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Full Description
Scripture teaches that God saves humanity through God's own actions and sufferings in Christ, thereby raising a key theological question: How can God use his own human actions and sufferings to bring about those things that he causes through divine power? To answer that question, J. David Moser here explores St. Thomas Aquinas's teaching that Christ's humanity is an instrument of the divinity. Offering an informed account of how Christian salvation happens through the Incarnation of Christ, he also poses a new set of questions about the Incarnation that Aquinas himself did not consider. In response to these questions, and in conversation with a wide range of theologians, including John Duns Scotus and Matthias Joseph Scheeben, Moser argues that the instrument doctrine, an underexplored and underappreciated idea, deepens our understanding of salvation that comes through the Incarnation of Jesus Christ. He also defends the instrument doctrine as a dogmatic theological topic worthy of consideration today.
Contents
Introduction; Part I. Foundations and Statements of the Doctrine: 1. Scripture and conciliar teaching; 2. St. John damascene, St. maximus the confessor and the earlier Greek fathers on the instrument doctrine; 3. St. Thomas aquinas on the instrument doctrine; Part II. Difficulties and Resolutions: 4. Dubia, Part 1: the human nature of Christ as instrument and secondary cause; 5. Dubia, Part 2: instrumental causality in Christology; 6. Towards a more precise thomistic account of the instrument doctrine; Part III. Theological Implications: 7. Theological benefits of the instrument doctrine: the hypostatic union, the mystical body of Christ, and the Eucharist; Conclusion; Bibliography.