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[p. 97]
Chapter II
Nautral and Supernatural Faith
Certainly the problem as to the distinction between natural and
supernatural faith offers one of the difficulties to be encountered in
the question of faith. Hence it should be interesting to see if Scheeben
has given us an easier solution of it. At all events, his wontedly
original approach to problems might be expected to reveal certain suggestive
ideas.
As an introduction to his teaching on this more particular point, it is
wholly necessary to say a word about his position on the question of the
specification of supernatural acts in general(1).
It is quite characteristic of him that he refuses to argue this latter
question in terms of the familiar Thomist-Molinist dichotomy. Dichotomies
of any sort made him uneasy, since he was always unwilling to accept
unqualifiedly either alternative(2). So also here. In his early work, the Natur und Gnade, he professes himself as dissatisfied with the
Molinistic theory: true in itself, he says, it does not
completely fulfill the demands of science(3). Hence he undertakes to
complete it, seeking the complementary elements from Suarez(4), with whom he
aligns himself against those theologians who wish to see no difference in
motive (between natural and supernatural acts), as Ripalda, Lugo, Platel and
many others(5). So much is clear. It is however quite another question
just what difference in motive Scheeben wished to see; he tells us himself that
he follows Suarez only with some modifications(6), —Scheeben
modified every opinion he ever touched, but it is not always easy
to put ones finger on the modifications. Furthermore
[p. 98]
he
followed Suarez with only a very moderate degree of conviction(7), and he
proceeds to establish his opinion by a mode of argumentation quite
un-Suarezian. Notably he nowhere argues from the principle that was such
an essential rib in the Suarezian (and Thomistic) theory, namely the principle
that acts are specified by their formal object. Such a type of argument was
quite foreign to his genius; he would, I feel sure, consider it an example of
that Begriffsspalterei(8) and that playing with Spitzfin
digkeiten that he so disliked. I mention the point to indicate that by it
one has an immediate reason to limit Garrigou-Legranges right to
invoke Scheebens authority in support of his beloved theory(9); whatever
similarity Scheebens conclusions may have to those of the learned
Dominican (a point not entirely clear), at any rate he certainly does not
arrive at them in the same way.
The chief point however that I wish to make is this, that Scheeben
definitely wished to posit a difference in formal object between natural and
supernatural acts(10). The doctrine had for him a certain probability, and it
seemed to fit well into his synthesis of the supernatural order. Moreover he
was not a little moved to accept it by reason of his exceedingly great respect
for the authority of Suarez(11).
Scheebens own approach to the problem was quite characteristic,
and worthy of note. In the Dogmatik, for instance, when undertaking to
determine the supernaturality of salutary acts in relation to their
object and end, he expressly refuses to go into two questions much
debated by the later Scholastics, often not to the advantage of
clarity(12), —the first is the moral question as to the necessity
of a supernatural intention, and the second is the metaphysical question
[p. 99]
whether or not the lofty objects necessary to supernatural acts can in
some way or other be aimed at also by natural acts(13). With such
abstract questions he has become in his later years increasingly impatient.
He says:
The whole point is that the life of the children of God is directed to
such specific objects and ends as cannot be striven for or attained, at least
in a way that corresponds to their loftiness, except by acts of a
supernatural perfection, that is, of a perfection unattainable by nature,
—in other words, by acts which are kindred and similar to the proper life
of God in its loftiness(14).
Moreover having thus limited the question, he adds that even in this
form it is not to be treated abstractly, but rather solved by
grasping the supernatural life concretely, in its principal
facets(15). It was precisely by such a concrete handling of the
problem that he thought to find a via media between Molina and Suarez.
For my purposes it will be sufficient to sketch in broad outlines the
build of Scheebens construction of his theory on the specification of
supernatural acts. I say constructions advisedly, since there is
little strict argumentation in the thing; notably the supernatural formal
object enters merely as a piece of the construction.
My sketch can be achieved with three major strokes: for Scheeben
mans new nature meant new powers and acts, new powers and acts meant new
objects for those powers and their acts, and the new powers acting on their new
objects meant a new union with God. To fill out these basic lines a bit.
Mans new nature is an image of the divine nature in its specific
perfections,
[p. 100]
—that is his starting point(16). One conclusion follows
immediately: the new powers which flow from the new nature must themselves be
an image of the divine vital powers(17), i.e. the specific
perfection of the divine vital powers must reflect itself in their working.
That is Scheebens Grundanschauung, on which rests all his
theorizing about supernatural acts. In a word, to the divinization of
mans nature corresponds a divinization of his activity(18). And Scheeben
is occupied wholly in drawing out the nature of this divinization and its
consequences. The immediate consequence, in which I am here interested, is that
mans divinized activity must be directed to objects of the specifically
divine order. The essence of Scheebens thought is revealed in this
sufficiently characteristic passage:
If we have truly become partakers in the divine nature, and by this
supernature have become most intimately akin to the divine nature.... then we
are taken up into the sphere of its life; then the Godhead itself in its
immediacy and in its own proper essence as it is in itself becomes the object
of our activity. Then we shall know God Himself, illuminated by His light,
without the mirror of creatures; then we shall love God immediately in Himself,
no longer as the Creator of our nature, but as One Who communicates His own
nature to us, —penetrated as we are by His fire, and made akin to Him in
His divine eminence . . . In a word, if we become partakers of the divine
nature, our life and our activity must be specifically similar to the divine.
To this end it must have the same specific, formal, characteristic object
as the divine activity has. Consequently
[p. 101]
the divine essence must be the
immediate determining object and motive of the supernatural activity in us(19).
This one passage, out of many(20), is sufficient to show how the theory
of the supernatural object enters into Scheebens system, namely as a
consequence of (or if you wish, as a postulate for the completion of) his
favorite parallelism between the divine life of God Himself and the life of
grace in His creature(21). That parallelism suggests the formula that
mans supernatural activity is an image of the divine
activity, and this formula in turn commands on the one hand the
introduction of a supernatural object (i.e. God as He is in
Himself), and on the other hand dictates the consistent use of the term
immediate to characterize the nature of the union with God that is
effected by supernatural knowledge and love(22). In this last detail,
that supernatural activity unites the soul immediately to God,
Scheebens theory culminates. The idea appealed immensely to him, though
practically speaking it merely means that God as He is in Himself
is the immediate object of supernatural activity. Its contrary is that natural
activity effects no immediate union with God, since it reaches God only through
the medium of creatures, and not as He is in Himself(23).
I would note one further point. It will be seen (e.g. in the quotation
just given) that Scheebens whole theory turns ultimately on the notion of
the kinship (Verwandtschaft) that grace establishes
between the soul and God. On this notion he insists often(24). I may illustrate
its importance for his theory by showing his use of it in the question of
supernatural love. In discussing this question he puts to himself what he
regarded as the decisive objection
[p. 102]
against the Thomistic and Suarezian theory
of the double object: given on the one hand the nature of the will
as a universal power, extending itself to all good, and on the other the
possibility (in the supposition of a revelation) of natural faith in the
supernatural order, he says:
Why should not the natural will also rise to the supernatural, to love
God as the principle and goal of supernature? And if so, what becomes of the
substantial supernaturality of love, even if one concedes a supernatural
motive?(25)
Unfortunately the definiteness of his answer does not match the
pointedness of the question. However he gets himself out of the difficulty by
means of the kinship notion. Man, he says, receives by
supernature a kinship with the divine goodness that as natural spirit he has
not got, and in consequence of this kinship he is attracted by this
supernatural good in a way in which nature is not attracted to it(26).
The result is that supernature tends to this good in a way in which nature
cannot tend to it; a supernatural tendency makes God as He is in
Himself the term of a real and immediate union. On the contrary, the
characteristic of a natural tendency is that it does not rise to union
with its object(27), God as bonum supernaturale. And the
reason is that the condition of union is lacking, namely the requisite
Verwandtschaft, from which there arises a particular type of
attraction, as it were a magnitism of a peculiar kind, which is based on the
particular affinity (between faculty and object)(28). Ultimately then
Scheebens answer receives this form: supernatural love has for its
object God as the author and consummator of the supernatural order under the
aspect of good in general, Conceded or
[p. 103]
transmitted; under the aspect of a good
to which it is by nature akin, Denied. The whole point of the answer is
obviously in the connaturality established by grace between supernatural love
and its object; it is this relation that specifies the love as supernatural,
rather than the naked formality of having for its object God as the author of
the supernatural order.
I introduce this objection and its answer here for three reasons. The
first is that Scheeben expressly wishes this answer to have place also in the
question of the distinction between natural and supernatural faith(29).
Secondly, this answer shows how Scheeben preserves the most intimate sense of
the Thomistic principle as to the specification of acts by their formal object.
He apparently interprets the principle as does P. Huby, for example:
Quand il sagit de connaissance, cela (i.e. the principle) revient
à dire quil doit y avoir une certaine
connaturalité, une certaine correspondence de nature entre
le sujet et lobjet, entre la faculté connaissante et lobjet
connu, entre la science perceptive et la science perçue(30).
Thirdly, I wish to point out that Scheeben imparts to his thought a nuance
somewhat foreign to that of P. Garrigou-Lagrange, by whom his authority is
invoked. P. Garrigou-Lagrange puts to himself the same objection: Et
si la foi naturelle peut atteindre le motif formel de la foi theologale,
pourquoi lamour naturel ne pourraitil atteindre le motif formel de
la charité surnaturelle, et ne serionsnous en plein
pélagianisme?(31). And to repel that horrible alternative he gives
a quite unequivocal answer, unaccompanied by any distinctions: the formal
object of supernatural faith and love, Deus auctor beatitudinis
supernaturalis, is inaccessible à la raison et à la
foi naturelle(32).
[p. 104]
From what has been said, it is clear that Scheeben would never subscribe
to such an unqualified statement. For Scheeben what is inaccessible to nature
is not simply and baldly the formal object of supernatural acts,
such a doctrine seems to him such an exaggeration that he even refuses to
discuss it. Rather, in his opinion what nature cannot achieve is an act,
tending to a supernatural object in a particular way, —i.e. connaturally,
—and effecting with it a particular union, i.e. a connatural union. And
the root of this impossibility he sees not merely in the presence in the object
of a certain formality that removes it utterly from the grasp of nature (as for
instance, in P. Garrigou-Legranges picturesque illustration, the
formality of syllogism in the pattern traced with meat before the
dog(33), but rather in the defect of a necessary connaturality, kinship,
(proportion would be the Thomistic word), —between object and
faculty, as a result of which a natural act lacks the intrinsic qualification
proper to a supernatural act. For Scheeben the lack of this connaturality
founds the necessity of grace, and also defines its function. Hence as regards
the specification of supernatural acts, his via media would seem to be
this: the act is not specified solely by its elicitive principle, nor yet again
by the object, but by both; that is to say, the new elicitive principle,
implying as it does an intrinsic modification of the faculty, to which it gives
a new power of knowing and loving, eo ipso alters the relation of the
faculty to its object, and to this extent defines a new object,
—the whole point being that the newness of the object is to
be considered in sensu composito with the act that attains it, since it
rests wholly upon the new relation of connaturality between faculty and
object(34).
[p. 105]
I can find no more intelligible way of putting Scheebens position
than this. Several things must be said about it, before going on to the
particular question of faith, the first is that though Scheeben himself
qualifies his theory as a modified Suarezianism, still as it
develops it might better be given the name of a modified Molinism,
since its emphasis is unmistakably on the elicitive principle as decisive for
the specification of supernatural acts. So much so, that in the last analysis
the modifications become rather unimportant, and Scheeben seems to
be proposing a theory very like that of Ripalda (which he expressly rejected at
the outset!), namely that supernatural acts differ from natural acts in the
ratio formalis sub qua objectum attingitur(35). Still, against this
interpretation there stands his professed allegiance to Suarez. In other words,
his whole theory is extremely obscure. And certainly one of the chief reasons
for the obscurity is his avoidance of the strictly metaphysical question
involved. The fact is that one cannot hope to erect a theory of supernatural
acts without sooner or later coming to grips with it, in all its naked
abstractness. That he would not do so, occasions one of the fundamental
weaknesses of Scheebens position. On the other hand, not the least
attractive feature of his position is his unwillingness to make a
preconstituted interpretation of the principle about the specification of acts
by their formal objects the be all, end-all of his theorizing; by this
mode of procedure one risks landing in factitiously simple systematizations,
—and for them Scheeben had an abhorrence. Still, however appealing his
positive, concrete, theological method, one must doubt whether, divorced from a
formal appeal to sheer metaphysics, it can carry him to his goal.
[p. 106]
Three other causes of Scheebens obscurity might be mentioned. The
first is his more or less careless use of the terms formal object,
formal motive etc. Then there is his inadequately explained use of
the notion of connaturality, —cette
théorie, as has been well said, si souvent citée par
les Scolastiques modernes, qui en tentent si rarement une
explication(36). Finallyand most importan —there is his
apparent missing of the major point of the post Tridentine debates on the
specification of supernatural acts, —namely whether a supernatural object
is necessary, and admissible, as a speculative foundation for the necessity of
grace(37). Suarez in explaining the Catholic dogma argues philosophically from
the object to the necessity of grace, —but Scheeben argues from the fact
of grace to the necessity of the object. Which is a modified
Suarezianism indeed . . . .
* * * * *
With this much background, we can now take up the question of faith. For
reasons of method, it is well to begin with the Natur und Gnade . There
Scheebens treatment of the subject is relatively brief, —and,
distinctly disappointing. One feels that he had not yet thought out a position
that was satisfactory even to himself. At that, he was in possession of certain
of his leading ideas, as the former chapter has showed, and he does achieve a
certain consistency with himself as regards the supernaturality of faith.
He points out, first of all, that the act of supernatural faith is not
to be confused with two other kinds of faith that bear to it a
deceptive simi larity(38). The first is faith generated by mere
reason, independent of any action of the will; the mind accepts the veracity of
God, recognizes the fact of
[p. 107]
revelation from its clear signs, takes these two
truths as premises, and is by reason obliged to admit the conclusions: the
revelation is true. But this is faith only in a wider sense, since here
one does not assent to the truth in order to consent with God speaking. Faith
is not a mere assensus, it is essentially consensus, and it is only assensus
insofar as by this assensus one achieves a consensus with a speaking
mind(39). Faith, in other words, implies the will to conform ones
intelligence to that of another; it is essentially an act of intelligent assent
determined by such a will.
As is clear, Scheeben here clearly and firmly enunciates the essentially
affective character of faith; but this notion, as was noted in the last
chapter, is far from receiving in the Natur und Gnade the same emphasis
that it will later receive in the Dogmatik; rather, in the earlier work
the intellectual element of faith is rather more in the foreground; faith is
a real adherence and union between two intelligences.
However, the mere presence of this affective element in faith does not
yet solve the problem of the nature of divine faith; Scheeben admits in the
most formal terms a natural faith in the technical sense, to which
an affective element is not lacking:
It cannot be denied that nature itself, after it has by its own
intellectual power come to the knowledge of the veracity of God and the fact of
revelation, can of itself form the decision, indeed by a natural law must form
the decision to conform itself and attach itself to the judgment of God, and
thus move the reason to consent and submission. In this sense I assert that
nature is capable of making an act of faith in which would be verified the full
philosophical concept of faith(40).
[p. 108]
Now then does this natural faith differ from supernatural faith? In
answering the question Scheeben brings forward a number of considerations,
without however welding them into a definite theory. The first consideration is
rather of the dogmatic order: this faith is not sicut oportet ad vitam
aeternam. And the proximate reason therefor is that it can proceed
from human nature, and consequently does not transcend human nature, nor
elevate it; It is a consent whose inner value is supported only by
those principles in nature which determine it(41). In other words, this
natural faith differs decisively from supernatural faith in its elicitive
principle. However a certain difference in object is also suggested: this
natural faith is a submission, an act of homage which the creature
offers to its Creator(42); it is a tribute to be paid
to the divine truth(43); in it we hear only the voice of our Master(44). But Scheeben does not press this distinction of object
with any degree of conviction or clarity, —far less than in his
general theory, or in his discussion of the virtue of love(45), or even of
hope(46). He certainly seeks no assistance from a clearly formulated notion of
auctoritas Dei auctoris naturae. Rather his answer falls back on
the notion of union with God achieved in supernatural faith, but not achieved
in natural faith. Whatever else the latter may be, it is not a union, not a close and intimate attachment of (our) knowledge to
the divine knowledge, by which the creature immediately and without reserve
joins itself to the divine knowledge, into which it is so introduced as
to be ready one day to receive it into itself in its own clarity(47).
Hence natural faith lacks the essential characteristic of supernatural faith:
the intimate
[p. 109]
union with which we unite ourselves to the divine
knowledge. It is precisely this union with the divine knowledge which is
absolutely impossible to the powers of nature:
This is what nature can never manage to do: to attach itself
immediately to, and unite itself with the divine knowledge, and thus to receive
into itself the divine properties of that knowledge(48).
In other words, natural faith can never have the knowledge of God as
its immediate and exclusive motive, —I say in other
words, because it is obvious from the context that these two notions were
for Scheeben correlative; in fact, he argues that supernatural faith
must have the divine knowledge as its immediate and exclusive
motive in order to be a union with, and participation in it.
Consequently the distinction between natural and supernatural faith
comes back to the fact that the latter as an intimate union with the
divine knowledge, has this knowledge as its unique motive, the former not
so. And upon this fact Scheeben bases the necessity of a new light
for supernatural faith. The functions of this light he describes in Scriptural
terms: it is auditus and revelatio interna, tractio Patris,
illuminatio cordis, —that is to say:
The lumen fidei is a grace whereby God immediately manifests Himself
in the soul as the One Who speaks to her, whereby he draws the soul up to
Himself, to have her rest in Him alone, and whereby He makes His truth
intelligible and apprehensible in a higher way.(49).
This last notion he before explained to mean that God fills the soul
with the light of His own knowledge in order that she may grasp the lofty
object (of her
[p. 110]
faith) with a light which is akin and equal to it. Thus
the light of faith operates in the soul in similar fashion to the light of
glory, which makes present to the soul the essence of God, determines her
to its vision, and renders her capable of penetrating into its
depths(50).
Such is the teaching of the Natur und Gnade with reference to
the distinction between natural and supernatural faith. One must, I think, feel
its lack of definiteness. On the other hand, Scheeben is consistent with
himself in being unwilling to accept a mere physical, ontological specification
of supernatural faith, —that is, one that is conceived only in
terms of its subjective elicitive principle. He obviously wants to place
supernatural faith in a different logical species than natural faith. This is
clear chiefly from his description of the action of the lumen fidei; it
goes beyond the action of a mere elevating principle: it confers on the object
of faith a new intelligibility corresponding to a new intellective power in the
subject, and brings the object into a new relation, a new presence
to the soul. Moreover, he claims for the motive of supernatural faith a certain
inaccessibility to nature, —an inaccessibility that belongs to it
precisely as a motive of faith. And to this extent at least, he separates
himself from the school of thought that maintains the possibility of a natural
faith of authority resting immediately and exclusively on the
authority of God, in such wise that in this respect it would exhibit no
difference from supernatural faith. Such a possibility Scheeben would seem
explicity to deny. On the other hand it is not easy to see just what it is that
constitutes the motive of supernatural faith inaccessible to natural faith.
[p. 111]
He
does indeed talk of natural faith being the creatures homage to its
Creator, but so casually that one cannot conclude that he wishes to reduce the
specification of natural faith to this, and to remove from it the possibility
of apprehending God under a different and higher formality. Moreover, in
general, the specifying difference in motive that he obviously wishes to posit
between natural and supernatural faith cannot be seen in this, that the motive
of supernatural faith actually represents God under a definite
formality, under which He is inaccessible to natural faith. Such a difference
he rejects when discussing the question of love. Rather the difference would
seem to be in this, that supernatural faith reaches its object (which, as far
as its conceptual representation goes, may be the same as the object of natural
faith) in a different way, i.e. in virtue of a cognitive power
kindred to it, that consequently effects with it a connatural
union. Thus supernatural faith would be specified not exclusively by its
elicitive principle, nor yet by its motive, considered objectively as a complex
of notes or formalities, but rather by both, that is by a certain type of
relation existing between the motive and the faculty moved. And this relation
is based upon the connaturality with the divine which is conferred upon the
soul by supernatural grace, whose effect is to introduce the soul to an order
of objects that is new in the sense that it is now a connatural order.
In other words, Scheebens position as to the specification of
faith by its motive would seem to be very similar to that assumed or suggested,
by Rousselot:
Je crois quon doit dire, sur lobject formel de la foi,
quà considerer precisement la représentation comme
telle, it ny a point per se de différence
[p. 112]
entre les notions
quont de nos mystères un incrédule et un croyant; mais que,
si lon considere la representation avec lassentiment, la
faculté surnaturelle définit un nouvel objet formel. Or chez lui
qui a la vertu de foi, pourvu quil y ait présentation suffisante,
la représentation ne va pas sans lassentiment(51).
Certainly it would seem to be precisely this that Scheeben is trying to
do, namely to consider both the assent, and the object with which it brings the
soul in contact, and to work out on this basis a theory as to the specification
of the assent. Moreover, Rousselots formula: La faculté
surnaturelle définit un nouvel object formel, is quite in the
spirit of Scheebens thought.
One important point to be noted here is that in the Natur und Gnade
Scheeben makes no attempt to explain the specification of supernatural
faith and its distinction from its natural counterpart in terms of the
voluntary, affective aspect of faith. From the present discussion, as well as
from what was said in the foregoing chapter, it is obvious that this aspect of
faith has not assumed in Scheebens earlier thought the same emphasis that
he was later to give to it. He has not yet won through to that organic concept
of faith as a compound of affective and intellectual elements, bound in an
indissoluble unity, that formed the basis of his theorizing in the Dogmatik. And here, I think, is the reason for at least part of the
embarassment and confusion in which Scheeben involves himself in the Natur
und Gnade ; he wishes to accept a motive specific to supernatural
faith, but then he attempts a specification of supernatural faith exclusively
in terms of its intellectual motive, whereas the very
[p. 113]
nature of faith as
an affective cognition dictates that its ethical motivation be considered also
—and even primarily—if one wishes to explain in terms of
their respective motives, and with any degree of adequacy, the distinction
between natural and supernatural faith, and the intimate nature of the latter.
This truth Scheeben seems to have before him when he undertakes in the
Doqmatik to explain the supernaturality of faith. He was led to it by his
profounder grasp of the implications contained in St. Thomas insistence
on the notion of faith as an actus intellectus imperatus a
voluntate, —the chief implication being that, as Scheeben often
insists, the pius credulitatis affectus belongs to the substance
of faith(52); it is a constitutive part of the act of faith.
To a formal discussion of this point we shall return in the next chapter; it
suffices for the moment to have noted it, to account for a new element in
Scheebens explanation of the supernaturality of faith, as it unfolds
itself in the Dogmatik.
He begins again by a formal admission of the possibility of natural
faith in Gods supernatural revelation, —the thing which causes all
the difficulty. To this natural act he opposes the real actus salutaris,
with its absolute or essential supernaturality, consisting in the inner
worth and loftiness of the act itself(53). It is the supernaturality of
faith in this sense that was defined by the Council of Orange, and later by
Trent. According to Scheeben, the formulated dogma immediately teaches
merely that faith is supernatural with respect to the cause, which it
presupposes, and with respect to the goal, at which it is directed(54).
He is concerned consequently with deducing the theological consequences of this
explicit
[p. 114]
teaching, as they bear on the intimate nature of faith. Thus he
argues:
Since the supernatural principle is the thing which gives faith the
value and the significance which are demanded by its supernatural goal, it
follows, as the one and only rational explanation of the dogma, that Christian
faith must have in itself a peculiar supernatural essence and constitution
(Wesensbeschaffenheit), by reason of which it is distinguished intrinsically
from every natural act. This supernatural essence and constitution gives it its
value and significance for its supernatural goal, and also demands for its
genesis a supernatural principle, and determines the way in which this
supernatural principle must operate upon faith(55).
I take this to mean that faith must be supernatural not merely in its
quality as actus salutaris, but also in its innermost essence as
actus intentionalis; that is certainly the more obvious sense of the
words, and it is borne out by what follows. In fact, Scheeben demands that
supernatural faith precisely as a coqnition be intrinsically
distinguished from natural faith, in order that the dogma as to its
absolute and essential supernaturality may receive its full force, since only
in this supposition has one a rational explanation for the absolute necessity
of a supernatural principle. So far, he has not gone beyond the ideas that
governed his thought in the Natur und Gnade ; but the ensuing
developments indicate the broader basis that his thinking has attained:
This supernatural essence and constitution consists in general in
this, that in Christian faith we accept the revealed truth in a way which on
the one
[p. 115]
hand corresponds to our elevation to the dignity of the adopted
children of God and to our destination to the immediate vision of God,
and which on the other hand corresponds to the fatherly condescension of God,
Who speaks to us as to His children, and by His message wills to call and
elevate us to the most intimate communion of life with Him(56).
The significance of this sentence is considerable. It reveals the
approach to the act of faith which has become firmly defined in
Scheebens mind by the thought of years. That is to say, he regards the
act of faith very much in the concrete, as a definite type of intercourse with
God, Who stands to us in a very definite relation. The God who speaks is no far
off, abstract Deus verax, but a loving Father; the one who hears
is no disembodied reason, but a child; the message spoken is no catalogue of
theses, but a promise of eternal life to the vision of the Fathers face;
and the childs answer faithis no carefully calculated
admission of what cannot be denied, but a gladly obedient acceptance of a
dignity and a destiny.
Unfortunately, we shall have to say later that Scheeben did not
consistently maintain this general view of faith. But at any rate it would be
difficult to lay too much emphasis on the concrete approach to the problem that
was Scheebens reaction in his later years to the mechanical and
abstract and to him excessively rationalizing treatment accorded it by
one who was in many other things his master, Kleutgen. For Scheeben, as the
next chapter will show more in detail, faith was essentially a homage given to
a person, not the mere acceptance of a proposition, —and in supernatural
faith the Person honored is the Pater spirituum.
[p. 116]
In the passage quoted, Scheeben gives the general spirit, so to speak,
of his discussion of the supernaturality of faith. In what follows, his
concrete concept of faith as an affective cognition(already indicated
in the same passage, in that he intimately joins the message of the Father with
the promise it contains)comes to fuller expression. He places the
supernaturality of faith both in its affective and its cognitive elements:
More in particular (the supernatural nature of faith) consists in
this, that 1) the Glaubens-gesinnung, the pius credulitatis
affectus, is transformed into a childlike piety toward God, and to a striving
after the supernatural end that is proportioned to its loftiness, —and
that 2) borne by this sentiment, the assent of faith itself contains such an
intimate and perfect union and assimilation of our knowledge with the divine
that it appears as a participation in the kingdom and life of God Himself, and
as an anticipation of the supernatural knowledge promised to us in the beatific
vision, —hence as a certitude that is truly divine, worthy of the dignity
of the word of God(57).
This statement is certainly interesting, far beyond anything we have
seen in the Natur und Gnade. And the ensuing statement is still more
interesting:
Both elements of the supernaturality of faith, its ethical and its
intellectual supernaturality, correspond most closely one with the other, as do
the two constituent parts of the act of faith itself, inasmuch as the intimate
attachment of the intellect to the divine knowledge presents itself as
the perfecting of the souls upsurge to God, to which the childlike piety
of the will impels it(58).
[p. 117]
That is certainly an extremely profound statement of the genesis and
nature of faith and though, as we shall see, he was not always faithful to it,
still it contains what was definitely his own most personal thought upon this
whole problem. One might compare it with the view of faith proposed by de la
Taille:
La foi, même en son état ordinaire, est engendrée
dans lesprit par une pression de la volonté,
cest-a-dire sous linfluence dun amour au moins
initial de la Bonté qui se promet dans la vie éternelle, amor
boni repromissi. Actionée par cet amour, lintelligence
elle-même est rattachée a ce Bien suprème par une
affirmation volontaire et amoureuse, ou lOBJET est atteint en même
temps comme la FIN a laquelle se rapporte laffirmation.(59)
Given the greater precision of de la Taille, the similarity of
thought is very considerable: the same organic concept of the act of faith with
its double aspect; the same primacy of the affective element; the same
interiority, so to speak, of the affective element in the intellectual; the
same, or at least substantially the same, dynamic conception of the
intellects assent, as the goal of the wills impulse, in that it
affects that definitive seizure of the object which is the term of the
souls whole motion: Veritas Prima SE revelans.
A corollary of this concept of faith is Scheebens pointing out of
the fact that in the ethical supernaturality of faith is situated its
radical supernaturality(60). For this fact he appeals to the
Council of Orange, whose whole definition, as he sees it, converges to
the establishment of the doctrine that the pius credulitatis affectus
does not come from nature,
[p. 118]
but is expressly the product of grace, the work of
the Holy Spirit, Who gives the necessary suavitas in credendo et
consentiendo veritati. This, he points out, was the point denied by the
Semipelagians, namely the necessity of a gratia adspirans (which
Scheeben significantly takes as a grace for the will); they were not so
strongly opposed to a gratia adjuvans (which he refers to the
intellect)(61).
Moreover he makes it clear that the supernaturality of the pius
credulitatis affectus is not to be theologically explained wholly by the fact
that it is the product of grace; he makes a definite reference to its object.
And his argument is based on the goal of faith in general:
Since this pius credulitatis affectus, transfigured by grace, is to
lead to (mans) supernatural end, and to supernatural union with God, it
is natural that it should direct itself to and strive after this goal, God the
author of salvation; and it is further natural that grace, by putting this
striving into a proper and connatural relation with its supernatural object and
goal, should thus give it its value for eternal savation. Furthermore, since
God as the author of salvation enters into a paternal relation with man,
consequently the term childlike piety affords the most apt
characterization of the supernatural nobility and loftiness proper to the
sentiment on which faith rests(62).
Here again, Scheebens concrete manner of thinking shows itself. In
this context at least, he has in mind that the fundamental content of
Gods supernatural message is a promise of salvation, even as
the goal of faith, whereby man accepts that message, is itself
[p. 119]
salvation. Similarly, he carries through the notion we have already
met in the Natur und Gnade, namely that the function of grace is to
establish a certain connatural relation between mans powers
and a higher order of objects, though even here he does not introduce any
strking precisions of the import of that connaturality. He does
indeed imply, as he has implied before, that the defect of that connaturality
renders grace necessary and adds the further implication that in creating in
man an affection of kindliche Pietät graces remedies that
defect. And to this extent, he strengthens the impression one gets from his
previous utterances, namely that he wishes grace to modify not merely the
ontological reality of the act, but also its inner structure and its essential
tendency to its object. The object of the pius credulitatis affectus, as
he here clearly states (though he does not consistently maintain the point, as
we shall see) is God as the Author of Salvation, calling His children to
union with Himself as their Father; it is under this aspect that God
generates a sentiment of filial piety in him who is approaching faith, in such
wise however that at the same time He, by His elevating grace,
transforms this sentiment, and imparts to it, even as a sentiment,
a new intrinsic modification, by bringing it into a new relation with its
object. In other words, in considering the specification of the pius credulitatis affectus one must take account not merely of its
object, but also of the connaturality between the object and the
will. This would seem to be a reasonable exegesis of Scheebens meaning;
it is certainly consistent with his fundamental position with regard to the
specification of supernatural acts, as stated before.
[p. 120]
One further point should be noted, as being of great importance, -
namely, that the grace in question, which "transforms" the pius credulitatis
affectus into a genuine movement of filial piety, is not conceived by
Scheeben to be the lumen fidei as such. Certainly he nowhere
attributes this action to the lumen fide in or even to the grace
that he calls the vocatio ad fidem. To both of these graces he
assigns an action exclusively, to all appearance, upon the intellect(63). This
fact cannot but strike one as strange. Certainly the grace productive of the
pius credulitatis affectus is an elevating grace, and it
is given precisely that the act of faith may be posited sicut
oportet; furthermore the act which it engenders "belongs to the
substance of faith", and by its supernaturality confers upon faith a radical
supernaturality. In view of all this, one would have the right to expect that
the relation of this grace to the specific grace of faith, the lumen
fidei, would be definitely determined. But Scheeben certainly does not
face the problem of determining it.
So much for the ethical supernaturality of faith. In discussing its
intellectual supernaturality, Scheeben employs the same circle of ideas that we
have met in his earlier work. The intrinsic supernaturality of the assent of
faith is explained by the fact that it contains a "Vereinigung and
Verähnlichung unserer Erkenntnis mit der göttlichen", and thus
assumes the character of an anticipation of the beatific vision (64). This
notion remained always the object of Scheeben's predilection. The relation of
the assent to its motive is given in this laborious passage, which I take the
liberty of giving in the original, —the English of it would be intolerable:
....der Glaubensassens ist ubernatürlich,
[p. 121]
inwiefern der Geist
nicht bloss seinerseits in irgend welcher Weise das göttliche Motiv der
Glaubensgewissheit zu ergreifen sucht and es auf sich wirken lässt, resp.
dasselbe in der ihm eigenen Erhabenheit unterwürfig anerkennt, sondern
inwiefern die Vernunft von der Kraft Gottes getragen and über sich selbst
hinausgehoben, zur Höhe des göttlichen Motives hinaufgezogen wird and
sich aufschwingt, and durch die Einwirking der Kraft Gottes ihr eine der
Erhabenheit des Motives entsprechende Gewissheit eingeprägt wird. Fidelis
tenet ea quae sunt fidei simpliciter inhaerendo primae veritati, ad quod
indiget homo adjuvari per habitum fidei; haereticus autem tenet ea propria
voluntate et judicio (II–II,q. 5, a. 3 ad 1). D. h. der wahrhaft
Gläubige hängt sich, von der Gnade getragen, an die prima veritas
schlechthin, wie sie in sich selbst ist, so dass diese rein and voll,
unabhängig von dem eigenen Wollen and Urteil des Menschen, sowohl
unbehindert durch dasselbe, wie über die Kraft desselben hinaus, ihre
Kraft und Wirksamkeit entfalten kann, und folglich der Gläubige in dem
Anschluss an die prima veritas die veritas proprii intellectus
übersteigt(65).
It is remarkable how that one sentence from St. Thomas strikes upon the
ear as a clear strain of Italian melody from out all the turgid German
orchestration that envelopes it. For myself, I cannot make much sense out of
the orchestration, nor see how it develops the virtualities in St. Thomas
theme. At any rate, it is reasonably clear that Scheeben wants supernatural
faith to be specified by the fact that it is a direct inhesion (one
feels that Scheeben too was puzzled by St. Thomasuse of that curious
word: inhaerere) in the
[p. 122]
Prima Veritas. Moreover he asserts, as
does St. Thomas, this inhesion to be the work of grace, since it is
impossible to nature. And he would certainly interpret St. Thomas to mean that
the source of this impossibility consists in the lack of a power in the
definitely intellectual order. Faith as a cognition, an intellectual act, and
not merely a salutary act, transcends the intellective powers of nature. Hence
the power conferred on nature by grace is a power of the intellectual order, a virtus intellectualis, which modifies and elevates the action of the
intellect as a coqnitive faculty. Without such an intrinsic modification
of the intellect, faith is impossible. Certainly, I think, Scheeben would not
admit the possibility that a mere imperium of the will, directed at an
intellect,tr,, elevated indeed but completely unmodified as
intellect, could bring to pass an assent that would be the assent of divine
faith sicut oportet.
But here again we meet one of the intrinsic dificulties of
Scheebens position. I characterized theory before as a modified
Molinism; nevertheless he implements it with a concept of the function of
grace that is quite un-Molinistic. The distinguishing mark of the Molinistic
grace, as one writer has put it, is that it effects the elevation of the
ontological substance of the act, while leaving its logical
substance untouched(66). The terminology is not particularly happy, I
think, but the point it makes clear enough, —namely that supernatural
faith, considered precisely as faith, as a particular type of cognition does
not differ from natural faith. In the logical order they are to be considered
as two species of the same genus, simplex fides auctoritatis,
—their differences lying not in the line of faith as such, but in
[p. 123]
the
greater or less physical perfection and moral value of the act, according as it
proceeds from grace or not. However it is clear that Scheeben took no such view
of things. It would have seemed to him, as indeed the whole Molinistic system
of grace did seem to him, quite superficial(67). On the other hand, he
certainly achieved no very great lucidity in the statement of his own position.
Of course, the difficulty of the problem is not small. As a matter of
fact, it does not seem possible for anyone to achieve lucidity when seeking a
specification of the act of faith, and an explanation of the operation of the
grace of faith purely in terms of faith as an intellectual assent. The
interesting thing is that Scheeben in the Doqmatik does actually posit a
more likely basis on which to theorize. His drive toward
concreteness led him to insist that faith is essentially an affective cognition, an act to which an affective element is somehow
interior. To correspond with this notion of faith he distinguishes a double
supernaturality, ethical and intellectual; as he calls the former the
radical supernaturality of faith, so in fidelity to his thought, I
may call the latter its formal supernaturality. And by this
concrete approach to the problem Scheeben would seem to be on the way to an
interesting solution of it. Consistently with this view of the act, one would
expect the motive of faith in its voluntary aspect to enter into its
specification, —or better, one would expect the specifying motive of
faith to be not solely the motive of the assent as such, but the motive of the
assent as voluntary. Such, I say, would seem to be the consequence of
Scheebens position that the assent of faith reaches its object and only
in virtue of the
[p. 124]
wills upsurge to its goal, its new
supernatural destiny, —which upsurge it completes, in such
wise that the two tendencies fuse into the unity of a single motus mentis
in Deum.
Unfortunately however Scheeben does not follow through the consequences
of this suggestive idea. He achieves a satisfactory basis for the specification
of faith, but he does not use it. It would seem that his synthetic powers
somehow failed him. He does not harmonize his theories on the radical and
the formal supernaturality of faith, just as he does not harmonize his theories
on the genesis of faith and its supernaturality, as the following chapter
will show. The prime difficulty, also to be more fully investigated in the next
chapter, in his confusion and inconsistency in the motivation of the pius
credulitatis affectus.
When discussing the supernaturality of faith, this motive appears as God
the Father calling His children to eternal life with Him, and by His grace
shaping their response to a filial acceptance both of His message and of the
destiny it promises them. This profound conception opens the way to a
specification of supernatural faith that would be definitely
concrete, i.e. based on a concrete view of faith, not merely as an
intellectual admission of a set of propositions, but, in Guardinis words,
as die lebendige Bewegung auf Den hin, an den geglaubt wird.... die
lebendige Antwort auf den Ruf dessen, der in der Offenbarung hervortritt, and
in der Gnade den Menschen heranzieht.... die Antwort des Menschen an den in
Christus kommenden Gott(68). In this concrete view, the specific motive—and the ultimate specific motiveof faith would be its affective
motive, which both impels the upsurge of the will and directs the
movement of
[p. 125]
the intellect toward the one term. Just as the affective element is
essential to faith, so also its motive, the affective motive of
faith, would belong essentially to the specifying motive of the concrete act.
On the former fact Scheeben insists continually in the Dogmatik; to the
latter he comes close when discussing the supernaturality of faith. That he did
not actually grasp it was due, I say, to the fact that he failed to synthesize
his theory on the supernaturality of faith with his theory on its genesis, in
which latter the pius credulitatis affectus, which belongs to the
substance of faith, was falsely motivated. But of that more later.
Another reason why Scheeben failed to use the basis for a specification
of faith that he actually posited in the Dogmatik, was, I think, his
uncritical obsession with the notion of faith as a participation in the
knowledge of God. He seems to have been rather hypnotized by the formula:
it fits so admirably into his system, and it sounds so terrifically
supernatural, that it obscured from him its own inadequacies as the
basis for a well-rounded theory as to the genesis of faith and its
specification. But the fact is that, however expressive it may be of a certain
mystical aspect of faith, it does not deserve the emphasis he placed on it, for
it fails to give back the more intimate connotations of the act. That is to
say, its connotations are not only too exclusively intellectual, but even in
that respect inadequate (after all, even natural faith would be a participation
in that knowlege of God in the sense that by it one would know what God
knows and has revealed). One would have to render more precise what this
knowledge of God actually is, —(primarily it must mean the
knowledge God has of His
[p. 126]
plan for His creature man, the sacramentum
voluntatis suae Ephesians 1, 9, —a point to whch Scheeben pays too
little attention); furthermore one must have some way of bringing this
participation in Gods knowledge into line with the
specifically affective dynamism of faith, —a thing which Scheeben does
not even attempt. The point however that I wish to make is simply this, that
Scheeben was so satisfied with his formula that he was not impelled to test its
adequacy as an explanation of the supernaturality of faith, nor to undertake
its completion in terms of his own concrete concept of that act of
faith, as an affective attachment of the mind of God.
The ultimate conclusion therefore is that Scheeben leaves his whole
theory too obscure in its actual developments to be more than interesting and
suggestive. Interesting and suggestive, however, it surely is, and
chiefly by reason of his method. He approached the problem concretely, and he
handles it theologically. And his aim was to solve it in terms of the actual
changes operated in human nature by the reality of grace. Moreover the concept
of grace that he used has a distinctly pre-Augustinian, Greek ring to it.
It has often enough been pointed out that in Western theology since the time of
Augustine the accent has been put on the capacity for meritorious action that
grace confers. The accent was of course the product of the Semipelagian
controversy, and it reached its sharpest emphasis in post-Tridentine
scholasticism. Moreover in this period, as a result of Protestant theology, it
was joined by a more or less correlative accent on logical and introspective
analysis of the epistemology of faith, which latter accent has grown stronger
right up to our own day. In Scheebens theo-
[p. 127]
logy, however, as in that of
the Greek Fathers, it is the physical ontological reality of grace that
receives the accent, —namely the deiformity conferred by
grace on human nature and its powers. He is continually circling about the idea
of the new immanence of God in His human creature, whereby He fashions it more
closely into His own image, accomplishing in it eine Umgestaltung in das
Lichtbild der Gottheit(69). Consistently with this central idea, his
deepest view of the grace of faith is that it effects a certain divinization of
the mind, thus bringing it into a kinship with the world of divine things, and
establishing a parallelism, in object and operation, between it and the divine
mind. And it must be admitted that in seizing this idea Scheeben has seized the
theological root of the supernaturality of faith.
It must, however, be also admitted that this purely theological
speculation does not suffice, as Scheeben apparently thought it did suffice, to
solve the problem. It does indeed rather incline one more favorably to the
Thomistic and Suarezian than to the Molinistic view, but it does not quite
settle the issue between them. Even on the intellectual side of faith, two
problems have yet to be faced: first, the metaphysical problem posed by the
axiom: actus specificatur ab objecto formali; and secondly the
cognate psychological problem, namely, what effects does the grace of faith
operate in the genesis (and consequently in the specification) of divine faith
as a cognition(70)? Scheeben does not face either problem, —both
of them were rather out of his line. Hence at this point his
thought disappears into the clouds. However, by his attempted reconciliation of
Molina and Suarez, he gives two indications that would seem to
[p. 128]
show whither his
theory was heading. On the one hand he disagrees with the Molinists that the
grace of faith has no effect on the human mind precisely as a mind. On the
other hand he does not seem to concede to Suarez and the Thomists that the
grace of faith unveils to the mind a new, hitherto unseen formality in its
object. The via media he apparently aims at is this, that faith is
indeed a cognitive act unique in its kind, —yet there is nothing new
seen, there is only a new seeing. Consequently
Scheebens grace of faith would introduce a new psychological factor into
the workings of the human mind, is such wise however that its effects would not
be, as they should be in the Thomistic-Suarezian theory, accessible to
introspection. The reason is that Scheebens grace of faith would operate
at the level of nature as such, and hence its workings would occasion an
experience unique indeed but incommunicable, since it would lie
below the shallow levels that reflex consciousness can reach. Or rather, the
experience of faith could receive only one formulation: One thing
I know, that whereas before I was blind, now I see. With such a
formulation, Scheeben would, I think, be content. Philosophers may feel
differently.
[p. 129]
NOTES
Chapter II
- This general question is treated in Natur
und Gnade pp 223 ff.; Dogmatik II, 3, nn. 701–757. On the
supernaturality of faith, cf. Natur und Gnade pp. 237 ff;
Doqmatik I, 1, nn. 778–807. This latter is his definite treatment,
incorporated into the article Glaube in Kirchenlexicon 2 Vol. 5, col. 653–659, and referred to in Doqmatik I, 3, n. 737,
where no further discussion is given. However, the teaching of the Natur und
Gnade retained always a permanent value in his eyes; it is referred to in
Mysterien, Anmerk. 370, p. 822; Casini-Scheeben p. 287; Dogmatik II, 3, n. 723 (bibliography).
- For Scheebens view of the
Thomist-Molinist controversy cf. his review of von Schäzlers Neue Untersuchunqen, Katholik, 1868 I, pp. 698 ff. esp. pp.
717–719. (This whole article affords an excellent picture of Scheeben as a
controversialist.) It seemed to him that all the argument had had the
unfortunate effect of sharpening differences and obscuring the real point. He
himself attempted a reconciliation on an Augustinian-Thomistic
basis, as he calls it, in Mysterien c. 10, par. 99. pp. 667 ff;
cp. also Dogmatik II, 3, nn. 948–967.
- Natur und Gnade p. 70.
- Cf. ibid. p. 70 note 1. Even in his
preference for Suarez, Scheeben retained a great admiration for Ripalda and his
erudition, clarity, conciseness and richness of content
(ibid.). There is an interesting commentary on Scheebens times in the
fact he can speak (ibid.) of Ripaldas once so famous work De
Ente Supernaturali as being now so rare and almost
unknown.
- Natur und Gnade p. 258.
- Katholik 1868 I, p. 726 (review on von
Schäzlers Neue Untersuchungen). Speaking of the authors
defense of the strict Suarezian view, he says: His reasons seem to me
well-chosen and felici-
[p. 130]
tously developed; but whether they will convince his
opponents I cannot say, since I have always held and defended the same opinion,
though with some modifications. He then refers to Natur und Gnade (ed. 1) pp. 178 ff. (ed. Grabmann pp. 237 ff.)
7. He says of von Schäzler:
Furthermore the doctrine, certainly very beautiful, that supernatural
acts must necessarily be distinguished in their motive from natural acts, is
too strongly emphasized, as regards its certainty. Katholik 1868 I, p.
726 note 8. Von Schäzlers affirmations on the point were indeed
quite uncompromising: cf. Neue Untersuchunqen pp. 527–531.
- Cf. Natur und Gnade p. 70.
- La vie mystique et la doctrine de
S.Thomas sur la foi. La Vie Spirituelle 1 (1919) p. 370. Cf. also De
Revelatione ed. 3 (1929) I, p. 497, 479 note 1. 480 note 1. In this last
place he congratulates Scheeben and von Schäzler, for a correct
interpretation of St. Thomas. But it must be noted that Scheeben does not
completely identify his position with that of von Schäzler, nor is he
interested in interpreting St. Thomas. I rather think that in this
question he reached St. Thomas through Suarez.
- David (De objecto formali actus
salutaris pp. 54–55) thinks that in the Dogmatik Scheeben
altered somewhat his earlier opinions. But his contention rests on a
misapprehension of Scheebens earlier opinions. David (p. 54) says that in
the Natur und Gnade Scheeben modified Suarez. Again, David
(ibid.) says that in the Dogmatik Scheeben uses a method of
expression that might also be used by the defenders of the negative solution of
the question. But, as we shall see, that is also true of the Natur und
Gnade. As regards the quotation from the Herrlichkeiten (ed. 1, p.
247) adduced by David (p. 55 note 1), one must remember that it is found in a
popular devotional book, not free from exaggerations. All in all, I am
convinced that Scheebens opinion remained always consistent, particularly
in its obscurities.
[p. 131]
11. Cf. Natur und Gnade p. 31. Also
Herrlichkeiten, Vorrede zur lsten Auflage p. ix, where he refers to
Suarez as the one whose assured doctrine I follow in almost all
points. Moroever, as we shall see in chapter IV, Scheebens analysis
of faith is wholly Suarezian in its inspiration and construction.
- Dogmatik II, 3, 4, 730.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Ibid. n. 732.
- <16.> Natur und Gnade p. 168,
171, 127,
- Ibid. p. 151.
- Ibid. p. 150.
- Ibid. p. 231. Substantially the same
argumentation, occurs in Dogmatik II, 3, 4, 736.
- Cf. Natur und Gnad p. 151, where
the parallelism with the Son of God is introduced.
- On this point, cf. A. Schmid, Ueber
Natur und Gnade, Tub. Theol. Quartals. 44 (1862) p. 24 ff.
- One could not say that this term
immediate is particularly felicitous, since it is open to
misunderstanding; cf. Schmid, 1. c. p. 32. However, it is clear that
Scheebens thought is free from any tinge of the ontologism that the use
of the same epithet exhibits in Kuhn: cf. von Schäzler, Neue
Untersuchunqen, pp. 426–499, esp. pp. 451 ff.
- Cf. Natur und Gnade pp.
229–730, 43–45, 96–101.
- Ibid. pp. 122, 178, 230, 231, 233, 234
note, 235, 242, 245, 248, 250, 254, 256, 259, 274, etc.
- Ibid. p. 255.
- Ibid. p. 257.
- Ibid. p. 256.
- Ibid. p. 256.
- Ibid. p. 257:
Consequently as only the
love which proceeds from supernature unites to God as the supernatural good,
which it tastes and relishes in its own sweetness, and for this reason is drawn
to it by its own proper power of attraction, so also it is this love
alone which really has as its motive God as the principle and end of
supernature, as we formerly said of faith. (Italics
mine).
- Miracle et lumière de la
grâce , Rech. Sc. Rel. 8 (1918) p.54.
- La surnaturalitè de la foi,
Rev. Thom. 22 (1914) p. 19.
- Ibid. p. 21, cp. pp. 24, 26, 29, 31.
- De Revelatione I, p. 448.
- Here I would note an important point that
has already emerged, I think, from the discussion, and will continue to emerge,
namely that for Scheeben the question of the necessity and function of
grace was not posited nor resolved merely in terms of an acts ontological
elevation into the supernatural order, as in the Molinistic view (cf. e. g.
Billot, De Virt. Inf. ed. 2, p. 80). For Scheeben grace had a function
in the specifically cognitive and affective orders, and his explanation of its
necessity invoked cognitive and affective elements. And in this respect he is
faithful to a substantially Thomistic interpretation of the principle:
actus specificatur ab objecto formali.
- Cf. Ripalda, De Fide, disp. 3, sect.
6, n. 71; De Ente Supernaturali, disp. 44, sect. 1, N.2; disp. 45 n. 37.
Ripalda admits of course only a different modus tendendi for
supernatural acts. Compare also Molinas position: Ratio sub qua
objecti fidei infusae non (est) cognoscibilitas per divinam revelationem
praecise tamquam per rationem assentiendi, sed cognoscibilitas non solum
per divinam revelationem sed etiam simul per habitum supernaturalem, qui
cum tali revelatione proportionem habet (in S. Th. I, c. 1, a. 3,
disp. 2). Which is certainly not very different from Scheebens view.
- Rousselot, LIntellectualisme de S.
Thomas, ed. 2, p. 71.
- Cf. A. Stolz, Glaubensqnade und
Glaubenslicht pp. 3–19.
- Natur und Gnade p. 238.
- Ibid. p. 239.
- Ibid. p. 239.
- Ibid. p. 240.
- Ibid. p. 240.
- Ibid. p. 243.
- Ibid. p. 241.
- Ibid. pp. 248–250; Dogmatik II,
3, nn. 739–747.
- Natur und Gnade pp. 277–280,
343. The same distinction of object has place also in the moral virtues: cf.
ibid. pp. 227–228, 271–273; Dogmatik II, 3, nn. 748–751.
- Natur und Gnade p. 240.
- Ibid. p. 241.
- Ibid. p. 242.
- Ibid. p. 242.
- Les veux de la foi, Rech. Sc. Rel. 1
(1910) p. 469, note.
- Dogmatik 2, 1, n. 684. Other texts
will be given later.
- Ibid. I, 1, n. 778.
- Ibid. n. 781.
- Ibid. n. 781.
- Ibid. n. 782.
- Ibid. n. 782.
- Ibid. n. 782.
- Loraison contemplative, Rech.
Sc. Rel. 9 (1919) p. 278.
- Dogmatik I, 1, n. 785.
- Ibid. n. 785.
- Ibid. n. 783.
- A fuller discussion of Scheebens
concept of the lumen fidei will be given in Chapter V.
- Dogmatik I, n. 782, 786.
- Ibid. n. 786.
- Pinard de la Boullaye, Notion et
problèmes de la crédibilité. Rech. Sc. Rel. 14 (1914)
p. 448, note. Physical versus intentional substance
might be a better antithesis, if one is wanted.
- Cf. Dogmatik II, 3, nn. 767, 784.
Scheeben counts Suarez (and Tannerthe disciple of Gregory of Valentiawhose work he respected greatly) among the deeper Molinists
(n. 767).
- Vom Leben des Glaubens, pp. 34, 33.
- Mysterien p. 619; cp. pp.
362–5, 618–622, etc.
- It is precisely the reduction of the former
question to this latter one that has lodged the problem of supernatural acts in
a hopeless impasse, hanging the issue on a point of introspection. See this
formulation:
Sil suffit...
dune gráce ontologiquement surnaturelle pour surnaturaliser
1acte de foi, it serait à coup sûr abusif de vouloir
discerner par la seule introspection le concours naturel ou surnaturel que Dieu
donne à nos actes. Au contraire, si à cette elevation entitative
ou physique sajoute nécessairement une perception spéciale
et un processus psychologique distinct du processus vulgaire, ainsi que
lenseigne le P. Gardeil, 1expérience interne est recevable
en lespèce et son verdict suffit à dirimer le débat.
Or quel converti, au moment de son premier acte de foi, quel catholique
après une faute contre le foi, ont jamais observé en eux ce
passage de la vision naturelle à la vision surnaturelle due motif
de foi?
Pinard de la Boullaye, 1.
c. Rech. Sc. Rel. 4 (1913), p. 452. Similarly Lange, De Gratia p. 218, n. 310:
Si motiva objectiva assensus super naturalis et naturalis diversa essent,
ex reflexione psychologica uterque actus discerni posset. Obviously in
this stage of the question the Molinists have all the better of it. And the
task for some future Scheeben is to strike out a via media in which the
values of the Thomist position will be so defended and developed that this
appeal to internal experience will be rendered illegitimate, or at least
indecisive. If the thing can be done....
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