|
St. Thomas Aquinas
excerpts
from
SUMMA THEOLOGICA
from the Christian
Classics Etherial Library website.
THE FIRST PART
________________________________________________________________________
QUESTION 50
OF THE SUBSTANCE OF THE ANGELS ABSOLUTELY
CONSIDERED (FIVE ARTICLES)
Now we consider the
distinction of corporeal and spiritual
creatures: firstly, the purely spiritual
creature which in Holy Scripture is called
angel; secondly, the creature wholly
corporeal; thirdly, the composite creature,
corporeal and spiritual, which is man.
Concerning the
angels, we consider first what belongs to
their substance; secondly, what belongs to
their intellect; thirdly, what belongs to
their will; fourthly, what belongs to their
creation.
Their substance we
consider absolutely and in relation to
corporeal things.
Concerning their
substance absolutely considered, there are
five points of inquiry:
(1)
Whether there is any entirely spiritual
creature, altogether incorporeal?
(2)
Supposing that an angel is such, we ask
whether it is composed of matter and form?
(3) We
ask concerning their number.
(4) Of
their difference from each other.
(5)
Of their immortality or incorruptibility.
|
Article (1) Whether an angel
is altogether incorporeal?
Objection 1: It
would seem that an angel is not entirely
incorporeal. For what is incorporeal only as
regards ourselves, and not in relation to
God, is not absolutely incorporeal. But
Damascene says (De Fide Orth. ii) that "an
angel is said to be incorporeal and
immaterial as regards us; but compared to
God it is corporeal and material. Therefore
he is not simply incorporeal."
Objection 2:
Further, nothing is moved except a body, as
the Philosopher says (Phys. vi, text 32).
But Damascene says (De Fide Orth. ii) that
"an angel is an ever movable intellectual
substance." Therefore an angel is a
corporeal substance.
Objection 3:
Further, Ambrose says (De Spir. Sanct. i,
7): "Every creature is limited within its
own nature." But to be limited belongs to
bodies. Therefore, every creature is
corporeal. Now angels are God's creatures,
as appears from
Ps. 148:2: "Praise ye" the Lord, "all
His angels"; and, farther on (verse 4), "For
He spoke, and they were made; He commanded,
and they were created." Therefore angels are
corporeal.
On the contrary,
It is said (Ps.
103:4): "Who makes His angels spirits."
I answer that,
There must be some incorporeal creatures.
For what is principally intended by God in
creatures is good, and this consists in
assimilation to God Himself. And the perfect
assimilation of an effect to a cause is
accomplished when the effect imitates the
cause according to that whereby the cause
produces the effect; as heat makes heat.
Now, God produces the creature by His
intellect and will (Q[14],
A[8];
Q[19], A[4] ). Hence the perfection of
the universe requires that there should be
intellectual creatures. Now intelligence
cannot be the action of a body, nor of any
corporeal faculty; for every body is limited
to "here" and "now." Hence the perfection of
the universe requires the existence of an
incorporeal creature.
The ancients, however,
not properly realizing the force of
intelligence, and failing to make a proper
distinction between sense and intellect,
thought that nothing existed in the world
but what could be apprehended by sense and
imagination. And because bodies alone fall
under imagination, they supposed that no
being existed except bodies, as the
Philosopher observes (Phys. iv, text 52,57).
Thence came the error of the Sadducees, who
said there was no spirit (Acts
23:8).
But the very fact that
intellect is above sense is a reasonable
proof that there are some incorporeal things
comprehensible by the intellect alone.
Reply to Objection
1: Incorporeal substances rank between
God and corporeal creatures. Now the medium
compared to one extreme appears to be the
other extreme, as what is tepid compared to
heat seems to be cold; and thus it is said
that angels, compared to God, are material
and corporeal, not, however, as if anything
corporeal existed in them.
Reply to Objection
2: Movement is there taken in the sense
in which it is applied to intelligence and
will. Therefore an angel is called an ever
mobile substance, because he is ever
actually intelligent, and not as if he were
sometimes actually and sometimes
potentially, as we are. Hence it is clear
that the objection rests on an equivocation.
Reply to Objection
3: To be circumscribed by local limits
belongs to bodies only; whereas to be
circumscribed by essential limits belongs to
all creatures, both corporeal and spiritual.
Hence Ambrose says (De Spir. Sanct. i, 7)
that "although some things are not contained
in corporeal place, still they are none the
less circumscribed by their substance."
|
Article (2) Whether an angel is
composed of matter and form?
Objection 1: It
would seem that an angel is composed of
matter and form. For everything which is
contained under any genus is composed of the
genus, and of the difference which added to
the genus makes the species. But the genus
comes from the matter, and the difference
from the form (Metaph. xiii, text 6).
Therefore everything which is in a genus is
composed of matter and form. But an angel is
in the genus of substance. Therefore he is
composed of matter and form.
Objection 2:
Further, wherever the properties of matter
exist, there is matter. Now the properties
of matter are to receive and to substand;
whence Boethius says (De Trin.) that "a
simple form cannot be a subject": and the
above properties are found in the angel.
Therefore an angel is composed of matter and
form.
Objection 3:
Further, form is act. So what is form only
is pure act. But an angel is not pure act,
for this belongs to God alone. Therefore an
angel is not form only, but has a form in
matter.
Objection 4:
Further, form is properly limited and
perfected by matter. So the form which is
not in matter is an infinite form. But the
form of an angel is not infinite, for every
creature is finite. Therefore the form of an
angel is in matter.
On the contrary,
Dionysius says (Div. Nom. iv): "The first
creatures are understood to be as immaterial
as they are incorporeal."
I answer that,
Some assert that the angels are composed of
matter and form; which opinion Avicebron
endeavored to establish in his book of the
Fount of Life. For he supposes that whatever
things are distinguished by the intellect
are really distinct. Now as regards
incorporeal substance, the intellect
apprehends that which distinguishes it from
corporeal substance, and that which it has
in common with it. Hence he concludes that
what distinguishes incorporeal from
corporeal substance is a kind of form to it,
and whatever is subject to this
distinguishing form, as it were something
common, is its matter. Therefore, he asserts
the universal matter of spiritual and
corporeal things is the same; so that it
must be understood that the form of
incorporeal substance is impressed in the
matter of spiritual things, in the same way
as the form of quantity is impressed in the
matter of corporeal things.
But one glance is
enough to show that there cannot be one
matter of spiritual and of corporeal things.
For it is not possible that a spiritual and
a corporeal form should be received into the
same part of matter, otherwise one and the
same thing would be corporeal and spiritual.
Hence it would follow that one part of
matter receives the corporeal form, and
another receives the spiritual form. Matter,
however, is not divisible into parts except
as regarded under quantity; and without
quantity substance is indivisible, as
Aristotle says (Phys. i, text 15). Therefore
it would follow that the matter of spiritual
things is subject to quantity; which cannot
be. Therefore it is impossible that
corporeal and spiritual things should have
the same matter.
It is, further,
impossible for an intellectual substance to
have any kind of matter. For the operation
belonging to anything is according to the
mode of its substance. Now to understand is
an altogether immaterial operation, as
appears from its object, whence any act
receives its species and nature. For a thing
is understood according to its degree of
immateriality; because forms that exist in
matter are individual forms which the
intellect cannot apprehend as such. Hence it
must be that every individual substance is
altogether immaterial.
But things
distinguished by the intellect are not
necessarily distinguished in reality;
because the intellect does not apprehend
things according to their mode, but
according to its own mode. Hence material
things which are below our intellect exist
in our intellect in a simpler mode than they
exist in themselves. Angelic substances, on
the other hand, are above our intellect; and
hence our intellect cannot attain to
apprehend them, as they are in themselves,
but by its own mode, according as it
apprehends composite things; and in this way
also it apprehends God
(Q[3]).
Reply to Objection
1: It is difference which constitutes
the species. Now everything is constituted
in a species according as it is determined
to some special grade of being because "the
species of things are like numbers," which
differ by addition and subtraction of unity,
as the Philosopher says (Metaph. viii, text
10). But in material things there is one
thing which determines to a special grade,
and that is the form; and another thing
which is determined, and this is the matter;
and hence from the latter the "genus" is
derived, and from the former the
"difference." Whereas in immaterial things
there is no separate determinator and thing
determined; each thing by its own self holds
a determinate grade in being; and therefore
in them "genus" and "difference" are not
derived from different things, but from one
and the same. Nevertheless, this differs in
our mode of conception; for, inasmuch as our
intellect considers it as indeterminate, it
derives the idea of their "genus"; and
inasmuch as it considers it determinately,
it derives the idea of their "difference."
Reply to Objection
2: This reason is given in the book on
the Fount of Life, and it would be cogent,
supposing that the receptive mode of the
intellect and of matter were the same. But
this is clearly false. For matter receives
the form, that thereby it may be constituted
in some species, either of air, or of fire,
or of something else. But the intellect does
not receive the form in the same way;
otherwise the opinion of Empedocles (De
Anima i, 5, text 26) would be true, to the
effect that we know earth by earth, and fire
by fire. But the intelligible form is in the
intellect according to the very nature of a
form; for as such is it so known by the
intellect. Hence such a way of receiving is
not that of matter, but of an immaterial
substance.
Reply to Objection
3: Although there is no composition of
matter and form in an angel, yet there is
act and potentiality. And this can be made
evident if we consider the nature of
material things which contain a twofold
composition. The first is that of form and
matter, whereby the nature is constituted.
Such a composite nature is not its own
existence but existence is its act. Hence
the nature itself is related to its own
existence as potentiality to act. Therefore
if there be no matter, and supposing that
the form itself subsists without matter,
there nevertheless still remains the
relation of the form to its very existence,
as of potentiality to act. And such a kind
of composition is understood to be in the
angels; and this is what some say, that an
angel is composed of, "whereby he is," and
"what is," or "existence," and "what is," as
Boethius says. For "what is," is the form
itself subsisting; and the existence itself
is whereby the substance is; as the running
is whereby the runner runs. But in God
"existence" and "what is" are not different
as was explained above (Q[3],
A[4]). Hence God alone is pure act.
Reply to Objection
4: Every creature is simply finite,
inasmuch as its existence is not absolutely
subsisting, but is limited to some nature to
which it belongs. But there is nothing
against a creature being considered
relatively infinite. Material creatures are
infinite on the part of matter, but finite
in their form, which is limited by the
matter which receives it. But immaterial
created substances are finite in their
being; whereas they are infinite in the
sense that their forms are not received in
anything else; as if we were to say, for
example, that whiteness existing separate is
infinite as regards the nature of whiteness,
forasmuch as it is not contracted to any one
subject; while its "being" is finite as
determined to some one special nature.
Whence it is said (De
Causis, prop. 16) that "intelligence is
finite from above," as receiving its being
from above itself, and is "infinite from
below," as not received in any matter.
|
Article (3) Whether the
angels exist in any great number?
Objection 1: It
would seem that the angels are not in great
numbers. For number is a species of
quantity, and follows the division of a
continuous body. But this cannot be in the
angels, since they are incorporeal, as was
shown above
(A[1]). Therefore the angels cannot
exist in any great number.
Objection 2:
Further, the more a thing approaches to
unity, so much the less is it multiplied, as
is evident in numbers. But among other
created natures the angelic nature
approaches nearest to God. Therefore since
God is supremely one, it seems that there is
the least possible number in the angelic
nature.
Objection 3:
Further, the proper effect of the separate
substances seems to be the movements of the
heavenly bodies. But the movements of the
heavenly bodies fall within some small
determined number, which we can apprehend.
Therefore the angels are not in greater
number than the movements of the heavenly
bodies.
Objection 4:
Dionysius says (Div. Nom. iv) that "all
intelligible and intellectual substances
subsist because of the rays of the divine
goodness." But a ray is only multiplied
according to the different things that
receive it. Now it cannot be said that their
matter is receptive of an intelligible ray,
since intellectual substances are
immaterial, as was shown above
(A[2]). Therefore it seems that the
multiplication of intellectual substances
can only be according to the requirements of
the first bodies---that is, of the heavenly
ones, so that in some way the shedding form
of the aforesaid rays may be terminated in
them; and hence the same conclusion is to be
drawn as before.
On the contrary,
It is said (Dan.
7:10): "Thousands of thousands
ministered to Him, and ten thousands times a
hundred thousand stood before Him."
I answer that,
There have been various opinions with regard
to the number of the separate substances.
Plato contended that the separate substances
are the species of sensible things; as if we
were to maintain that human nature is a
separate substance of itself: and according
to this view it would have to be maintained
that the number of the separate substances
is the number of the species of sensible
things. Aristotle, however, rejects this
view (Metaph. i, text 31) because matter is
of the very nature of the species of
sensible things. Consequently the separate
substances cannot be the exemplar species of
these sensible things; but have their own
fixed natures, which are higher than the
natures of sensible things. Nevertheless
Aristotle held (Metaph. xi, text 43) that
those more perfect natures bear relation to
these sensible things, as that of mover and
end; and therefore he strove to find out the
number of the separate substances according
to the number of the first movements.
But since this appears
to militate against the teachings of Sacred
Scripture, Rabbi Moses the Jew, wishing to
bring both into harmony, held that the
angels, in so far as they are styled
immaterial substances, are multiplied
according to the number of heavenly
movements or bodies, as Aristotle held
(Metaph. xi, text 43); while he contended
that in the Scriptures even men bearing a
divine message are styled angels; and again,
even the powers of natural things, which
manifest God's almighty power. It is,
however, quite foreign to the custom of the
Scriptures for the powers of irrational
things to be designated as angels.
Hence it must be said
that the angels, even inasmuch as they are
immaterial substances, exist in exceeding
great number, far beyond all material
multitude. This is what Dionysius says (Coel.
Hier. xiv): "There are many blessed armies
of the heavenly intelligences, surpassing
the weak and limited reckoning of our
material numbers." The reason whereof is
this, because, since it is the perfection of
the universe that God chiefly intends in the
creation of things, the more perfect some
things are, in so much greater an excess are
they created by God. Now, as in bodies such
excess is observed in regard to their
magnitude, so in things incorporeal is it
observed in regard to their multitude. We
see, in fact, that incorruptible bodies,
exceed corruptible bodies almost
incomparably in magnitude; for the entire
sphere of things active and passive is
something very small in comparison with the
heavenly bodies. Hence it is reasonable to
conclude that the immaterial substances as
it were incomparably exceed material
substances as to multitude.
Reply to Objection
1: In the angels number is not that of
discrete quantity, brought about by division
of what is continuous, but that which is
caused by distinction of forms; according as
multitude is reckoned among the
transcendentals, as was said above (Q[30],
A[3];
Q[11]).
Reply to Objection
2: From the angelic nature being the
nighest unto God, it must needs have least
of multitude in its composition, but not so
as to be found in few subjects.
Reply to Objection
3: This is Aristotle's argument (Metaph.
xii, text 44), and it would conclude
necessarily if the separate substances were
made for corporeal substances. For thus the
immaterial substances would exist to no
purpose, unless some movement from them were
to appear in corporeal things. But it is not
true that the immaterial substances exist on
account of the corporeal, because the end is
nobler than the means to the end. Hence
Aristotle says (Metaph. xii, text 44) that
this is not a necessary argument, but a
probable one. He was forced to make use of
this argument, since only through sensible
things can we come to know intelligible
ones.
Reply to Objection
4: This argument comes from the opinion
of such as hold that matter is the cause of
the distinction of things; but this was
refuted above (Q[47],
A[1]). Accordingly, the multiplication
of the angels is not to be taken according
to matter, nor according to bodies, but
according to the divine wisdom devising the
various orders of immaterial substances.
|
Article (4)
Whether
the angels differ in species?
Objection 1: It
would seem that the angels do not differ in
species. For since the "difference" is
nobler than the 'genus,' all things which
agree in what is noblest in them, agree
likewise in their ultimate constitutive
difference; and so they are the same
according to species. But all angels agree
in what is noblest in them---that is to say,
in intellectuality. Therefore all the angels
are of one species.
Objection 2:
Further, more and less do not change a
species. But the angels seem to differ only
from one another according to more and
less---namely, as one is simpler than
another, and of keener intellect. Therefore
the angels do not differ specifically.
Objection 3:
Further, soul and angel are
contra-distinguished mutually from each
other. But all souls are of the one species.
So therefore are the angels.
Objection 4:
Further, the more perfect a thing is in
nature, the more ought it to be multiplied.
But this would not be so if there were but
one individual under one species. Therefore
there are many angels of one species.
On the contrary,
In things of one species there is no such
thing as "first" and "second" [prius et
posterius], as the Philosopher says (Metaph.
iii, text 2). But in the angels even of the
one order there are first, middle, and last,
as Dionysius says (Hier. Ang. x). Therefore
the angels are not of the same species.
I answer that,
Some have said that all spiritual
substances, even souls, are of the one
species. Others, again, that all the angels
are of the one species, but not souls; while
others allege that all the angels of one
hierarchy, or even of one order, are of the
one species.
But this is impossible.
For such things as agree in species but
differ in number, agree in form, but are
distinguished materially. If, therefore, the
angels be not composed of matter and form,
as was said above
(A[2]), it follows that it is impossible
for two angels to be of one species; just as
it would be impossible for there to be
several whitenesses apart, or several
humanities, since whitenesses are not
several, except in so far as they are in
several substances. And if the angels had
matter, not even then could there be several
angels of one species. For it would be
necessary for matter to be the principle of
distinction of one from the other, not,
indeed, according to the division of
quantity, since they are incorporeal, but
according to the diversity of their powers;
and such diversity of matter causes
diversity not merely of species, but of
genus.
Reply to Objection
1: "Difference" is nobler than "genus,"
as the determined is more noble than the
undetermined, and the proper than the
common, but not as one nature is nobler than
another; otherwise it would be necessary
that all irrational animals be of the same
species; or that there should be in them
some form which is higher than the sensible
soul. Therefore irrational animals differ in
species according to the various determined
degrees of sensitive nature; and in like
manner all the angels differ in species
according to the diverse degrees of
intellectual nature.
Reply to Objection
2: More and less change the species, not
according as they are caused by the
intensity or remissness of one form, but
according as they are caused by forms of
diverse degrees; for instance, if we say
that fire is more perfect than air: and in
this way the angels are diversified
according to more or less.
Reply to Objection
3: The good of the species preponderates
over the good of the individual. Hence it is
much better for the species to be multiplied
in the angels than for individuals to be
multiplied in the one species.
Reply to Objection
4: Numerical multiplication, since it
can be drawn out infinitely, is not intended
by the agent, but only specific
multiplication, as was said above (Q[47],
A[3]). Hence the perfection of the
angelic nature calls for the multiplying of
species, but not for the multiplying of
individuals in one species.
|
Article
(5) Whether the angels are
incorruptible?
Objection 1: It would seem that the
angels are not incorruptible; for Damascene,
speaking of the angel, says (De Fide Orth.
ii, 3) that he is "an intellectual
substance, partaking of immortality by
favor, and not by nature."
Objection 2:
Further, Plato says in the Timaeus: "O gods
of gods, whose maker and father am I: You
are indeed my works, dissoluble by nature,
yet indissoluble because I so will it." But
gods such as these can only be understood to
be the angels. Therefore the angels are
corruptible by their nature
Objection 3:
Further, according to Gregory (Moral. xvi),
"all things would tend towards nothing,
unless the hand of the Almighty preserved
them." But what can be brought to nothing is
corruptible. Therefore, since the angels
were made by God, it would appear that they
are corruptible of their own nature.
On the contrary,
Dionysius says (Div. Nom. iv) that the
intellectual substances "have unfailing
life, being free from all corruption, death,
matter, and generation."
I answer that,
It must necessarily be maintained that the
angels are incorruptible of their own
nature. The reason for this is, that nothing
is corrupted except by its form being
separated from the matter. Hence, since an
angel is a subsisting form, as is clear from
what was said above
(A[2]), it is impossible for its
substance to be corruptible. For what
belongs to anything considered in itself can
never be separated from it; but what belongs
to a thing, considered in relation to
something else, can be separated, when that
something else is taken away, in view of
which it belonged to it. Roundness can never
be taken from the circle, because it belongs
to it of itself; but a bronze circle can
lose roundness, if the bronze be deprived of
its circular shape. Now to be belongs to a
form considered in itself; for everything is
an actual being according to its form:
whereas matter is an actual being by the
form. Consequently a subject composed of
matter and form ceases to be actually when
the form is separated from the matter. But
if the form subsists in its own being, as
happens in the angels, as was said above
(A[2]), it cannot lose its being.
Therefore, the angel's immateriality is the
cause why it is incorruptible by its own
nature.
A token of this
incorruptibility can be gathered from its
intellectual operation; for since everything
acts according as it is actual, the
operation of a thing indicates its mode of
being. Now the species and nature of the
operation is understood from the object. But
an intelligible object, being above time, is
everlasting. Hence every intellectual
substance is incorruptible of its own
nature.
Reply to Objection
1: Damascene is dealing with perfect
immortality, which includes complete
immutability; since "every change is a kind
of death," as Augustine says (Contra Maxim.
iii). The angels obtain perfect immutability
only by favor, as will appear later
(Q[62]).
Reply to Objection
2: By the expression 'gods' Plato
understands the heavenly bodies, which he
supposed to be made up of elements, and
therefore dissoluble of their own nature;
yet they are for ever preserved in existence
by the Divine will.
Reply to Objection
3: As was observed above (Q[44],
A[1]) there is a kind of necessary thing
which has a cause of its necessity. Hence it
is not repugnant to a necessary or
incorruptible being to depend for its
existence on another as its cause.
Therefore, when it is said that all things,
even the angels, would lapse into nothing,
unless preserved by God, it is not to be
gathered therefrom that there is any
principle of corruption in the angels; but
that the nature of the angels is dependent
upon God as its cause. For a thing is said
to be corruptible not merely because God can
reduce it to non-existence, by withdrawing
His act of preservation; but also because it
has some principle of corruption within
itself, or some contrariety, or at least the
potentiality of matter.
|
|
|