Speaking the Incomprehensible God: Thomas Aquinas on the Interplay of Positive and Negative Theology
How
can the Church speak of the God who transcends all thought and speech?
This book is a comprehensive retrieval of Thomas Aquinas's theological
epistemology of the divine names, which is his profound contribution to
that perennial question. His theology of the divine names is a rich and
complex tapestry that weaves together the twin themes of negative and
positive theology. Tempering any extreme agnosticism, Aquinas sets out a
multi-layered negative theology respectful of God's
incomprehensibility, while he also proposes a view of theological
analogy that places it at the heart of his positive theology. Finally,
he grounds his epistemology in the fundamental theological truth that
God is the infinitely perfect and self-subsistent Creator.
Gregory Rocca's nuanced discussion prevents Aquinas's thought from being capsulized in familiar slogans and is an antidote to unilateralist or monochrome views about God-talk. Rocca laces Aquinas's negative and positive theology together, because only thatintertwining can do justice to the mystery of God. This study finds that, contrary to the views of some, Aquinas's analogy is more a matter of judgment and truth than of concept and meaning; despite his own presuppositions, Aquinas bases his theological analogy more on the insights of faith than those of reason.
Aquinas's theology of the divine names encourages contemporary dialogue to keep the tensioned truth of God in view and to remember that only a fruitful interplay of positive and negative theology can do justice to the Elusive One who evades our linguistic capture and yet desires to be acknowledged and worshiped as Creator and Sustainer. The book will prove helpful to specialists inAquinas and to others who are interested in the God-talk dialogue and can profit from an in-depth retrieval of Aquinas.
Gregory P. Rocca, O.P., is Professor of Philosophy and Theology and currently President of the Domin
Gregory Rocca's nuanced discussion prevents Aquinas's thought from being capsulized in familiar slogans and is an antidote to unilateralist or monochrome views about God-talk. Rocca laces Aquinas's negative and positive theology together, because only thatintertwining can do justice to the mystery of God. This study finds that, contrary to the views of some, Aquinas's analogy is more a matter of judgment and truth than of concept and meaning; despite his own presuppositions, Aquinas bases his theological analogy more on the insights of faith than those of reason.
Aquinas's theology of the divine names encourages contemporary dialogue to keep the tensioned truth of God in view and to remember that only a fruitful interplay of positive and negative theology can do justice to the Elusive One who evades our linguistic capture and yet desires to be acknowledged and worshiped as Creator and Sustainer. The book will prove helpful to specialists inAquinas and to others who are interested in the God-talk dialogue and can profit from an in-depth retrieval of Aquinas.
Gregory P. Rocca, O.P., is Professor of Philosophy and Theology and currently President of the Domin
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