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Theological Exegesis and Aquinas's Treatise ‘against the Greeks’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Mark D. Jordan
Affiliation:
Mr. Jordan is associate professor of liberal studies in Norte Dame University, Notre Dame, Indiana.

Extract

According to Pope Leo XIII, it could almost be said that Thomas Aquinas “presided” over the deliberations at Lyons (1274) and Florence (1438) when these councils confronted the Greek church.1 This judgment, which would be true at best and in part only for the later council, both enshrines and encourages a misreading of Thomas's short treatise Contra errores Graecorum. In fact, the Contra errores is neither as well informed nor as technically argued as other Latin polemics of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. It is a treatise limited in form and argument, motivated by another, poorer treatise.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1987

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References

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2. There are summary accounts in Dondaine, Antoine, “Nicolas de Cotrone et les sources du Contra errores Graecorum de Saint Thomas,” Divus Thomas 28 (1950): 313340, esp. 339–340;Google Scholar in Palémon Glorieux's edition of the Contra errores Graecorum (hereafter CEG) (Tournai, 1957), pp. 57;Google Scholar and in Dondaine's, Antoine edition of the CEG for the Leonine edition of Opera omnia (Rome, 1969), 40: A18–A19.Google Scholar

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6. Ibid., pp. 325–326, and Dondaine ed., CEG, A18.

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14. Dondaine concedes that the opening of the CEG gives no evidence of Thomas's having seen the work before (Dondaine, A8), but he suggests that this silence is because Thomas had not seen the final, complete redaction (A18 A19).

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28. See the summary by Dondaine in his CEG, A9-A11.

29. Madoz, ,“Nueva redacciòn,” pp. 564565,Google Scholar passim; and see note 11 for the dating of Viterb's work.

30. Ibid., p. 582.

31. Dondaine ed., CEG, A14-A17.

32. Sambin, , II vescovo Cotronese, p. 17,Google Scholar items no. 8 and 18, with comments on pp. 18–22.

33. See M. A., and Rouse, R. H., “Florilegia of Patristic Texts,” in Les genres littéraires dans les sources théologiques et philosophiques médiévales (Louvain-la-Neuve, 1982), pp. 170176.Google Scholar For the earlier history in outline, Ghellinck, Joseph de, Patristique et Moyen Age, 2 vols. (Brussels, 1947), 2: 289294.Google Scholar

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35. See Dondaine, , “Contra Graecos,” pp. 350384,Google Scholar for the textual problems in the “appendices”to the anonymous CEG; Lechat, R., “La patristique grecque chez un théologue latin du XIIe siècle: Hughes Etherien,” in Mélanges d'histoire offerts à Charles Moeller (Louvain, 1914), 1: 498500,Google Scholar for difficulties in the documentation of Hugh Etherianus; and Loenertz, Raymond J., “L'épître de Théorien le Philosophe aux prêtres d'Oreine,” in Mémorial Louis Petit: Mélanges d'histoire et d'archéologie byzantines (Bucharest, 1948), pp. 321322,Google Scholar for the use of fiorilegia in the anonymous Dominican CEG.

36. See the opening remarks in Pelikan, Jaroslav, “The Doctrine of Filoque in Thomas Aquinas and its Patristic Antecedents,”in St. Thomas Aquinas, 1274–1974: Commemorative Studies (Toronto, 1974), 1:315316.Google Scholar

37. Pars Prior prologue, lines 3–4: “ad nostrae fidei assertionem.”Citations to the CEG henceforth will be given parenthetically by section and line numbers as in the Leonine edition. “PP”will mean the Pars Prior, “PA”the Pars Altera. A lower-case “prol”in place of the section numbers indicates the prologue; “epil”indicates the epilogue.

38. These passages are 7.27–32, 10.150–155, 64.16–17 (and 70.4–5), and 90.6.

39. Gardeil, A., “La réforme de la théologie Catholique: La documentation de saint Thomas,” Revue Thomiste 11 (1903): 211.Google Scholar This essay is part of a larger project completed in “La réforme de la théologie catholique: Les procédés exégètiques de saint Thomas,” Revue Thomiste 11(1903): 428456Google Scholar (for the CEG, see esp. 433, 444). There followed a series of replies to objections under the general title of “La documentation de saint Thomas,” in Ibid., 12 (1904): 207–211, 486–493, 583–592; and 13 (1905): 194–197. Gardeil's views were endorsed, for example, by Renaudin, Paul, “Le théologie de saint Cyrille d'Alexandrie d'après S. Thomas,” Revue Thomiste 18 (1910): 176178.Google Scholar

40. Dondaine, ed. CEG, A19.

41. The passages are surveyed in Jordan, Mark D., Ordering Wisdom; The Hierarchy of Philosophical Discourse in Aquinas (Notre Dame, 1986), pp. 2239.Google Scholar

42. Quodlibetales, q.6 a.3.

43. For the comparison with Cano, see Corbin, Michel, Le chemin de la théologie chez Thomas d'Aquin (Paris, 1974), pp. 99, 842854,Google Scholar with qualifications at pp. 850–851; for the comparison with Trent on tradition, see Geenen, G., “The Place of Tradition in the Theology of St. Thomas,” Thomist 15 (1952): 110135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

44. He does so, for example, with the claim that the Cistercian Liber de spiritu et anima was a work by Augustine; see Thomas's remarks on the text's authorship at Sent. 4 dist.44 q.3 a.3 sol.2. Parallel passages and similar cases are surveyed by Geenen, G., “S.Thomas d'Aquin et les sources pseudépigraphiques,” Ephemerides theologicae Lovanienses 20 (1943): 7377.Google Scholar

45. Resp. ad lectorem Bisuntinum, qq.1–3 and 5.

46. Summa theol. 2–2 q. 5 art. 1 ad im.

47. Quodlib. 2 q.4 a.2 corp.; Summa theol. 2–2 q.10 a.12 corp. The passages form a doublet.

48. Principium biblicum 2 (Verardo ed., no. 1204).

49. This principle applies particularly to scripture; see, for example, Super evangel. Matt., chap.4 lect.1.