Do not Resist the Spirit's Call(English, Hardcover, Torre Michael D.)

Do not Resist the Spirit's Call(English, Hardcover, Torre Michael D.)

  • Torre Michael D.
Publisher:The Catholic University of America PressISBN 13: 9780813221496ISBN 10: 0813221498

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Do not Resist the Spirit's Call(English, Hardcover, Torre Michael D.) is written by Torre Michael D. and published by The Catholic University of America Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0813221498 (ISBN 10) and 9780813221496 (ISBN 13).

The relationship of God's grace and man's free will is one of the most disputed topics in the history of Catholic theology. At the time of the Counter-Reformation, a famous quarrel arose between Jesuit defenders of Molina and Dominican defenders of Banez. This led to a series of Roman congregations on the ""aids of God's grace"" (de auxiliis), which looked into the matter but settled very little, beyond the pope declaring that neither position was heretical. Leo XIII's call to advance Thomism led to this quarrel resurfacing with renewed force in the first quarter of the twentieth century. Into this fray stepped a renowned Dominican of the University of Fribourg, Francisco Marin-Sola (1873-1932), whose published work on the development of Catholic doctrine had secured his fame among Catholic theologians. In three celebrated articles published in the Ciencia Tomista in 1925 and 1926, he presented a new and revised version of the Dominican position on this question. Marin-Sola suggested that his new version rightly developed the principles of Aquinas and was supported in major part, if only implicitly, by earlier Dominican commentators. Marin-Sola's position was instantly controversial, with some respondents decrying an abandonment of Dominican ideas and others declaring that Marin-Sola had resolved central objections and ended the quarrel of de auxiliis. In this book, Michael D. Torre makes Marin-Sola's articles available in English for the first time. The articles are preceded by an introduction on Marin-Sola and followed by a conclusion that traces the reception of his thought within the Catholic theological community. In Torre's afterword, he defends Marin-Sola's position as substantively the same as that of Aquinas.