text
stringlengths 0
80
|
---|
_______________________ |
SIXTH ARTICLE [III, Q. 89, Art. 6] |
Whether the Effect of Subsequent Penance Is to Quicken Even Dead |
Works? |
Objection 1: It would seem that the effect of subsequent Penance is |
to quicken even dead works, those, namely, that were not done in |
charity. For it seems more difficult to bring to life that which has |
been deadened, since this is never done naturally, than to quicken |
that which never had life, since certain living things are engendered |
naturally from things without life. Now deadened works are revived by |
Penance, as stated above (A. 5). Much more, therefore, are dead works |
revived. |
Objection 2: Further, if the cause be removed, the effect is removed. But |
the cause of the lack of life in works generically good done without |
charity, was the lack of charity and grace, which lack is removed by |
Penance. Therefore dead works are quickened by charity. |
Objection 3: Further, Jerome in commenting on Agg. i, 6: "You have sowed |
much," says: "If at any time you find a sinner, among his many evil |
deeds, doing that which is right, God is not so unjust as to forget |
the few good deeds on account of his many evil deeds." Now this seems |
to be the case chiefly when past evil deeds are removed by Penance. |
Therefore it seems that through Penance, God rewards the former deeds |
done in the state of sin, which implies that they are quickened. |
Contrary: The Apostle says (1 Cor. 13:3): "If I should |
distribute all my goods to feed the poor, and if I should deliver my |
body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing." |
But this would not be true, if, at least by subsequent Penance, they |
were quickened. Therefore Penance does not quicken works which before |
were dead. |
Response: A work is said to be dead in two ways: first, |
effectively, because, to wit, it is a cause of death, in which sense |
sinful works are said to be dead, according to Heb. 9:14: "The blood |
of Christ . . . shall cleanse our conscience from dead works." These |
dead works are not quickened but removed by Penance, according to |
Heb. 6:1: "Not laying again the foundation of Penance from dead |
works." Secondly, works are said to be dead privatively, because, to |
wit, they lack spiritual life, which is founded on charity, whereby |
the soul is united to God, the result being that it is quickened as |
the body by the soul: in which sense too, faith, if it lack charity, |
is said to be dead, according to James 2:20: "Faith without works is |
dead." In this way also, all works that are generically good, are |
said to be dead, if they be done without charity, inasmuch as they |
fail to proceed from the principle of life; even as we might call the |
sound of a harp, a dead voice. Accordingly, the difference of life |
and death in works is in relation to the principle from which they |
proceed. But works cannot proceed a second time from a principle, |
because they are transitory, and the same identical deed cannot be |
resumed. Therefore it is impossible for dead works to be quickened by |
Penance. |
Reply Objection 1: In the physical order things whether dead or deadened |
lack the principle of life. But works are said to be deadened, not in |
relation to the principle whence they proceeded, but in relation to |
an extrinsic impediment; while they are said to be dead in relation |
to a principle. Consequently there is no comparison. |
Reply Objection 2: Works generically good done without charity are said to |
be dead on account of the lack of grace and charity, as principles. |
Now the subsequent Penance does not supply that want, so as to make |
them proceed from such a principle. Hence the argument does not prove. |
Reply Objection 3: God remembers the good deeds a man does when in a state |
of sin, not by rewarding them in eternal life, which is due only to |
living works, i.e. those done from charity, but by a temporal reward: |
thus Gregory declares (Hom. de Divite et Lazaro, 41 in Evang.) that |
"unless that rich man had done some good deed, and had received his |
reward in this world, Abraham would certainly not have said to him: |
'Thou didst receive good things in thy lifetime.'" Or again, this may |
mean that he will be judged less severely: wherefore Augustine says |
(De Patientia xxvi): "We cannot say that it would be better for the |
schismatic that by denying Christ he should suffer none of those |
things which he suffered by confessing Him; but we must believe that |
he will be judged with less severity, than if by denying Christ, he |
had suffered none of those things. Thus the words of the Apostle, 'If |
I should deliver my body to be burned and have not charity, it |
profiteth me nothing,' refer to the obtaining of the kingdom of |
heaven, and do not exclude the possibility of being sentenced with |
less severity at the last judgment." |
_______________________ |
QUESTION 90 |
OF THE PARTS OF PENANCE, IN GENERAL |
(In Four Articles) |
We must now consider the parts of Penance: (1) in general; |
(2) each one in particular. |
Under the first head there are four points of inquiry: |
(1) Whether Penance has any parts? |
(2) Of the number of its parts; |