Preview

St. Thomas Aquinas Research Paper

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
582 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
St. Thomas Aquinas Research Paper
As a Catholic I believe in God Almighty that He is the supreme being. He created us and everything in the world and He is powerful. Although there is still imperfections, problems and sins, He can’t control them because the evil spirits always cause them. He can’t control those bad things, but it is okay because those problems can help us to grow and learn more things. He didn’t created those evil things, but He is doing something to stop those things in different ways, maybe like making us more faithful to us and to be more kind and responsible in able to not do bad things that will cause sin.
Same thing is with atheists, sinners, and offenders of God’s creations. They became like that because they might have lost faith in God and started to do things against Him. Also because some of them don’t like God and starts riots and fights against Him. Those are bad things that cause sin, but God forgives and accepts them by still making them part of this world. He still also protects them in every situation. Also my CLE teacher, stated that there are sin in the world because of the willful decisions of God’s creations to disobey His teachings and rules. They became evil by themselves because they decided to not
…show more content…
Thomas of Aquinas proved it using his Five Ways. He proved that God is the Unmoved Mover, He is the Uncaused Causer, He is the Necessary Being, He is the Perfect Being, and He is the Perfect Designer. I agree with St. Thomas of Aquinas that God really exists, because He created, guided, protected and loved me unconditionally. I can feel Him always by my side, watching over me to avoid bad problems. He accepts who I am and He really loves me. Also He exists because when I have problems and wishes, He always helps me and gives me what I need. I got an experience when I got sick once and I got hospitalized. I got a fever because I was 39.6 degrees Celsius and I was feeling very hot. After my family prayed for me, I got better after a few

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Evil, how did it happen and why is it still here on this earth? There is this belief that the Christian God is good and all-powerful. He has the power to create worlds and beings, yet there is still evil in the world. Both Pierre Bayle and Voltaire address these questions in their works “Paulicians” and Candide (respectively). They both believe the Manichean philosophy as a more rational thought process than the contemporaneous Christian view. This belief is that there is not one, but two gods in the world; a god of good and a god of evil. I myself believe in a world of balance and like the two authors listed above, accept this as more rational thought than a single omnipotent god. My reasoning is that without evil, there is no concept of good,…

    • 592 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The idea of God is intense, as both of these analyses have shown. Aquinas’ idea of God is “Ipsum esse subsistens,” or Subsistent Act of Existing Itself (Magee, 2015). To speak of God as a self-subsistent being is to say He “Just Is.” He articulates every creature is “fundamentally composed of essence and existence.” In order for everything to exist, there must be a First Cause and Aquinas says God is that cause because without it, nothing exists. God is infinite simplicity and perfect. Aquinas and Tillich both see God as Being Itself (Fesser, 2011). Tillich places God “above God.” He writes, “God does not exist.” However, this is not in an attempt to deny God, but to demonstrate that God transcends everything.…

    • 236 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aquinas is a well-known philosopher and theologian of all time. In the Summa question 6, article 8 talks about whether ignorance is voluntary. Involuntariness is to act against one’s will. Also, ignorance is the lack of knowledge. Aquinas questions how voluntary ignorance can be; he spends most or all of the eighth article explaining this. Ignorance can occur when one does not realize their ignorance, but their efforts to obtain the knowledge are of no advantage to them. In article two, objection two claims that sins imply ignorance and ignorance causes involuntariness. This leads to the idea that that every sin is involuntary. The second objection claims that sin infers ignorance, which causes involuntariness.…

    • 666 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    St. Francis of Assisi, was a very Godly, and righteous man, and in the books, I read, (St. Francis of Assisi, Francis) portrays that clearly. He was one of the most influential monks/ friars of that era, and possibly of the world, and made many contributions during the medieval ages. During his lifetime, he established many lasting orders (Order of Friars Minor, Order of Saint Claire, Third Order of Saint Francis, Custody of the Holy Land) that has much influence during that time, like the well-known St. Dominic.…

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    St. Francis has a large impact on me. He is the patron of animals, merchants and ecology. Because Francis and I both have a connection to animals it seems only fitting that I choose him as my saint for this project.…

    • 788 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Telelogical argument

    • 1100 Words
    • 5 Pages

    St.Thomas Aquinas believed that existence of god could be proven. In his Summa Theologiae Aquinas put forward five proofs (or five ways) for the existence of God:First Way – Argument from Motion Second Way – Causation of Existence Third Way – Contingent and Necessary Objects Fourth Way – The Argument from Degrees and Perfection Fifth Way – The Argument from Intelligent Design.…

    • 1100 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    We all look up to leaders, but who do they look up to? In the society we live in today, there are many political leaders all around the world. From the United States president to the pope of the Roman Catholic Church, people just like us are fighting for good causes. Leaders have walked the face of this earth and have left their marks in history. Saint Thomas More was one of those people. Saint Thomas was a lawyer, author, and a statesman. Born in 1478, More served under King Henry VIII. He became Undersheriff of the City of London, Under-Treasurer of the Exchequer, Master of Requests, High Steward of Oxford and Cambridge, Lord Chancellor of the Realm, and Speaker of the House of Commons. He is known for writing the fiction Utopia in 1516 and his brave death in 1535. Saint Thomas had many attributes that people strive for today.…

    • 767 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Aquinas' 3rd Way

    • 474 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Aquinas' third way argument states that there has to be something that must exist, which is most likely God. He starts his argument by saying not everything must exist, because things are born and die every single day. By stating this we can jump to the conclusion that if everything need not exist then there would have been a time where there was nothing. But, he goes on, if there was a time when there was nothing, then nothing would exist even today, because something cannot come from nothing. However, our observations tell us that something does exist, therefore there is something that must exist, and Aquinas says that something is God.…

    • 474 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    I do not believe that it is possible to “prove” the existence of God in the scientific sense. However, based on the arguments reviewed in favor of the rationality of God, I can enumerate reasons to believe that God exists and is active in the universe.…

    • 580 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Catholic liberal arts education is an education in the liberal arts, philosophy, and theology that takes wisdom/contemplation to be the end and so regards the liberal arts as a preparation for philosophy and theology. Moreover, it sees the wisdom/contemplation attained by theology as being higher than that of philosophy and, therefore, takes philosophy itself to be ordered to theology. The study of theology improves on our knowledge of God and illuminates the path to perfect happiness. Therefore, the continuity between each subject makes not only the goal necessary but also each step required to reach it. Therefore, the subjects found in a Catholic liberal arts education are taught in a way that utilizes their true purpose…

    • 544 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As there is more than one type of evil that also causes problems for religious believers as God didn’t just create one evil but multiple ones. Moral evil is “all evil caused deliberately by humans doing what they ought not to do” (Richard Swinburne) e.g. murder, terrorism, war whereas natural evil is “the evil that originates independently of human actions” (John Hick) e.g. volcanoes, famine, disease. Leibniz coined the term ‘metaphysical evil’, which is tracing back the evil (moral and natural) to their ultimate cause.…

    • 650 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Just once wouldn't you love for someone to simply show you the evidence for God's existence? No arm-twisting. No statements of, "You just have to believe." Well, here is an attempt to honestly offer some of the reasons which suggest that God exists.…

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The problem of evil refers to the nature of God. Many assume that God is benevolent but hardly anyone really considers the possibility that God is not all good but rather an all evil, malevolent God. The question is if God is all good and all powerful, then why did he create a world full of evil and suffering? There is so much suffering in this world that a lot of people find it hard to believe that, if God does exist, he is good. There is the argument that an all good, all powerful God would create some suffering in the world to perhaps allow people to achieve greater goods. However, in all honesty, there is more evil than good in the world and so the likely hood of that isn’t very high. So in order to explain the nature of the problem of evil, then one has to consider the possibility of an evil God as well as a benevolent one. Is God willing to prevent evil, but unable to? Is God able to prevent evil, but unwilling to do so? Or is God able to prevent evil and willing to?…

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Thomas Aquinas

    • 919 Words
    • 4 Pages

    1.) Thomas Aquinas believes that humans are born with a clean slate in a state of potency and acquire knowledge through sense experiences by abstraction of the phantasms. His view on how man acquires knowledge rejects Plato’s theory that humans are born with innate species. Along with Plato’s theory of humans understanding corporeal things through innate species, Aquinas also rejects Plato’s theory that in being born with innate species, humans spend their lives recollecting their knowledge.…

    • 919 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    God Is Responsible

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Some people would say that he is responsible for everything in the universe such as, Christians because they believe he created the world through ‘creatio ex nihilo’, this means created the world out of nothing. This elucidates that God is responsible for everything that happens in the universe because he created the world from nothing using his own hands without help from anything or anyone else and therefore should be held responsible for everything that happens in the universe however some people would argue if God was ‘pleased with what he saw’ then why are there natural disasters and suffering in the world. Christians would reply to this argument that, God created natural disasters and suffering for humans to be appreciative of what they have and this is therefore why god can be seen as responsible for everything that happens in the universe including the bad things.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays