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Peter Kreeft - Practical Theology: Spiritual Direction from St. Thomas Aquinas

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Peter Kreeft Practical Theology: Spiritual Direction from St. Thomas Aquinas
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Practical Theology: Spiritual Direction from St. Thomas Aquinas: summary, description and annotation

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From a lifetime of studying the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas, popular author Peter Kreeft says that his amazement has continually increased not only at Aquinas theoretical, philosophical brilliance and sanity, but also at his personal, practical wisdom, his existential bite. Yet this second dimension of St. Thomas has usually been eclipsed by the other. Kreeft wrote this book to help bring that sun out from its eclipse. He provides easily digestible samples of the religious wisdom of Aquinas.
Here are 359 pieces of wisdom from St. Thomas s masterpiece, the Summa Theologiae, which Kreeft says are literally more valuable than all the kingdoms of this world because they will help you to attain the one thing needful, or the greatest good, the ultimate end and purpose and meaning of life. Three of its names are being a saint, beatitude ( supreme happiness ) and union with God. That was the principle for Kreeft in choosing which passages to use: do they help you to attain your ultimate end - sanctity, happiness, union with God? St. Thomas would have agreed with writer Leon Bloy, who often wrote that in the end there is only one tragedy in life: not to have been a saint .
These 359 gold nuggets have helped Kreeft in the struggles of real life, to live in the real world, to grow closer to the Lord, and he hopes they will do the same for his readers. After each passage directly from Aquinas, Kreeft provides brief spiritual commentary to help explain it and apply it - practical, personal, existential, livable thoughts.
He has framed these readings as answers to questions that people actually ask their spiritual directors. Each answer is taken word for word from Aquinas.
Among the many topics Aquinas and Kreeft cover here include: The problem of evilInterpreting the BibleLove vs. knowledgeReconciling justice and mercyHuman freedom and divine graceAngels and demonsThe need for theologyPredestination and free willThree kinds of goods

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PRACTICAL THEOLOGY

SPIRITUAL DIRECTION
FROM ST. THOMAS AQUINAS

PETER KREEFT

PRACTICAL THEOLOGY

SPIRITUAL DIRECTION

FROM ST. THOMAS AQUINAS

358 Ways Your Mind Can Help You to Become a Saint
from the Summa Theologiae

IGNATIUS PRESS SAN FRANCISCO

Quotes from the Summa Theologica , first complete American edition
1947 by Benziger Brothers, New York

In most cases the Scripture quotations in this book have been taken from the Revised Standard Version of the Holy Bible, Second Catholic Edition, 2006. The Revised Standard Version of the Holy Bible: the Old Testament, 1952, 2006; the Apocrypha, 1957, 2006; the New Testament, 1946, 2006; the Catholic Edition of the Old Testament, incorporating the Apocrypha, 1966, 2006; the Catholic Edition of the New Testament, 1965, 2006 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. All rights reserved.

Some of the Scripture quotations, especially from the Psalms and the Wisdom books, are taken from the Douay-Rheims Version of the Bible. The notation differs from that of modern versions like the RSV.

Cover art: St. Thomas Aquinas by Carlo Crivelli, 1476
National Gallery, London
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Cover design by Enrique Javier Aguilar Pinto

2014 by Ignatius Press, San Francisco
All rights reserved
ISBN 978-1-58617-968-7
Library of Congress Control Number 2014943996
Printed in the United States of America

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION

St. Thomas wrote a very short preface to his very long (4,000-page) Summa Theologiae . In it he says he wrote his Summa for beginners! I too will give you a fairly short preface (though not as short as his) to tell you why I wrote this fairly long book (though not as long as his), and why beginners should read it.

In a lifetime of browsing through Aquinas, my amazement has continually increased not only at his theoretical, philosophical brilliance and sanity but equally at his personal, practical wisdom, his existential bite. Yet this second dimension of St. Thomas has usually been eclipsed by the other. I wrote this book to help bring that sun out from its eclipse. Since I already wrote an annotated anthology of St. Thomas purely rational, philosophical wisdom, Summa of the Summa , extracting it from its larger theological context of faith and divine revelation. I here try to redress the balance with an easily digestible sample of his much larger distinctively religious wisdom.

Here are 358 pieces of wisdom from St. Thomas masterpiece the Summa , which are literally more valuable than all the kingdoms of this world because they will help you to attain the one thing needful, the summum bonum or greatest good, the ultimate end and purpose and meaning of life, which has many names but which is the same reality. Three of its names are being a saint, beatitude (supreme happiness) and union with God. That was my principle for choosing which passages to use: do they help you to attain your ultimate end, i.e., sanctity, happiness, union with God?

St. Thomas would have agreed with Leon Bloy, who often wrote that in the end there is only one tragedy in life: not to have been a saint.

This is the same thing as attaining true happiness. St. Thomas, like Aristotle, meant by happiness not merely subjective contentment but real perfection, attaining the end or final cause or purpose of your very existence.

This is the same thing as union with God, the source of all holiness and all happiness. St. Thomas knew that union with God begins not after death but now. If this real union does not begin now, as a seedif you are not born again of the Spiritthen that life cannot and will not grow, as a flower, in eternity.

This book is a selection of St. Thomas fertilizers to make that seed grow.

There are four kinds of fertilizer. They are the four dimensions of every religion. The word religion (from religare ) means a binding-back relationship, a tying-to; and there are four ways every religion ties us to God, or something like God. (These four ways are also the four parts of The Catechism of the Catholic Church. ) They are (1) theology, (2) morality, (3) public liturgy, and (4) private prayer. Condensing the last two into one, they are (1) creed, (2) code, and (3) cult; or (1) words, (2) works, and (3) worship; or (1) the spiritually true, (2) the spiritually good, and (3) the spiritually beautiful. They are the three ways to become a saint, the three highways to Heaven, and they all begin in the heart, for in the heart are the highways to Zion (Heaven) (Ps 84:5). St. Thomas was a master of all three.

The ultimate reason we must become holy is that that is the only way to become real . For becoming holy is becoming what reality ultimately is, i.e., what God, the ultimate reality and the touchstone for all reality, is: true, good, and beautiful; real, loving, and joyful. You must be holy because I the Lord your God am holy was His ultimate explanation of His law to His chosen people, who were His collective prophet to the world.

Attaining this end depends on the willthe will to attain it, the wills choice to believe God, to hope in God, and above all, to love God and that which God is (truth, goodness, beauty).

But the will depends on the mind. Each truth about God known by the mind is a new motive for loving Him with the will. It also works the other way around: the more you love any person (human or divine), the more you want to know him (or Him) better, and the more you do. And this always causes deep joy.

But we simply cant jump-start our will by a simple command: Go to now, love God more! When we give this command to ourselves, we immediately find, like St. Augustine in the Confessions , that the very same self that commands sanctity also disobeys its own commandment! We have divided selves. The self that wants above all things to be forever bound to God and His will in eternity also wants to be free from Him at the present moment to do its own will. Our wills are divided. We love our Father in Heaven, yet we are rebellious kids. We are stubborn, silly, stupid, selfish, and sinful. That is the bad news. Without it the good news makes no sense. A free heart transplant is not good news unless your old heart is in bad shape. Sin means our hearts are in bad shape-Sin means separationfrom God and from our neighbors and even from our deepest selves.

We need the mind to educate and enlighten the will, as a traveler needs a map.

No one in history has ever supplied that map more brilliantly and profoundly than St. Thomas.

Therefore, reading St. Thomas is a powerful aid to happiness, to sanctity.

It has been that to me. I have found more personal spiritual nourishment, more motivation to be holy, in the dry, abstract pages of the Summa than in most other spiritual writers.

But reading the Summa all by yourself is difficult, unless someone makes it easy. Its not likely that you will read all 4,000 pages of the Summa , so I give you here a kind of Readers Digest version. By chopping up the meat into small, bite-sized pieces, as Mommy does for Babyor, to change the image to something less insulting, I do the preliminary work of going down into the 4,000-page tunnels of this labyrinth, as into a deep mine, extract a few choice gold nuggets from this rich lode, bring them to the surface, and give them to you to wear as jewelry.

I tried to type the next sentence The Summa is a gold mine, and it came out The Summa is a gold mind. I think this was my guardian angel playing a providential joke on me. The typo is the truth.

Here are 358 gold nuggets that have helped me enormously in the struggle of real life, the struggle to live in the real world, to be sane, or in the words of the classic Anglican prayer, to know Thee more clearly, to love Thee more dearly, and to follow Thee more nearly. They will help you too.

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