Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas

Neo-Thomism misread Aquinas by trying to find in him answers to questions posed by Descartes and Kant, producing a theology that people like Chauvet rightly abandoned. This thesis, on the other hand, proposes a decidedly pre-modern reading of Thomas. It begins with two basic structures of Thomas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vnuk, Joseph
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13153/
_version_ 1848791665595121664
author Vnuk, Joseph
author_facet Vnuk, Joseph
author_sort Vnuk, Joseph
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Neo-Thomism misread Aquinas by trying to find in him answers to questions posed by Descartes and Kant, producing a theology that people like Chauvet rightly abandoned. This thesis, on the other hand, proposes a decidedly pre-modern reading of Thomas. It begins with two basic structures of Thomas' thought - a threefold notion of truth (so that truth is ontological as well as epistemological), and an understanding of exitus-reditus that shows its links to “archaic” concepts such as the hau of the Maori. Then it considers human life in terms of merit and thus “economy,” (exchange of valuables); but this economy is a gift economy, and here we consider the gift in the light of Seneca (whom Thomas took as an authority) and Mauss, as well as using Allard's insights into how debt, particularly debt to God, generates what in Thomas takes the place of the Cartesian subject. In this light grace is seen as the spirit of the gift with which God graces us, giving rise to gratitude. We then consider Christ as graced and gracing us, first of all by our configuration to him in the sacraments (using the analogy of clothes), followed by a conformation in grace. We look at this in baptism and penance, but then we take the Eucharist as a three-fold sign, and show how it generates in us faith, hope and love. The unity of the sacrament as a gift is emphasised, and the cases of its division, such as fiction, the votum sacramenti, and circumcision are examined. As a Jew, Derrida gives insight into grace before the coming of Christ and the value of the sacrifice of Abraham, and in this way we can see how Thomas circumvents Derrida's critique of the gift. Finally we compare Thomas with Chauvet.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:32:07Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-13153
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:32:07Z
publishDate 2013
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-131532025-02-28T11:23:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13153/ Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas Vnuk, Joseph Neo-Thomism misread Aquinas by trying to find in him answers to questions posed by Descartes and Kant, producing a theology that people like Chauvet rightly abandoned. This thesis, on the other hand, proposes a decidedly pre-modern reading of Thomas. It begins with two basic structures of Thomas' thought - a threefold notion of truth (so that truth is ontological as well as epistemological), and an understanding of exitus-reditus that shows its links to “archaic” concepts such as the hau of the Maori. Then it considers human life in terms of merit and thus “economy,” (exchange of valuables); but this economy is a gift economy, and here we consider the gift in the light of Seneca (whom Thomas took as an authority) and Mauss, as well as using Allard's insights into how debt, particularly debt to God, generates what in Thomas takes the place of the Cartesian subject. In this light grace is seen as the spirit of the gift with which God graces us, giving rise to gratitude. We then consider Christ as graced and gracing us, first of all by our configuration to him in the sacraments (using the analogy of clothes), followed by a conformation in grace. We look at this in baptism and penance, but then we take the Eucharist as a three-fold sign, and show how it generates in us faith, hope and love. The unity of the sacrament as a gift is emphasised, and the cases of its division, such as fiction, the votum sacramenti, and circumcision are examined. As a Jew, Derrida gives insight into grace before the coming of Christ and the value of the sacrifice of Abraham, and in this way we can see how Thomas circumvents Derrida's critique of the gift. Finally we compare Thomas with Chauvet. 2013 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13153/1/Full_of_Grace_and_Truth__-__the_sacramental_economy_according_to_Thomas_Aquinas.pdf Vnuk, Joseph (2013) Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Vnuk, Joseph
Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas
title Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas
title_full Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas
title_fullStr Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas
title_full_unstemmed Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas
title_short Full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to Thomas Aquinas
title_sort full of grace and truth: the sacramental economy according to thomas aquinas
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13153/