help us on our way to building up God’s kingdom on earth.
 Today’s ashes bring to our mind one of the most famous lines in the Bible: “Remember that you are dust and to dust you will return” (cf. Genesis 3:19).
This is a natural thought for every Christian, and a source of strength to stay faithful even when difficulties arise, instead of following the path of the law of the minimum effort through life.
The law of nature tells us that there is no life without death. The law of super-nature, the law of our Christian faith, tells us that there is no resurrection without a cross.
Lent tells us that there is no spiritual growth without self-denial.  During Lent we are encouraged to self-sacrifice through almsgiving, fasting and prayer, and we may do so. However, we may give alms just to demonstrate our generosity. We may pray just to make an impression on others. Our praying may simply be an attempt to demonstrate our exceptional piety. We may fast, not really to humble ourselves in the sight of God, but to show our brothers and sisters what a splendid self disciplined character we have. We may practice good works simply to win praise from men. All these, according to the Gospel, will be useless; will be a waste of time because, as the Gospel says, you have already received your reward. So the external manifestations must spring from our internal spirit. All the penitential manifestations will remain meaningless if they remain peripheral.
The ashes spread on our forehead must be a reminder throughout the season of Lent that we need a constant examination of our life to make it socially useful. Only from this perspective our custom of giving up something for Lent will make sense.
By giving up something that we like, by voluntarily giving that up, we are exercising our faith that this life is not all that exists, we are reminding ourselves that we cannot achieve the purpose for which we were created. Just by trying to create heaven on earth through self-indulgence, we are expressing our confidence in God, in his revelation about the meaning of life and death. There would be no reason for self-denial if we didn’t believe in Christ’s Kingdom. Giving up something for Lent, strengthens our spirit. We are training our souls in self-discipline and self-mastery. There are times in life when in order to do the right thing, or in order to help someone else who is in trouble, we have to be able to renounce our own preferences or desires.
Ash Wednesday reminds us of this great truth, the transitory nature of our existence. The ashes tell us that we all are mortal.
The call to repentance that echoes through today’s readings shows us the same thing – life on earth will not go on forever, so we need to take responsibility for it, to live it the way God meant it to be lived. Otherwise we will fail in our purpose; we will fail to reach the destination we are meant for: eternal life.
VATICAN CITY, FEB. 6, 2012 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the homily Benedict XVI gave last Thursday at vespers on the feast of the Presentation of the Lord, which is also the World Day of Consecrated Life.
Dear brothers and sisters!
The Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, 40 days after Jesus’ birth, shows us Mary and Joseph, who in obedience to the Mosaic Law travel to the temple of Jerusalem to offer the child, as the first born, to the Lord and ransom him by a sacrifice (cf. Luke 2:22-24). It is one of the cases in which the liturgical time reflects historical time, because today it has been precisely 40 days since the Solemnity of the Birth of the Lord; the theme of Christ the Light, which has characterized the cycle of Christmas feasts and culminates in the Solemnity of Epiphany, is taken up again and prolonged in today’s feast.
The ritual gesture of Jesus’ parents, which takes place in the form of the humble discretion that characterizes the Incarnation of the Son of God, is received in a unique way by the elderly Simeon and the prophetess Anna. By divine inspiration they recognize in that child the Messiah announced by the prophets. In the meeting between the venerable old Simeon and Mary, the young mother, the Old and the New Testament join together in a marvelous way in giving thanks for the gift of the Light, which shown in the darkness and prevented it from taking over: Christ the Lord, light to enlighten the nations and the glory of his people Israel (cf. Luke 2:32).
On the day in which the Church recalls the presentation of Jesus in the temple, we celebrate the Day of Consecrated Life. In effect, the Gospel episode to which we refer constitutes a significant icon of the self-donation of those who have been called to represent, in the Church and in the world, the characteristic traits of Jesus: virgin, poor, obedient, the Consecrated One of the Father. Thus in today’s feast we celebrate the mystery of consecration: the consecration of Jesus, the consecration of Mary, the consecration of all those who place themselves in the following of Jesus for the love of the Kingdom of God.
Following the ideas of Blessed John Paul II, who celebrated it for the first time in 1997, the day dedicated to the consecrated life has some particular purposes. It intends to respond first of all to the need to praise and thank the Lord for the gift of this state of life, which pertains to the sanctity of the Church. To each consecrated person today is dedicated the prayer of the whole Community, who gives thanks to God the Father, giver of every good gift, for the gift of this vocation, and with faith calls upon him once more. Moreover, this occasion aims to increase more and more the recognition of the value of the witness of those who have chosen to follow Christ through the practice of the evangelical counsels by promoting knowledge and esteem for the consecrated life among the People of God. Finally, the Day of Consecrated Life intends to be, above all for you, dear brothers and sisters, who have embraced this state in the Church, a precious occasion to renew the decisions and revive the sentiments that have inspired and inspire your gift of yourselves to the Lord. This we wish to do today; this is a task that you are called to accomplish every day of your life.
On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council, I have, as you know, called for the Year of Faith, which will open in October. All of the faithful, but in a special way the members of the institutes of consecrated life, have welcomed this initiative as a gift, and I hope that they will live the Year of Faith as a favorable time for interior renewal — for which one always feels the need — with a deepening of the essential values and of the demands of their consecration. During the Year of Faith you, who have accepted the call to follow Christ more closely through the profession of the evangelical counsels, are called to deepen still further your relationship with God. The evangelical counsels, accepted as an authentic rule of life, reinforce the faith, hope and charity that unite us to God. This profound nearness to the Lord, which must be the element that has priority and that characterizes your existence, will bring you to a renewed commitment to him and it will have a positive influence on your particular presence and the form of your apostolate among the People of God, through the contribution of your charisms, in fidelity to the magisterium, with the goal of being witnesses of faith and grace, credible witnesses for the Church and the world of today.
The Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, with the means that it will judge adequate, will suggest directions and do its best to ensure that this Year of Faith constitutes for all of you a year of renewal and fidelity, so that all consecrated men and women engage in the new evangelization with enthusiasm. While I address my cordial greeting to the prefect of that dicastery, Monsignor João Braz de Aviz — whom I have chosen to be among those whom I will make cardinals at the next consistory — I gladly welcome this moment to thank him and his collaborators in the precious service that they give to the Holy See and to the whole Church. [Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic]
On January 28, Feast of St. Thomas Aquinas, and after the proclamation of the Gospel, a new Moderator of Studies for the Center of Institutional Studies of the Province of Our lady of the Rosary, Fr. Jose Luis de Miguel, OP made his Profession of Faith and Oath of Fidelity. Thereafter, Fr. Jose Luis pronounced the following Homily (Editor)
Promising fidelity to God, to Jesus his Son, to the Gospel he preached and the Church he established, and being faithful to the mission entrusted by the Spirit to the members of the Order of Preachers, makes me feel as if I were renewing those promises of long ago, made in fear and trembling, trusting not in one´s own strength, but in God´s mercy.
In our Order, when we make promises, we do it in the presence of and surrounded by our brothers: we place our weakness into their hands, and thus, strengthened by them, we look to the future with faith and confidence, joyful for the joint venture of announcing to the world the Good News of the Gospel of Jesus.
Ever, since the beginning of our eight centuries old history, it has been customary to have a Centre of Studies in our houses of formation, to secure that the preparation of our younger brothers to carry out the mission entrusted to them by the Spirit and confirmed by the Church, is guaranteed. Thus started our Studium, that in our present situation, here in Macau, will count with the very highly esteemed cooperation of the Catholic University of Saint Joseph, towards which we cannot but express our deepest gratitude.
In his words of farewell, Jesus made it clear to his disciples that he would not leave them alone; he himself, together with his Spirit, would accompany them. This is, and it will always be, our trust, our hope and our joy.
However, this promise does not, in any way, dispense us from the responsibilities we must assume to bring, in a dignified manner, the good news of the gospel to our fellow women and men of today. And we must do it in fidelity to our Dominican vocation.
The mission entrusted to us by the Lord in the construction of his Kingdom, demands that we be prepared not only to be familiar with God´s revelation, expressed in the Holy Scriptures, but also that we be trained to be able to talk to our fellow men and women about God, and to share with them their anxieties, their interests, their desires and hopes. More and more every day, we must also be ready to face their possible disagreements with us and humbly explain to them the reason for our hope.
In the convent, or in any other centre of learning, the Dominican prepares himself –he does not preserve himself- to engage in the battles of the spirit, wherever the doctrinal or human problems present themselves acutely. In the cultural crossroads, in the “agoras†of the world and in any place where religious and profane sciences convene, the Dominican makes himself present, to offer the fruit of his study at the light of the Gospel. We are speaking, therefore, about a serious, exigent, and always up to date study, which takes into account our fidelity to the Word revealed, as well as to the questions that people pose to themselves, even if sometimes they are not aware of it.
All these challenges make it necessary to study hard, and constantly, since it is greatly through the means of our study that we shall be able to enter into dialogue with our contemporaries, respectfully listening to their questions and sharing with them the fruit of our effort. Thus, our study becomes, in the first place, an act of love, for we do it not just for our own personal interests, but to share the truth we pursue and place it at the service of others.
This demands of us and open mind to understand the plans of God for his people –his children- today, and an equal openness to accept the “truths†that they, too, in their own way, seek; for as Saint Thomas Aquinas, quoting Saint Ambrose, used to say, “the truth, no matter where it comes from, is always from the Holy Spiritâ€. Saint Thomas Aquinas himself, whose glorification we are commemorating today, is an extraordinary example of how we can be salt and light today, at the service of our people and with the joy and good taste of Jesus in our hearts.
***
In the passage of the gospel, just proclaimed, Jesus tells his disciples –he tells all of us, his followers-, that, if we live the beatitudes, we cannot but pay attention to the social dimension of our faith. He says it with two very delightful, unforgettable metaphors: “Lookâ€, he tells them, “you are an insignificant group of persons, lost in the midst of this powerful Roman empire, and yet, I´ve called you to be the “salt of the earthâ€, and the “light of the worldâ€.
“Salt†and “Lightâ€â€¦, ¿of the world? ¿Would that not be too pretentious?
Jesus explains to them how this will be possible. Salt, he says, does not seem to be very important; and yet, its effects are noticeable, precisely when it mixes with the food and seems to have disappeared.
We all know what the purpose of salt is, and of the use we make of it is. on one hand, it is used to preserve the food, so that it won´t rot; on the other hand, it serves to add taste to the food we consume, it makes it more tasteful. Food is good, but it can rot. It is tasteful, but sometimes not tasteful enough. With salt food becomes tastier.
Our study, carried out in the silence of our room, is meant to enable us to preserve the best tradition of our Church that links us to our very roots, which are in Christ. It also enables us to proclaim to others the good news of the gospel, helping them to live more meaningfully, more tastefully and more joyously. ¿Are we salty enough to give taste to the life of our contemporaries? ¿Who are the ones benefitted by our presence in their lives?
As for the light, Jesus was, once more, extremely generous, entrusting to each and every one of us a task that belongs exclusively to Him. When we are in darkness and switch on a light, no matter how small, it brightens the whole atmosphere, filling it with life, meaning and sense. We are called to shed light to this world, at times immersed in thick shadows. It is useless, and a sign of little faith, to waste our time lamenting incessantly about the wrongdoings that we detect around. As the English saying goes, “Do not course darkness, light a matchâ€! Light, not darkness, has the last word.
Our task is to be light for others, so that they can see, and eventually feel embraced and enlightened by the light of Christ. We should not forget, though, that we do not shine on our own; we just share the light that comes from Jesus and then, out of his grace, we reflect it to others. We are light in the deepest sense of the word, when other people can see in us “the good works†and be moved to glorify our Father in heaven. That is why our light cannot be kept hidden. That would be mean and stupid. Our light is ordained to enlighten our fellow men, so that they can discover the true face of our Father in heaven.
Saint Thomas, our brother, is a good example of how we can be salt and light today, at the service of our people and with the joy and good taste of Jesus in our hearts. Blessed are those who are “salt†and “lightâ€, for they shall be rewarded with the love and mercy of our Father for time everlasting.

José Luis de Miguel, OP
Moderator
St. Dominic Center of Studies
Macau
SOME INTRODUCTORY NOTES ON
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS
In the following pages, I present some brief notes on St. Thomas Aquinas. I shall focus on five points: first, life of Aquinas; second, profile of his life; third, his works; fourth, relevance of St. Thomas, and five, some references (mainly the ones I have used here) on his life and works.
1. LIFE OF ST. THOMAS: HIGHLIGHTS
Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) was born in Roccaseca, Italy, about 1225. He studied with the Benedictine Monks of Monte Cassino. When he was around 14 years old, he studied at the University of Naples. Five years later, he joined the Dominican Order: in 1244, at 19, against the wishes of the family. In 1245, he went to Paris to pursue the institutional studies; in Paris, he studied under Albert the Great. His classmates called Thomas “the dumb ox.â€
Albert told them: “You call this man a dumb ox, but I tell you that the time will come when the bellowing of his doctrine will be heard to the ends of the earth.†In 1248, he went with Albert to Cologne, where he completed his studiers and was ordained to the priesthood. At 27, he went to Paris and taught at St. Jacques and later became professor of theology at the University of Paris. He also taught in different cities of Italy (Anagni, Orvieto, Rome, Viterbo). In 1269, Thomas returned to Paris to teach. He was considered a controversial teacher by some other teachers and professors: for some disciples of Averroes, because Thomas did not accept the doctrine on two truths (one philosophical and one theological); for traditionalists, because he was too liberal, especially by rationalizing faith too much. The Angelic Doctor defended that reason and faith are two sources of knowledge – a point underlined by John Paul II in Fides et Ratio, and also by Benedict XVI in some of his papal Addresses. Thomas was admired by many for his clarity, brevity and originality. In 1272 was called back to Naples to inaugurate a Dominican House of Studies, be the Regent of Studies and teach. He died on March 7, 1274, at the Cistercian Monastery of Fossanova between Naples and Roma, when he was on his way to the Second Council of Lyons.
Thomas is a great humanist, philosopher and theologian, saint and mystic. The Church has given him many titles, including Angelic Doctor, Doctor of the Church, Doctor of Divinity, Universal Doctor, and Doctor of Humanity. His distinctive sign is the sun, because “while he gives the light of science to the intellects, he lights up the wills with the flame of virtue.â€
Throughout his life, Thomas had a single commitment, that is, the unshakeable and uncompromising commitment to search for the truth. Indeed, he was “veritatis unice amator,†lover of truth only! Every truth, he wrote, “regardless of who said it, comes from the Holy Spiritâ€: “Omne verum a quocumque dicatur, a Spiritu Sancto est†(Summa Theologiae, I-II, 109, 1 ad 1).
I wish to mention here two symbolic stories. Thomas is a young boy, maybe between 6 and 9 years of age. He was then studying with the Benedictine monks of Monte Cassino. One day his teacher asked him: “Thomas, what do you dream?†The boy answered quickly: “I look for God, master, what is God?â€
After having written much and well, Thomas had a special encounter with Christ, a vision of God, which prompted the theologian to utter humbly: “All that I have written is straw.†It was on December 6, 1273 during the Mass of St. Nicholas in the Church of St. Dominic in Naples. After this vision, just a few months before his death, Thomas did not write anything more and even abandoned the instruments of writing. (Bruno Forte wrote a little lovely book on the silence of Thomas from December 6, 1273 to March 1274. In 71 pages, theologian Forte contemplates the mystery of Thomas’ silence and expresses it meditatively in prose and verse.)
Â
2. PROFILE OF SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS
Thomas Aquinas was tall, probably 1.90 meters, and stout, and sensitive to cold weather. (Main source for this section: S. Ramirez, OP).
He was very intelligent, had great memory and was very industrious and curious. (This curiosity he had since he was a child. He asked his teacher at Monte Cassino: “Quid est Deus?†Later on he will speak of disordered curiosity as a vice opposed to the virtue of studiositas, or studiousness, which includes healthy curiosity) He loved to read, meditate and contemplate. He avoided useless chatting. Following his Father Dominic, he only talked with God or of God. His favorite pastime during recreation was to stroll in the cloister or garden. He was, we are told, very affable and kind.
Thomas was called by his students “il buon fra Tommaso†(Dante Alighieri, in Ramirez, 58). He was pure of heart and sober in eating and drinking. He loved poverty and was happy with his poor habit and poor pair of shoes. He had the heart of a mother towards the poor.
He was very humble as a student, a teacher and a member of the community. He refused high ecclesiastical positions.
He was a patient man. In Paris, at the beginning of his teaching and especially during his second turn as master, he was maligned and called all kinds of names. He never reacted. However, he was strong and energetic in promoting and defending the truth.
Thomas was prudent, “prudentissimus Frater Thomas.†He was a man of prayer, a contemplative man. In his life, there was no opposition but integration between prayer and study, contemplation and action (see II-II, 181, 3). He was very devoted to the Holy Eucharist and celebrated one Mass and heard another Mass daily. He was very devoted to Our Mother Mary. (At margins of his Summa Contra Gentiles, we find repeatedly in his hand-writing the words Ave Maria.) He was also devoted to the angels about whom he wrote incredibly well. He was, moreover, devoted to the saints and in particular to St. Agnes. He read every day a chapter of the Collationes of Cassian: “to maintain alive in his heart the fire of devotion and the love of God.†A. Sertillanges says that “learning goes hand in hand with virtue-ing.†So it was in the case of Thomas Aquinas.
He had the gift of tears and cried when meditating on the Passion and Death of Jesus, and at Compline, when singing “Do not abandon us, Lord, when we are old†(Ps 70).
Thomas was – and continues to be – an outstanding teacher and writer. He was also a great preacher. We are told that Thomas preached a series of sermon during the Lent of 1273 at the Church of San Domenico in Naples. John Coppa, a contemporary of St. Thomas tells us that “almost the whole population of Naples went to hear his sermons every day.†And his first biographer, William Tocco affirms: “He was heard by the people with such reverence that it was as if his preaching came forth from God.â€
After Thomas passed away (March 7, 1274), St. Albert the Great proclaimed: “My son Thomas, flower of the world and light of the Church has passed away.â€
The three qualities of the spirituality of St. Thomas are, according to Mons. Grabmann: wisdom, charity and peace.
Thomas Aquinas was canonized by John XXII in Avignon on July 18, 1323. He was declared Doctor of the Church by Pius V in 1567. He was named Patron of Catholic Schools by Pope Leo XIII.
St. Thomas is doctor and saint. He has been described as “the wisest of the saints and the holiest of the wise†(Cardinal Bessarion).
3.WORKS OF ST. THOMAS
(Main source: S. Ramirez, OP)
It is almost unimaginable that Thomas could write so much in so short a time: he died at 49, and wrote the last 21 years of his life – from 1252 to 1273. In these two decades, Thomas wrote 891 lessons on the books of Aristotle, 803 lessons on Sacred Scriptures, 850 chapters on the Gospels (his Catena Aurea), 463 chapters in his Summa contra Gentiles, 2.991 articles on the Master of the Sentences Peter Lombard, about 1200 chapters of his many minor works (opuscula), 510 articles in Disputed Questions, 260 articles in Quodlibet Questions and 2.669 articles in the Summa Theologiae. Chesterton is right when he says: “Thomas produced books enough to sink a ship or to stock a library.â€
Thomas writes on about every science: from grammar to homiletics, metaphysics, dogma, morals, casuistry. In the last years of his life, Thomas had 3 to 4 secretaries to write his lessons. Probably, he dedicated 16 hours per day to do his work. His life was focused on two things: prayer and study. He knew very well the Bible, the Sentences of Peter Lombard, the works of Aristotle, of the Pseudo-Dionisio and of St. Augustine. He enters into dialogue with everybody in search of the truth, the commitment of his life. His favorite authors are Aristotle and St. Augustine, but he did not exclude anyone, and he is most grateful to all, including those who taught some errors (II-II, 49, 3 ad 2; In II Metaphysicorum, lect. 9, n. 2.566). Moreover, a great innovator in many ways, Thomas was faithful to the magisterium of the Church.
Ramirez enumerates 130 works authored by Thomas. These works are of different importance, significance and volume. Thomas’ writings include the following:
- Commentaries to the Old (6) and the New (17) Testaments;
- Â Commentaries to philosophers, particularly to Aristotle (11);
- Commentaries to theologians – Peter Lombard, Boethius, Pseudo-Dionisio;
- Disputed questions (13) and Quodlibet questions ((11);
- Minor (opuscula) books of theology (22), and of philosophy (23);
- Lectures and sermons (15).
Beside the Summa Theologiae (the textbook of theology for centuries) his other major works are: Summa contra Gentiles and Compendium Theologiae. He wrote Summa contra Gentiles between the years 1258 and 1265. It is a synthesis of Christian doctrine for non-Christians, particularly Jews and Muslims. His Compendium Theologiae (1261-1269) is also a synthesis of Christian doctrine, but for Christians.
4. RELEVANCE OF ST. THOMAS AQUINAS
St. Thomas Aquinas continues to be very important and significant for theology and, in particular, for the Dominicans for whom he is essential part of their tradition. St. Thomas continues to be important also for the whole Church, which made him Doctor of the Church and Patron of Catholic Universities.
The Dominican sage is still – as Vatican II calls him – a special master (OT, 16) and guide (GE, 10). In his encyclical Veritatis Spendor (1993), Pope John Paul II describes him as outstanding philosopher and Paul VI in Lumen Ecclesiae, 10 as apostle of truth (also John Paul II, Fides et Ratio, 44). The Angelic Doctor is “light for the Church and the whole world†(Paul VI, Lumen Ecclesiae, 1974; see Sapientia Christiana, art. 71 footnote 23, and art. 80 footnote 26; in both footnotes we read: “See especially the letter of Paul VI on Saint Thomas Aquinas Lumen Ecclesiae of 20 November 1974â€; Canon Law, 252, # 3). Benedict XVI pictures him as a model theologian. Great theologians have recommended him, including Karl Rahner, Chenu, Congar, Schillebeeckx, Gustavo Gutierrez and Clodovis Boff.
Certainly, Thomas is not “the exclusive doctor†of the Church: there are 32 more doctors of the Church, including three women – only! The Catechism of the Catholic Church (1992, 1997), or CCC, quotes St. Thomas 61 times. Benedict XVI has pronounced 4 important addresses on St. Thomas in 2010, underlining his masterfulness in harmonizing faith and reason, and his Summa Theologiae (see specific references in number 5 below)).
As Dominicans, we study St. Thomas not to repeat him but to re-create him in our time. I quote the pertinent words of our brother Dominican Yves Congar:
St. Thomas is a master of thought, a model of loyalty and intellectual honesty, a man of dialogue, the symbol of open-mindedness, the genius of reality. We should remain faithful to his spirit… I doubt that a better intellectual guide can be found… I am distressed when I see young clerics, sometimes even seminary professors trying to invent a new synthesis from scratch – “to meet the needs of modern man,†as they say… St Thomas is proposed as a master (by Vatican II). This does not mean simply repetition and the exclusion of other theologians. Rather it means that we study under his guidance; we follow his spirit
Writes Benedict XVI: “In our catechesis on the Christian culture of the Middle
Ages, we now turn to St. Thomas Aquinas, known as the Doctor Communis, whose life and teaching have always been revered as an outstanding model for theologians… Among the many commentaries and systematic works, the great Summa Theologiae reveals his critical gifts and his conviction of the natural harmony between faith and reason†(Address: June 2, 2010).
5. SOME REFERENCES
As we all know, there are hundreds of excellent books on St. Thomas. I just mention the following:
- Aquinas Thomas, Summa Theologiae (I, II, III).(See works of St. Thomas Aquinas in different web sites, Universidad de Navarra: http://www.corpusthomisticum.org/ Id., The Aquinas Catechism. Manchester: New Hampshire, Sophia Institute Press, 2000.
- Benedict XVI, “Aquinas: Harmony between Reason and Faith,†Address: Vatican City: January 28, 2010; “On Thomas Aquinas,†Address: Vatican City, June 2, 2010; “On Aquinas Philosophy and Theology,†Address: Vatican City, June 16, 2010; “On the Summa Theologiae,†Address: Vatican City: June 23, 2010.
- Diogenes Allen and Eric O. Springsted, “Aquinas Program and Two Critics, Karl Barth and Process Theology,†in their book Philosophy for Understanding Theology, 2nd Ed. Louisville/London: Westminster John Knox Press, 1985, 2007, pp.103-112.
- Forment Eudaldo, Santo Tomás de Aquino. Su vida, su obra y su época. Madrid: BAC, 2009.
- Forte Bruno, El silencio de Tomás. Buenos Aires: Paulinas, 1999.
- Geffré Claude OP, and Thomas F. O’Meara, OP, Thomas Aquinas and Contemporary Thought, Ed. Richard Woods, OP, Illinois, River Forest: Priory of St. Dominic and St. Thomas, 1989, pp. 1-58.
- Grabmann Martin, The Interior Life of St. Thomas Aquinas. Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company, 1951.
- Kerr Fergus, Thomas Aquinas. A Very Short Introduction. London: Oxford University Press, 2009
- Ramirez Santiago, OP, Introducción a Santo Tomás. Madrid: BAC, 1975.
- Spiazzi Raimondo, OP, Santo Tomás de Aquino. BiografÃa documentada de un hombre bueno, inteligente, verdaderamente grande, Traducida por Aristónico Montero, OP. Madrid: Edibesa, 2004.
- Torrell, Jean-Pierre, OP. Aquinas’s Summa. Background, Structure, & Reception, Trans. by Benedict M. Guevin, OSB. Washington, D. C.: The Catholic University Press, 2005.
- Gomez Fausto, OP, “Theology, Theology of Liberation and St. Thomas,†in his book Liberation Theology & Christian Liberation. Manila: UST Social Research Center, 1987, pp. 71-83; Id. “Relevance of St. Thomas Aquinas on Justice Today,†in his book The Journey Continues: Notes on Ethics and Bioethics. Manila: University of Santo Tomas, 2009, pp. 141-170.
F. Gomez Berlana, OP
St. Dominic Center of Studies
St. Dominic’s Priory
Macau, January 2012
Second Sunday of Ordinary Time, year of Mark, John the Apostle tells us this story of vocation: “John (the Baptist) was standing with two of his disciples, and as he watched Jesus walk by, he said, ‘Behold, the Lamb of God.’ The two disciples heard what he said and followed Jesus. Jesus turned and saw them following him and said to them, ‘What are you looking for?’ They said to him, ‘Rabbi’ – which translated means Teacher -, ‘where are you staying?’ He said to them, ‘Come, and you will see.’ So they went and saw where Jesus was staying, and they stayed with him that day” (John 1:35-39).
Normally people have the same desire to become better and better - to transcend themselves. It is because “man is created by God and for God; and God never ceases to draw man to himself. Only in God will he find the truth and happiness he never stops searching for” (CCC. 27). As people want to fulfill their life with a meaning they find out that God alone is the eternal good, from him and to him they have a full life. The psalmist today says, “I delight to do your will, my God; your law is in my inner being!” (Psalm 40:9). For us Christians, Christ Jesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, through whom we will go to God the Father (cf. John 14:6).
If the two disciples of John the Baptist (Andrew and John, son of Zebedee), as they had met and followed Jesus, were invited to come and discern the place where the Lord stayed; today also we are invited to “come” and discern Christ in our heart through faith (cf. Ephesians 3:17). The question is, how can we “come” to the Lord once He is already in our heart? The invitation “come” implies the expectation of getting closer – the action that expresses proximity of relationship. Here the Buddhist meditation technique “Vipassana” (insight) could be of some help: Being uninterruptedly mindful! Not by walking round to find things outside but by watching into ourselves we can come closer to God, who is always in our heart and even obviously so when we love and obey the teaching of Jesus (cf. John 14:23).
Living in a media manipulated society like nowadays, let us fall not into the trap of things that attract us on the outside but distract us from listening inside to God’s call. May we be always simple and faithful like Samuel, not permitting any word that God plants into our heart to be without effect (cf. 1 Samuel 3:19). May we be always careful of using our body, which is “a temple of the Holy Spirit,” not for immorality, but for the immortality – the Lord (cf. 1 Corinthians 6:13c-15a, 17-20). May we be constantly mindful of the actual presence of God in our heart so that all the time we should act in accordance to His law. Like our beloved Brother Lionel, whose 90th day returning home to the Father we commemorate today, often said when he was alive, using the words of St. Catherine of Siena, “All the way to heaven is heaven, because He said I am the Way;” let us be mindful that our Lord Jesus Christ daily invites us to live with him now in heavens. Amen.
Peter Thoại O.P.