دانلود کتاب Charity as Divine and Human Friendship: A Metaphysical and Scriptural Explanation According to the Thought of St. Thomas Aquinas
by Matthew Kauth
|
عنوان فارسی: نیکوکاری به عنوان دوستی الهی و انسانی: توضیحی متافیزیکی و کتاب مقدس با توجه به تفکر سنت توماس آکویناس |
دانلود کتاب
جزییات کتاب
This is achieved in two symphonic movements:
1) An investigation into the metaphysical substructure of friendship;
2) Analysis of St Thomas' commentary on St John's Gospel from which he takes his understanding of charity as friendship.
In the first part, basic concepts are defined which are employed ubiquitously by the Angelic Doctor whenever he discusses love and friendship. Once a basic lexicon is built, the author distinguishes diverse kinds of love given the anthropology of St Thomas. This in term is employed in the specific love of friendship noting also Thomas' dependence upon the Philosopher, Aristotle. Finally, charity itself is examined based primarily upon Thomas' treatment in the Secunda secundae of the Summa Theologiae.
The second movement of the work engages the text of Thomas' commentary. Aquinas sees the Incarnation as the archetype of all transformation in Christ, namely, that Christ establishes with man a common life upon which friendship is based. This common life must move from the sensible to the spiritual, from human life to Divine. This course is tracked by the author with special emphasis on the means employed by Christ now with His would-be friends, namely, the gift of His Spirit and the Sacrament of Charity.
About the Author:
Fr. Matthew Kauth is a priest for the Diocese of Charlotte North Carolina, ordained in the Year of our Lord 2000. Fr. Kauth did his undergraduate work in philosophy at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary and his graduate work in theology at the Catholic University of America. After serving as both parochial vicar and subsequently pastor, Fr. Kauth earned a license and doctorate in Moral Theology from the University of the Holy Cross in Rome. He currently teaches diverse courses at Belmont Abbey College in addition to his other pastoral responsibilities at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Charlotte, NC.