This book is a study on the ideas of Thomas Aquinas, one of the greatest philosophers and theologians of all time, on the Catholic doctrine of Immaculate Conception. Though Thomas had denied the doctrine which was not yet declared a dogma then, it has to be understood in the historical viewpoint and
The Immaculate Conception: Why Thomas Aquinas Denied, While John Duns Scotus, Gregory Palamas, & Mark Eugenicus Professed the Absolute Immaculate Existence of Mary
✍ Scribed by Fr. Christiaan Kappes
- Publisher
- Academy of the Immaculate
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 220
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This second volume of the series Mariological Studies in Honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe treats the mystery of the Immaculate Conception, hidden in plain sight for nearly a thousand years prior to Bl. John Duns Scotus and his later influence at the Council of Florence.
Until now, practically nothing was known of this history.Key to the present study is St. Gregory Nazianzen, whose Marian doctrine inspired Benedict XVI at a 2007 public “Mary, who gave human nature to Christ, is true Mother of God and, in view of her highest mission, was ‘prepurified,’ as if a distant prelude of the Immaculate Conception.”
Fr. Kappes’ groundbreaking thesis confirms Benedict’s insight beyond anything previously imaginable. The person and mystery of Mary in Christ and the Church unfolds as indispensable for ecumenical theology. Greco-Latin agreement on the Immaculate Conception at Florence was itself a portent to subsequent harmony on other doctrinal questions, then, as now. As Pope Francis intensifies efforts to resolve differences between Orthodox and Catholics, Fr. Kappes’ research clarifies Our Lady’s central role in these efforts.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book is a study on the ideas of Thomas Aquinas, one of the greatest philosophers and theologians of all time, on the Catholic doctrine of Immaculate Conception. Though Thomas had denied the doctrine which was not yet declared a dogma then, it has to be understood in the historical viewpoint and
cf. "[St. Thomas affirming the Immaculate Conception!](https://isidore.co/forum/index.php?topic=119.msg333#msg333)" Storff's book is a fairly rambling, redundant attempt at refuting: Pedro Lumbreras O.P., "[Saint Thomas and the Immaculate Conception](https://novusordowatch.org/wp-content/uploads/lum
In 1920s Montreal, 75 parishoners die one terrible night at the hands of an arsonist. Among the survivors are Remouald, whose nightmarish, repressed childhood memories cause him constant turmoil; Séraphon, his invalid father who holds a self-destructive secret; and schoolteacher Clémentine Clément,
In 1920s Montreal, 75 parishoners die one terrible night at the hands of an arsonist. Among the survivors are Remouald, whose nightmarish, repressed childhood memories cause him constant turmoil; Séraphon, his invalid father who holds a self-destructive secret; and schoolteacher Clémentine Clément,