Tuesday, April 05, 2005

Paradiso: Canto X, Doctors of the Church

Thomas Aquinas, immortalized by Dante only a couple of years before his canonization by the Church, expresses his welcome and identifies those among the first garland of the sun's souls. Having risen above Venus, Dante and Beatrice are no longer in the shadow of the earth, so we can note the first division of heaven to be within this canto -- whereas those souls existing in the sphere of the moon, of Mercury, and of Venus were souls more engaged in terrestrial affairs (inconstancy, honour, and amorousness) than in spiritual affairs, these souls of the sun were more engaged in theological concerns than they were in concerns of a terrestrial nature. For that reason, Dante sees them not as persons so much as a garland. The human form begins to fade into sheer light at this point in our escapade.



That these souls are actively dancing, pausing only long enough to address Dante and filled with their continued dance, is measured fairly against Aristotle's assertion that happiness is an activity and that he who is truly happy will always be so because he will have the attitude toward life that perpetuates his bliss even if he meets with ill-fortune. In the same measure, the Church had begun its meeting with ill-fortune at the time of Dante's writing with the planting of the seed of Church schism in the move of the papacy to Avignon, something St. Vincent Ferrer would help end and an event that would have repercussions until the Council of Constance in 1417 consolidated the three papacies that would eventually arise from this move into only one papacy reinstalled in its rightful place in Rome. The Church Triumphant, however, proves its resilience as a truly happy (activity filled) entity, meaning that regardless of the ill-fortune into which its members fall, all who are united to God through the Church can never fail in happiness.

S.

10 Comments:

Blogger Fr. Earl Meyer said...

The commentary's title is "Doctors of the Church." Aquinas, the "Angelic Doctor" lists his 11 companions, only two of whom (Albert and Bede) are on our modern list of Doctors of the Church! Since this is presumably Dante's slate of the doctors, one cannot help but be disappointed that he did not include St. Bonaventure, the Seraphic Doctor, since Dante was favorable toward his theological perspective and was educated by Franciscans. A curious list! Aquinas (Dante) does show a certain generosity here by including Siger of Brabant who was an adversary of Aquinas. It is true that the Doctors of the Church are not a single voice, but then "there can be no harmony if the whole choir sings in unison."

5:35 AM  
Blogger atskro said...

It is interesting that none of the Doctors of the Church are feminine. All of the women must have come after. Aquinas leading them appropriate due to his influence on Dante in the Comedy.

8:36 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

You've likely discovered St. Bonaventura by now, Fr. Earl. He's in the second garland and will speak quite extensively himself.

S.

9:48 PM  
Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

There are likely women in there somewhere, Atskro, for what are saints, but doctors of the Church who instruct us in how to live. Dante just hasn't articulated any. We'll meet more women later, seated near the throne of God.

S.

10:25 AM  
Blogger Romani Sum said...

First, the thought of the rotund Angelic Doctor dancing causes me to be joyful! This image of the Blessed being joyful corresponds to those who expressed Christian joy in life. I've encountered some people in my life who are constantly happy, not joyful, as we should be, but a sort of frontal-labotamy-enduced happy that causes one to feel uncomfortable. I believe there is a difference to those who are truly happy and those who always act happy. The one who is truly happy, because he knows of his adopted sonship, doesn't always smile goofily in order to express that reality. That person is content in the interior joy, the joy even in silence that permeates all other actions. Do not read this as a condemnation of happy people who bounce around the refectory in the morning, they are just out of touch with time!! Just kidding! The joy we seek is more deep than that, it is a deep-seated joy that effects out interior life, and is hopefully expressed in the exterior...properly.
-Ed

8:34 PM  
Blogger bheck said...

When reading about Aquinas, I kept comparing the role of Virgil as human reason to Aquinas and thinking that Aquinas, given his extraordinary amount of reason, would have done quite well in leading Dante on his journey.

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