summa theologica 4-6
Summa Theologica
Question: 51
OF CHRIST'S BURIAL (FOUR ARTICLES)
We have now to consider Christ's burial, concerning which there are four points of inquiry:
(1) Whether it was fitting for Christ to be buried?
(2) Concerning the manner of His burial;
(3) Whether His body was decomposed in the tomb?
(4) Concerning the length of time He lay in the tomb.
Article: 1
Whether it was fitting for Christ to be buried?
Objection 1: It would seem unfitting for Christ to have been
buried, because it is said of Him (Ps. 87:6): "He is [Vulg.: 'I am']
become as a man without help, free among the dead." But the bodies of
the dead are enclosed in a tomb; which seems contrary to liberty.
Therefore it does not seem fitting for Christ to have been buried.
Objection 2: Further, nothing should be done to Christ except it
was helpful to our salvation. But Christ's burial seems in no way to be
conducive to our salvation. Therefore, it was not fitting for Him to be
buried.
Objection 3: Further, it seems out of place for God who is above
the high heavens to be laid in the earth. But what befalls the dead
body of Christ is attributed to God by reason of the union. Therefore
it appears to be unbecoming for Christ to be buried.
On the contrary, our Lord said (Mt. 26:10) of the woman who
anointed Him: "She has wrought a good work upon Me," and then He added
(Mt. 26:12)---"for she, in pouring this ointment upon My body, hath
done it for My burial."
I answer that, It was fitting for Christ to be buried. First of
all, to establish the truth of His death; for no one is laid in the
grave unless there be certainty of death. Hence we read (Mk. 15:44,45),
that Pilate by diligent inquiry assured himself of Christ's death
before granting leave for His burial. Secondly, because by Christ's
rising from the grave, to them who are in the grave, hope is given of
rising again through Him, according to Jn. 5:25,28: "All that are in
their graves shall hear the voice of the Son of God . . . and they that
hear shall live." Thirdly, as an example to them who dying spiritually
to their sins are hidden away "from the disturbance of men" (Ps.
30:21). Hence it is said (Col. 3:3): "You are dead, and your life is
hid with Christ in God." Wherefore the baptized likewise who through
Christ's death die to sins, are as it were buried with Christ by
immersion, according to Rm. 6:4: "We are buried together with Christ by
baptism into death."
Reply to Objection 1: Though buried, Christ proved Himself "free
among the dead": since, although imprisoned in the tomb, He could not
be hindered from going forth by rising again.
Reply to Objection 2: As Christ's death wrought our salvation,
so likewise did His burial. Hence Jerome says (Super Marc. xiv): "By
Christ's burial we rise again"; and on Is. 53:9: "He shall give the
ungodly for His burial," a gloss says: "He shall give to God and the
Father the Gentiles who were without godliness, because He purchased
them by His death and burial."
Reply to Objection 3: As is said in a discourse made at the
Council of Ephesus [*P. iii, cap. 9], "Nothing that saves man is
derogatory to God; showing Him to be not passible, but merciful": and
in another discourse of the same Council [*P. iii, cap. 10]: "God does
not repute anything as an injury which is an occasion of men's
salvation. Thus thou shalt not deem God's Nature to be so vile, as
though It may sometimes be subjected to injuries."
Article: 2
Whether Christ was buried in a becoming manner?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ was buried in an
unbecoming manner. For His burial should be in keeping with His death.
But Christ underwent a most shameful death, according to Wis. 2:20:
"Let us condemn Him to a most shameful death." It seems therefore
unbecoming for honorable burial to be accorded to Christ, inasmuch as
He was buried by men of position---namely, by Joseph of Arimathea, who
was "a noble counselor," to use Mark's expression (Mk. 15:43), and by
Nicodemus, who was "a ruler of the Jews," as John states (Jn. 3:1).
Objection 2: Further, nothing should be done to Christ which
might set an example of wastefulness. But it seems to savor of waste
that in order to bury Christ Nicodemus came "bringing a mixture of
myrrh and aloes about a hundred pounds weight," as recorded by John
(19:39), especially since a woman came beforehand to anoint His body
for the burial, as Mark relates (Mk. 14:28). Consequently, this was not
done becomingly with regard to Christ.
Objection 3: Further, it is not becoming for anything done to be
inconsistent with itself. But Christ's burial on the one hand was
simple, because "Joseph wrapped His body in a clean linen cloth," as is
related by Matthew (27:59), "but not with gold or gems, or silk," as
Jerome observes: yet on the other hand there appears to have been some
display, inasmuch as they buried Him with fragrant spices (Jn. 19:40).
Consequently, the manner of Christ's burial does not seem to have been
seemly.
Objection 4: Further, "What things soever were written,"
especially of Christ, "were written for our learning," according to Rm.
15:4. But some of the things written in the Gospels touching Christ's
burial in no wise seem to pertain to our instruction---as that He was
buried "in a garden . . . "in a tomb which was not His own, which was
"new," and "hewed out in a rock." Therefore the manner of Christ's
burial was not becoming.
On the contrary, It is written (Is. 11:10): "And His sepulchre shall be glorious."
I answer that, The manner of Christ's burial is shown to be
seemly in three respects. First, to confirm faith in His death and
resurrection. Secondly, to commend the devotion of those who gave Him
burial. Hence Augustine says (De Civ. Dei i): "The Gospel mentions as
praiseworthy the deed of those who received His body from the cross,
and with due care and reverence wrapped it up and buried it." Thirdly,
as to the mystery whereby those are molded who "are buried together
with Christ into death" (Rm. 6:4).
Reply to Objection 1: With regard to Christ's death, His
patience and constancy in enduring death are commended, and all the
more that His death was the more despicable: but in His honorable
burial we can see the power of the dying Man, who, even in death,
frustrated the intent of His murderers, and was buried with honor: and
thereby is foreshadowed the devotion of the faithful who in the time to
come were to serve the dead Christ.
Reply to Objection 2: On that expression of the Evangelist (Jn.
19:40) that they buried Him "as the manner of the Jews is to bury,"
Augustine says (Tract. in Joan. cxx): "He admonishes us that in offices
of this kind which are rendered to the dead, the custom of each nation
should be observed." Now it was the custom of this people to anoint
bodies with various spices in order the longer to preserve them from
corruption [*Cf. Catena Aurea in Joan. xix]. Accordingly it is said in
De Doctr. Christ. iii that "in all such things, it is not the use
thereof, but the luxury of the user that is at fault"; and, farther on:
"what in other persons is frequently criminal, in a divine or prophetic
person is a sign of something great." For myrrh and aloes by their
bitterness denote penance, by which man keeps Christ within himself
without the corruption of sin; while the odor of the ointments
expresses good report.
Reply to Objection 3: Myrrh and aloes were used on Christ's body
in order that it might be preserved from corruption, and this seemed to
imply a certain need (in the body): hence the example is set us that we
may lawfully use precious things medicinally, from the need of
preserving our body. But the wrapping up of the body was merely a
question of becoming propriety. And we ought to content ourselves with
simplicity in such things. Yet, as Jerome observes, by this act was
denoted that "he swathes Jesus in clean linen, who receives Him with a
pure soul." Hence, as Bede says on Mark 15:46: "The Church's custom has
prevailed for the sacrifice of the altar to be offered not upon silk,
nor upon dyed cloth, but on linen of the earth; as the Lord's body was
buried in a clean winding-sheet."
Reply to Objection 4: Christ was buried "in a garden" to express
that by His death and burial we are delivered from the death which we
incur through Adam's sin committed in the garden of paradise. But for
this "was our Lord buried in the grave of a stranger," as Augustine
says in a sermon (ccxlviii), "because He died for the salvation of
others; and a sepulchre is the abode of death." Also the extent of the
poverty endured for us can be thereby estimated: since He who while
living had no home, after death was laid to rest in another's tomb, and
being naked was clothed by Joseph. But He is laid in a "new" sepulchre,
as Jerome observes on Mt. 27:60, "lest after the resurrection it might
be pretended that someone else had risen, while the other corpses
remained. The new sepulchre can also denote Mary's virginal womb." And
furthermore it may be understood that all of us are renewed by Christ's
burial; death and corruption being destroyed. Moreover, He was buried
in a monument "hewn out of a rock," as Jerome says on Mt. 27:64, "lest,
if it had been constructed of many stones, they might say that He was
stolen away by digging away the foundations of the tomb." Hence the
"great stone" which was set shows that "the tomb could not be opened
except by the help of many hands. Again, if He had been buried in the
earth, they might have said: They dug up the soil and stole Him away,"
as Augustine observes [*Cf. Catena Aurea]. Hilary (Comment. in Matth.
cap. xxxiii) gives the mystical interpretation, saying that "by the
teaching of the apostles, Christ is borne into the stony heart of the
gentile; for it is hewn out by the process of teaching, unpolished and
new, untenanted and open to the entrance of the fear of God. And since
naught besides Him must enter into our hearts, a great stone is rolled
against the door." Furthermore, as Origen says (Tract. xxxv in Matth.):
"It was not written by hazard: 'Joseph wrapped Christ's body in a clean
winding-sheet, and placed it in a new monument,'" and that "'he rolled
a great stone,' because all things around the body of Jesus are clean,
and new, and exceeding great."
Article: 3
Whether Christ's body was reduced to dust in the tomb?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ's body was reduced to
dust in the tomb. For just as man dies in punishment of his first
parent's sin, so also does he return to dust, since it was said to the
first man after his sin: "Dust thou art, and into dust thou shalt
return" (Gn. 3:19). But Christ endured death in order to deliver us
from death. Therefore His body ought to be made to return to dust, so
as to free us from the same penalty.
Objection 2: Further, Christ's body was of the same nature as
ours. But directly after death our bodies begin to dissolve into dust,
and are disposed towards putrefaction, because when the natural heat
departs, there supervenes heat from without which causes corruption.
Therefore it seems that the same thing happened to Christ's body.
Objection 3: Further, as stated above (Article [1]), Christ
willed to be buried in order to furnish men with the hope of rising
likewise from the grave. Consequently, He sought likewise to return to
dust so as to give to them who have returned to dust the hope of rising
from the dust.
On the contrary, It is written (Ps. 15:10): "Nor wilt Thou
suffer Thy holy one to see corruption": and Damascene (De Fide Orth.
iii) expounds this of the corruption which comes of dissolving into
elements.
I answer that, It was not fitting for Christ's body to putrefy,
or in any way be reduced to dust, since the putrefaction of any body
comes of that body's infirmity of nature, which can no longer hold the
body together. But as was said above (Question [50], Article [1], ad
2), Christ's death ought not to come from weakness of nature, lest it
might not be believed to be voluntary: and therefore He willed to die,
not from sickness, but from suffering inflicted on Him, to which He
gave Himself up willingly. And therefore, lest His death might be
ascribed to infirmity of nature, Christ did not wish His body to
putrefy in any way or dissolve no matter how; but for the manifestation
of His Divine power He willed that His body should continue incorrupt.
Hence Chrysostom says (Cont. Jud. et Gent. quod 'Christus sit Deus')
that "with other men, especially with such as have wrought strenuously,
their deeds shine forth in their lifetime; but as soon as they die,
their deeds go with them. But it is quite the contrary with Christ:
because previous to the cross all is sadness and weakness, but as soon
as He is crucified, everything comes to light, in order that you may
learn it was not an ordinary man that was crucified."
Reply to Objection 1: Since Christ was not subject to sin,
neither was He prone to die or to return to dust. Yet of His own will
He endured death for our salvation, for the reasons alleged above
(Question [51], Article [1]). But had His body putrefied or dissolved,
this fact would have been detrimental to man's salvation, for it would
not have seemed credible that the Divine power was in Him. Hence it is
on His behalf that it is written (Ps. 19:10): "What profit is there in
my blood, whilst I go down to corruption?" as if He were to say: "If My
body corrupt, the profit of the blood shed will be lost."
Reply to Objection 2: Christ's body was a subject of corruption
according to the condition of its passible nature, but not as to the
deserving cause of putrefaction, which is sin: but the Divine power
preserved Christ's body from putrefying, just as it raised it up from
death.
Reply to Objection 3: Christ rose from the tomb by Divine power,
which is not narrowed within bounds. Consequently, His rising from the
grave was a sufficient argument to prove that men are to be raised up
by Divine power, not only from their graves, but also from any dust
whatever.
Article: 4
Whether Christ was in the tomb only one day and two nights?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ was not in the tomb
during only one day and two nights; because He said (Mt. 12:40): "As
Jonas was in the whale's belly three days and three nights: so shall
the Son of man be in the heart of the earth three days and three
nights." But He was in the heart of the earth while He was in the
grave. Therefore He was not in the tomb for only one day and two nights.
Objection 2: Gregory says in a Paschal Homily (Hom. xxi): "As
Samson carried off the gates of Gaza during the night, even so Christ
rose in the night, taking away the gates of hell." But after rising He
was not in the tomb. Therefore He was not two whole nights in the grave.
Objection 3: Further, light prevailed over darkness by Christ's
death. But night belongs to darkness, and day to light. Therefore it
was more fitting for Christ's body to be in the tomb for two days and a
night, rather than conversely.
On the contrary, Augustine says (De Trin. iv): "There were
thirty-six hours from the evening of His burial to the dawn of the
resurrection, that is, a whole night with a whole day, and a whole
night."
I answer that, The very time during which Christ remained in the
tomb shows forth the effect of His death. For it was said above
(Question [50], Article [6]) that by Christ's death we were delivered
from a twofold death, namely, from the death of the soul and of the
body: and this is signified by the two nights during which He remained
in the tomb. But since His death did not come of sin, but was endured
from charity, it has not the semblance of night, but of day:
consequently it is denoted by the whole day during which Christ was in
the sepulchre. And so it was fitting for Christ to be in the sepulchre
during one day and two nights.
Reply to Objection 1: Augustine says (De Consens. Evang. iii):
"Some men, ignorant of Scriptural language, wished to compute as night
those three hours, from the sixth to the ninth hour, during which the
sun was darkened, and as day those other three hours during which it
was restored to the earth, that is, from the ninth hour until its
setting: for the coming night of the Sabbath follows, and if this be
reckoned with its day, there will be already two nights and two days.
Now after the Sabbath there follows the night of the first day of the
Sabbath, that is, of the dawning Sunday, on which the Lord rose. Even
so, the reckoning of the three days and three nights will not stand. It
remains then to find the solution in the customary usage of speech of
the Scriptures, whereby the whole is understood from the part": so that
we are able to take a day and a night as one natural day. And so the
first day is computed from its ending, during which Christ died and was
buried on the Friday; while the second. day is an entire day with
twenty-four hours of night and day; while the night following belongs
to the third day. "For as the primitive days were computed from light
to night on account of man's future fall, so these days are computed
from the darkness to the daylight on account of man's restoration" (De
Trin. iv).
Reply to Objection 2: As Augustine says (De Trin. iv; cf. De
Consens. Evang. iii), Christ rose with the dawn, when light appears in
part, and still some part of the darkness of the night remains. Hence
it is said of the women that "when it was yet dark" they came "to the
sepulchre" (Jn. 20:1). Therefore, in consequence of this darkness,
Gregory says (Hom. xxi) that Christ rose in the middle of the night,
not that night is divided into two equal parts, but during the night
itself: for the expression "early" can be taken as partly night and
partly day, from its fittingness with both.
Reply to Objection 3: The light prevailed so far in Christ's
death (which is denoted by the one day) that it dispelled the darkness
of the two nights, that is, of our twofold death, as stated above.
Question: 52
OF CHRIST'S DESCENT INTO HELL (EIGHT ARTICLES)
We have now to consider Christ's descent into hell; concerning which there are eight points of inquiry:
(1) Whether it was fitting for Christ to descend into hell?
(2) Into which hell did He descend?
(3) Whether He was entirely in hell?
(4) Whether He made any stay there?
(5) Whether He delivered the Holy Fathers from hell?
(6) Whether He delivered the lost from hell?
(7) Whether He delivered the children who died in original sin?
(8) Whether He delivered men from Purgatory?
Article: 1
Whether it was fitting for Christ to descend into hell?
Objection 1: It would seem that it was not fitting for Christ to
descend into hell, because Augustine says (Ep. ad Evod. cliv.): "Nor
could I find anywhere in the Scriptures hell mentioned as something
good." But Christ's soul did not descend into any evil place, for
neither do the souls of the just. Therefore it does not seem fitting
for Christ's soul to descend into hell.
Objection 2: Further, it cannot belong to Christ to descend into
hell according to His Divine Nature, which is altogether immovable; but
only according to His assumed nature. But that which Christ did or
suffered in His assumed nature is ordained for man's salvation: and to
secure this it does not seem necessary for Christ to descend into hell,
since He delivered us from both guilt and penalty by His Passion which
He endured in this world, as stated above (Question [49], Articles
[1],3). Consequently, it was not fitting that Christ should descend
into hell.
Objection 3: Further, by Christ's death His soul was separated
from His body, and this was laid in the sepulchre, as stated above
(Question [51]). But it seems that He descended into hell, not
according to His soul only, because seemingly the soul, being
incorporeal, cannot be a subject of local motion; for this belongs to
bodies, as is proved in Phys. vi, text. 32; while descent implies
corporeal motion. Therefore it was not fitting for Christ to descend
into hell.
On the contrary, It is said in the Creed: "He descended into
hell": and the Apostle says (Eph. 4:9): "Now that He ascended, what is
it, but because He also descended first into the lower parts of the
earth?" And a gloss adds: "that is---into hell."
I answer that It was fitting for Christ to descend into
hell. First of all, because He came to bear our penalty in order to
free us from penalty, according to Is. 53:4: "Surely He hath borne our
infirmities and carried our sorrows." But through sin man had incurred
not only the death of the body, but also descent into hell.
Consequently since it was fitting for Christ to die in order to deliver
us from death, so it was fitting for Him to descend into hell in order
to deliver us also from going down into hell. Hence it is written (Osee
13:14): "O death, I will be thy death; O hell, I will be thy bite."
Secondly, because it was fitting when the devil was overthrown by the
Passion that Christ should deliver the captives detained in hell,
according to Zach. 9:11: "Thou also by the blood of Thy Testament hast
sent forth Thy prisoners out of the pit." And it is written (Col.
2:15): "Despoiling the principalities and powers, He hath exposed them
confidently." Thirdly, that as He showed forth His power on earth by
living and dying, so also He might manifest it in hell, by visiting it
and enlightening it. Accordingly it is written (Ps. 23:7): "Lift up
your gates, O ye princes," which the gloss thus interprets: "that
is---Ye princes of hell, take away your power, whereby hitherto you
held men fast in hell"; and so "at the name of Jesus every knee should
bow," not only "of them that are in heaven," but likewise "of them that
are in hell," as is said in Phil. 2:10.
Reply to Objection 1: The name of hell stands for an evil of
penalty, and not for an evil of guilt. Hence it was becoming that
Christ should descend into hell, not as liable to punishment Himself,
but to deliver them who were.
Reply to Objection 2: Christ's Passion was a kind of universal
cause of men's salvation, both of the living and of the dead. But a
general cause is applied to particular effects by means of something
special. Hence, as the power of the Passion is applied to the living
through the sacraments which make us like unto Christ's Passion, so
likewise it is applied to the dead through His descent into hell. On
which account it is written (Zach. 9:11) that "He sent forth prisoners
out of the pit, in the blood of His testament," that is, by the power
of His Passion.
Reply to Objection 3: Christ's soul descended into hell not by
the same kind of motion as that whereby bodies are moved, but by that
kind whereby the angels are moved, as was said in the FP, Question
[53], Article [1].
Article: 2
Whether Christ went down into the hell of the lost?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ went down into the hell
of the lost, because it is said by the mouth of Divine Wisdom (Ecclus.
24:45): "I will penetrate to all the lower parts of the earth." But the
hell of the lost is computed among the lower parts of the earth
according to Ps. 62:10: "They shall go into the lower parts of the
earth." Therefore Christ who is the Wisdom of God, went down even into
the hell of the lost.
Objection 2: Further, Peter says (Acts 2:24) that "God hath
raised up Christ, having loosed the sorrows of hell, as it was
impossible that He should be holden by it." But there are no sorrows in
the hell of the Fathers, nor in the hell of the children, since they
are not punished with sensible pain on account of any actual sin, but
only with the pain of loss on account of original sin. Therefore Christ
went down into the hell of the lost, or else into Purgatory, where men
are tormented with sensible pain on account of actual sins.
Objection 3: Further, it is written (1 Pt. 3:19) that "Christ
coming in spirit preached to those spirits that were in prison, which
had some time been incredulous": and this is understood of Christ's
descent into hell, as Athanasius says (Ep. ad Epict.). For he says that
"Christ's body was laid in the sepulchre when He went to preach to
those spirits who were in bondage, as Peter said." But it is clear the
unbelievers were in the hell of the lost. Therefore Christ went down
into the hell of the lost.
Objection 4: Further, Augustine says (Ep. ad Evod. clxiv): "If
the sacred Scriptures had said that Christ came into Abraham's bosom,
without naming hell or its woes, I wonder whether any person would dare
to assert that He descended into hell. But since evident testimonies
mention hell and its sorrows, there is no reason for believing that
Christ went there except to deliver men from the same woes." But the
place of woes is the hell of the lost. Therefore Christ descended into
the hell of the lost.
Objection 5: Further, as Augustine says in a sermon upon the
Resurrection: Christ descending into hell "set free all the just who
were held in the bonds of original sin." But among them was Job, who
says of himself (Job 17:16): "All that I have shall go down into the
deepest pit." Therefore Christ descended into the deepest pit.
On the contrary, Regarding the hell of the lost it is written
(Job 10:21): "Before I go, and return no more, to a land that is dark
and covered with the mist of death." Now there is no "fellowship of
light with darkness," according to 2 Cor. 6:14. Therefore Christ, who
is "the light," did not descend into the hell of the lost.
I answer that, A thing is said to be in a place in two ways.
First of all, through its effect, and in this way Christ descended into
each of the hells, but in different manner. For going down into the
hell of the lost He wrought this effect, that by descending thither He
put them to shame for their unbelief and wickedness: but to them who
were detained in Purgatory He gave hope of attaining to glory: while
upon the holy Fathers detained in hell solely on account of original
sin, He shed the light of glory everlasting.
In another way a thing is said to be in a place through
its essence: and in this way Christ's soul descended only into that
part of hell wherein the just were detained. so that He visited them
"in place," according to His soul, whom He visited "interiorly by
grace," according to His Godhead. Accordingly, while remaining in one
part of hell, He wrought this effect in a measure in every part of
hell, just as while suffering in one part of the earth He delivered the
whole world by His Passion.
Reply to Objection 1: Christ, who is the Wisdom of God,
penetrated to all the lower parts of the earth, not passing through
them locally with His soul, but by spreading the effects of His power
in a measure to them all: yet so that He enlightened only the just:
because the text quoted continues: "And I will enlighten all that hope
in the Lord."
Reply to Objection 2: Sorrow is twofold: one is the suffering of
pain which men endure for actual sin, according to Ps. 17:6: "The
sorrows of hell encompassed me." Another sorrow comes of hoped-for
glory being deferred, according to Prov. 13:12: "Hope that is deferred
afflicteth the soul": and such was the sorrow which the holy Fathers
suffered in hell, and Augustine refers to it in a sermon on the
Passion, saying that "they besought Christ with tearful entreaty." Now
by descending into hell Christ took away both sorrows, yet in different
ways: for He did away with the sorrows of pains by preserving souls
from them, just as a physician is said to free a man from sickness by
warding it off by means of physic. Likewise He removed the sorrows
caused by glory deferred, by bestowing glory.
Reply to Objection 3: These words of Peter are referred by some
to Christ's descent into hell: and they explain it in this sense:
"Christ preached to them who formerly were unbelievers, and who were
shut up in prison"---that is, in hell---"in spirit"---that is, by His
soul. Hence Damascene says (De Fide Orth. iii): "As He evangelized them
who are upon the earth, so did He those who were in hell"; not in order
to convert unbelievers unto belief, but to put them to shame for their
unbelief, since preaching cannot be understood otherwise than as the
open manifesting of His Godhead. which was laid bare before them in the
lower regions by His descending in power into hell.
Augustine, however, furnishes a better exposition of the
text in his Epistle to Evodius quoted above, namely, that the preaching
is not to be referred to Christ's descent into hell, but to the
operation of His Godhead, to which He gave effect from the beginning of
the world. Consequently, the sense is, that "to those (spirits) that
were in prison"---that is, living in the mortal body, which is, as it
were, the soul's prison-house---"by the spirit" of His Godhead "He came
and preached" by internal inspirations, and from without by the
admonitions spoken by the righteous: to those, I say, He preached
"which had been some time incredulous," i.e. not believing in the
preaching of Noe, "when they waited for the patience of God," whereby
the chastisement of the Deluge was put off: accordingly (Peter) adds:
"In the days of Noe, when the Ark was being built."
Reply to Objection 4: The expression "Abraham's bosom" may be
taken in two senses. First of all, as implying that restfulness,
existing there, from sensible pain; so that in this sense it cannot be
called hell, nor are there any sorrows there. In another way it can be
taken as implying the privation of longed-for glory: in this sense it
has the character of hell and sorrow. Consequently, that rest of the
blessed is now called Abraham's bosom, yet it is not styled hell, nor
are sorrows said to be now in Abraham's bosom.
Reply to Objection 5: As Gregory says (Moral. xiii): "Even the
higher regions of hell he calls the deepest hell . . . For if
relatively to the height of heaven this darksome air is infernal, then
relatively to the height of this same air the earth lying beneath can
be considered as infernal and deep. And again in comparison with the
height of the same earth, those parts of hell which are higher than the
other infernal mansions, may in this way be designated as the deepest
hell."
Article: 3
Whether the whole Christ was in hell?
Objection 1: It would seem that the whole Christ was not in
hell. For Christ's body is one of His parts. But His body was not in
hell. Therefore, the whole Christ was not in hell.
Objection 2: Further, nothing can be termed whole when its parts
are severed. But the soul and body, which are the parts of human
nature, were separated at His death, as stated above (Question [50],
Articles [3],4), and it was after death that He descended into hell.
Therefore the whole (Christ) could not be in hell.
Objection 3: Further, the whole of a thing is said to be in a
place when no part of it is outside such place. But there were parts of
Christ outside hell; for instance, His body was in the grave, and His
Godhead everywhere. Therefore the whole Christ was not in hell.
On the contrary, Augustine says (De Symbolo iii): "The whole Son
is with the Father, the whole Son in heaven, on earth, in the Virgin's
womb, on the Cross, in hell, in paradise, into which He brought the
robber."
I answer that, It is evident from what was said in the FP,
Question [31], Article [2], ad 4, the masculine gender is referred to
the hypostasis or person, while the neuter belongs to the nature. Now
in the death of Christ, although the soul was separated from the body,
yet neither was separated from the Person of the Son of God, as stated
above (Question [50], Article [2]). Consequently, it must be affirmed
that during the three days of Christ's death the whole Christ was in
the tomb, because the whole Person was there through the body united
with Him, and likewise He was entirely in hell, because the whole
Person of Christ was there by reason of the soul united with Him, and
the whole Christ was then everywhere by reason of the Divine Nature.
Reply to Objection 1: The body which was then in the grave is
not a part of the uncreated Person, but of the assumed nature.
Consequently, the fact of Christ's body not being in hell does not
prevent the whole Christ from being there: but proves that not
everything appertaining to human nature was there.
Reply to Objection 2: The whole human nature is made up of the
united soul and body; not so the Divine Person. Consequently when death
severed the union of the soul with the body, the whole Christ remained,
but His whole human nature did not remain.
Reply to Objection 3: Christ's Person is whole in each single
place, but not wholly, because it is not circumscribed by any place:
indeed, all places put together could not comprise His immensity;
rather is it His immensity that embraces all things. But it happens in
those things which are in a place corporeally and circumscriptively,
that if a whole be in some place, then no part of it is outside that
place. But this is not the case with God. Hence Augustine says (De
Symbolo iii): "It is not according to times or places that we say that
the whole Christ is everywhere, as if He were at one time whole in one
place, at another time whole in another: but as being whole always and
everywhere."
Article: 4
Whether Christ made any stay in hell?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ did not make any stay in
hell. For Christ went down into hell to deliver men from thence. But He
accomplished this deliverance at once by His descent, for, according to
Ecclus. 11:23: "It is easy in the eyes of God on a sudden to make the
poor man rich." Consequently He does not seem to have tarried in hell.
Objection 2: Further, Augustine says in a sermon on the Passion
(clx) that "of a sudden at our Lord and Saviour's bidding all 'the bars
of iron were burst'" (Cf. Is. 45:2). Hence on behalf of the angels
accompanying Christ it is written (Ps. 23:7,9): "Lift up your gates, O
ye princes." Now Christ descended thither in order to break the bolts
of hell. Therefore He did not make any stay in hell.
Objection 3: Further, it is related (Lk. 23:43) that our Lord
while hanging on the cross said to the thief: "This day thou shalt be
with Me in paradise": from which it is evident that Christ was in
paradise on that very day. But He was not there with His body. for that
was in the grave. Therefore He was there with the soul which had gone
down into hell: and consequently it appears that He made no stay in
hell.
On the contrary, Peter says (Acts 2:24): "Whom God hath raised
up, having loosed the sorrows of hell, as it was impossible that He
should be held by it." Therefore it seems that He remained in hell
until the hour of the Resurrection.
I answer that, As Christ, in order to take our penalties upon
Himself, willed His body to be laid in the tomb, so likewise He willed
His soul to descend into hell. But the body lay in the tomb for a day
and two nights, so as to demonstrate the truth of His death.
Consequently, it is to be believed that His soul was in hell, in order
that it might be brought back out of hell simultaneously with His body
from the tomb.
Reply to Objection 1: When Christ descended into hell He
delivered the saints who were there, not by leading them out at once
from the confines of hell, but by enlightening them with the light of
glory in hell itself. Nevertheless it was fitting that His soul should
abide in hell as long as His body remained in the tomb.
Reply to Objection 2: By the expression "bars of hell" are
understood the obstacles which kept the holy Fathers from quitting
hell, through the guilt of our first parent's sin; and these bars
Christ burst asunder by the power of His Passion on descending into
hell: nevertheless He chose to remain in hell for some time, for the
reason stated above.
Reply to Objection 3: Our Lord's expression is not to be
understood of the earthly corporeal paradise, but of a spiritual one,
in which all are said to be who enjoy the Divine glory. Accordingly,
the thief descended locally into hell with Christ, because it was said
to him: "This day thou shalt be with Me in paradise"; still as to
reward he was in paradise, because he enjoyed Christ's Godhead just as
the other saints did.
Article: 5
Whether Christ descending into hell delivered the holy Fathers from thence?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ descending into hell did
not deliver the holy Fathers from thence. For Augustine (Epist. ad
Evod. clxiv) says: "I have not yet discovered what Christ descending
into hell bestowed upon those righteous ones who were in Abraham's
bosom, from whom I fail to see that He ever departed according to the
beatific presence of His Godhead." But had He delivered them, He would
have bestowed much upon them. Therefore it does not appear that Christ
delivered the holy Fathers from hell.
Objection 2: Further, no one is detained in hell except on
account of sin. But during life the holy Fathers were justified from
sin through faith in Christ. Consequently they did not need to be
delivered from hell on Christ's descent thither.
Objection 3: Further, if you remove the cause, you remove the
effect. But that Christ went down into hell was due to sin which was
taken away by the Passion, as stated above (Question [49], Article
[1]). Consequently, the holy Fathers were not delivered on Christ's
descent into hell.
On the contrary, Augustine says in the sermon on the Passion
already quoted that when Christ descended into hell "He broke down the
gate and 'iron bars' of hell, setting at liberty all the righteous who
were held fast through original sin."
I answer that, As stated above (Article [4], ad 2), when Christ
descended into hell He worked through the power of His Passion. But
through Christ's Passion the human race was delivered not only from
sin, but also from the debt of its penalty, as stated above (Question
[49], Articles [1],3). Now men were held fast by the debt of punishment
in two ways: first of all for actual sin which each had committed
personally: secondly, for the sin of the whole human race, which each
one in his origin contracts from our first parent, as stated in Rm. 5
of which sin the penalty is the death of the body as well as exclusion
from glory, as is evident from Gn. 2 and 3: because God cast out man
from paradise after sin, having beforehand threatened him with death
should he sin. Consequently, when Christ descended into hell, by the
power of His Passion He delivered the saints from the penalty whereby
they were excluded from the life of glory, so as to be unable to see
God in His Essence, wherein man's beatitude lies, as stated in the FS,
Question [3], Article [8]. But the holy Fathers were detained in hell
for the reason, that, owing to our first parent's sin, the approach to
the life of glory was not opened. And so when Christ descended into
hell He delivered the holy Fathers from thence. And this is what is
written Zach. 9:11: "Thou also by the blood of Thy testament hast sent
forth Thy prisoners out of the pit, wherein is no water." And (Col.
2:15) it is written that "despoiling the principalities and powers,"
i.e. "of hell, by taking out Isaac and Jacob, and the other just
souls," "He led them," i.e. "He brought them far from this kingdom of
darkness into heaven," as the gloss explains.
Reply to Objection 1: Augustine is speaking there against such
as maintained that the righteous of old were subject to penal
sufferings before Christ's descent into hell. Hence shortly before the
passage quoted he says: "Some add that this benefit was also bestowed
upon the saints of old, that on the Lord's coming into hell they were
freed from their sufferings. But I fail to see how Abraham, into whose
bosom the poor man was received, was ever in such sufferings."
Consequently, when he afterwards adds that "he had not yet discovered
what Christ's descent into hell had brought to the righteous of old,"
this must be understood as to their being freed from penal sufferings.
Yet Christ bestowed something upon them as to their attaining glory:
and in consequence He dispelled the suffering which they endured
through their glory being delayed: still they had great joy from the
very hope thereof, according to Jn. 8:56: "Abraham your father rejoiced
that he might see my day." And therefore he adds: "I fail to see that
He ever departed, according to the beatific presence of His Godhead,"
that is, inasmuch as even before Christ's coming they were happy in
hope, although not yet fully happy in fact.
Reply to Objection 2: The holy Fathers while yet living were
delivered from original as well as actual sin through faith in Christ;
also from the penalty of actual sins, but not from the penalty of
original sin, whereby they were excluded from glory, since the price of
man's redemption was not yet paid: just as the faithful are now
delivered by baptism from the penalty of actual sins, and from the
penalty of original sin as to exclusion from glory, yet still remain
bound by the penalty of original sin as to the necessity of dying in
the body because they are renewed in the spirit, but not yet in the
flesh, according to Rm. 8:10: "The body indeed is dead, because of sin;
but the spirit liveth, because of justification."
Reply to Objection 3: Directly Christ died His soul went down
into hell, and bestowed the fruits of His Passion on the saints
detained there; although they did not go out as long as Christ remained
in hell, because His presence was part of the fulness of their glory.
Article: 6
Whether Christ delivered any of the lost from hell?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ did deliver some of the
lost from hell, because it is written (Is. 24:22): "And they shall be
gathered together as in the gathering of one bundle into the pit, end
they shall be shut up there in prison: and after many days they shall
be visited." But there he is speaking of the lost, who "had adored the
host of heaven," according to Jerome's commentary. Consequently it
seems that even the lost were visited at Christ's descent into hell;
and this seems to imply their deliverance.
Objection 2: Further, on Zach. 9:11: "Thou also by the blood of
Thy testament hast sent forth Thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is
no water," the gloss observes: "Thou hast delivered them who were held
bound in prisons, where no mercy refreshed them, which that rich man
prayed for." But only the lost are shut up in merciless prisons.
Therefore Christ did deliver some from the hell of the lost.
Objection 3: Further, Christ's power was not less in hell than
in this world, because He worked in every place by the power of His
Godhead. But in this world He delivered some persons of every state.
Therefore, in hell also, He delivered some from the state of the lost.
On the contrary, It is written (Osee 13:14): "O death, I will be
thy death; O hell, I will be thy bite": upon which the gloss says: "By
leading forth the elect, and leaving there the reprobate." But only the
reprobate are in the hell of the lost. Therefore, by Christ's descent
into hell none were delivered from the hell of the lost.
I answer that, As stated above (Article [5]), when Christ
descended into hell He worked by the power of His Passion.
Consequently, His descent into hell brought the fruits of deliverance
to them only who were united to His Passion through faith quickened by
charity, whereby sins are taken away. Now those detained in the hell of
the lost either had no faith in Christ's Passion, as infidels; or if
they had faith, they had no conformity with the charity of the
suffering Christ: hence they could not be cleansed from their sins. And
on this account Christ's descent into hell brought them no deliverance
from the debt of punishment in hell.
Reply to Objection 1: When Christ descended into hell, all who
were in any part of hell were visited in some respect: some to their
consolation and deliverance, others, namely, the lost, to their shame
and confusion. Accordingly the passage continues: "And the moon shall
blush, and the sun be put to shame," etc.
This can also be referred to the visitation which will
come upon them in the Day of Judgment, not for their deliverance, but
for their yet greater confusion, according to Sophon. i, 12: "I will
visit upon the men that are settled on their lees."
Reply to Objection 2: When the gloss says "where no mercy
refreshed them," this is to be understood of the refreshing of full
deliverance, because the holy Fathers could not be delivered from this
prison of hell before Christ's coming.
Reply to Objection 3: It was not due to any lack of power on
Christ's part that some were not delivered from every state in hell, as
out of every state among men in this world; but it was owing to the
very different condition of each state. For, so long as men live here
below, they can be converted to faith and charity, because in this life
men are not confirmed either in good or in evil, as they are after
quitting this life.
Article: 7
Whether the children who died in original sin were delivered by Christ?
Objection 1: It would seem that the children who died in
original sin were delivered from hell by Christ's descending thither.
For, like the holy Fathers, the children were kept in hell simply
because of original sin. But the holy Fathers were delivered from hell,
as stated above (Article [5]). Therefore the children were similarly
delivered from hell by Christ.
Objection 2: Further, the Apostle says (Rm. 5:15): "If by the
offense of one, many died; much more the grace of God and the gift, by
the grace of one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many." But the
children who die with none but original sin are detained in hell owing
to their first parent's sin. Therefore, much more were they delivered
from hell through the grace of Christ.
Objection 3: Further, as Baptism works in virtue of Christ's
Passion, so also does Christ's descent into hell, as is clear from what
has been said (Article [4], ad 2, Articles [5],6). But through Baptism
children are delivered from original sin and hell. Therefore, they were
similarly delivered by Christ's descent into hell.
On the contrary, The Apostle says (Rm. 3:25): "God hath proposed
Christ to be a propitiation, through faith in His blood." But the
children who had died with only original sin were in no wise sharers of
faith in Christ. Therefore, they did not receive the fruits of Christ's
propitiation, so as to be delivered by Him from hell.
I answer that, As stated above (Article [6]), Christ's descent
into hell had its effect of deliverance on them only who through faith
and charity were united to Christ's Passion, in virtue whereof Christ's
descent into hell was one of deliverance. But the children who had died
in original sin were in no way united to Christ's Passion by faith and
love: for, not having the use of free will, they could have no faith of
their own; nor were they cleansed from original sin either by their
parents' faith or by any sacrament of faith. Consequently, Christ's
descent into hell did not deliver the children from thence. And
furthermore, the holy Fathers were delivered from hell by being
admitted to the glory of the vision of God, to which no one can come
except through grace; according to Rm. 6:23: "The grace of God is life
everlasting." Therefore, since children dying in original sin had no
grace, they were not delivered from hell.
Reply to Objection 1: The holy Fathers, although still held
bound by the debt of original sin, in so far as it touches human
nature, were nevertheless delivered from all stain of sin by faith in
Christ: consequently, they were capable of that deliverance which
Christ brought by descending into hell. But the same cannot be said of
the children, as is evident from what was said above.
Reply to Objection 2: When the Apostle says that the grace of
God "hath abounded unto many," the word "many" [*The Vulgate reads
'plures,' i.e. 'many more'] is to be taken, not comparatively, as if
more were saved by Christ's grace than lost by Adam's sin: but
absolutely, as if he said that the grace of the one Christ abounded
unto many, just as Adam's sin was contracted by many. But as Adam's sin
was contracted by those only who descended seminally from him according
to the flesh, so Christ's grace reached those only who became His
members by spiritual regeneration: which does not apply to children
dying in original sin.
Reply to Objection 3: Baptism is applied to men in this life, in
which man's state can be changed from sin into grace: but Christ's
descent into hell was vouchsafed to the souls after this life when they
are no longer capable of the said change. And consequently by baptism
children are delivered from original sin and from hell, but not by
Christ's descent into hell.
Article: 8
Whether Christ by His descent into hell delivered souls from purgatory?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ by His descent into hell
delivered souls from Purgatory---for Augustine says (Ep. ad Evod.
clxiv): "Because evident testimonies speak of hell and its pains, there
is no reason for believing that the Saviour came thither except to
rescue men from those same pains: but I still wish to know whether it
was all whom He found there, or some whom He deemed worthy of such a
benefit. Yet I do not doubt that Christ went into hell, and granted
this favor to them who were suffering from its pains." But, as stated
above (Article [6]), He did not confer the benefit of deliverance upon
the lost: and there are no others in a state of penal suffering except
those in Purgatory. Consequently Christ delivered souls from Purgatory.
Objection 2: Further, the very presence of Christ's soul had no
less effect than His sacraments have. But souls are delivered from
Purgatory by the sacraments, especially by the sacrament of the
Eucharist, as shall be shown later (XP, Question [71], Article [9]).
Therefore much more were souls delivered from Purgatory by the presence
of Christ descending into hell.
Objection 3: Further, as Augustine says (De Poenit. ix), those
whom Christ healed in this life He healed completely. Also, our Lord
says (Jn. 7:23): "I have healed the whole man on the sabbath-day." But
Christ delivered them who were in Purgatory from the punishment of the
pain of loss, whereby they were excluded from glory. Therefore, He also
delivered them from the punishment of Purgatory.
On the contrary, Gregory says (Moral. xiii): "Since our Creator
and Redeemer, penetrating the bars of hell, brought out from thence the
souls of the elect, He does not permit us to go thither, from whence He
has already by descending set others free." But He permits us to go to
Purgatory. Therefore, by descending into hell, He did not deliver souls
from Purgatory.
I answer that, As we have stated more than once (Article [4], ad
2, Articles [5],6,7), Christ's descent into hell was one of deliverance
in virtue of His Passion. Now Christ's Passion had a virtue which was
neither temporal nor transitory, but everlasting, according to Heb.
10:14: "For by one oblation He hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified." And so it is evident that Christ's Passion had no greater
efficacy then than it has now. Consequently, they who were such as
those who are now in Purgatory, were not set free from Purgatory by
Christ's descent into hell. But if any were found such as are now set
free from Purgatory by virtue of Christ's Passion, then there was
nothing to hinder them from being delivered from Purgatory by Christ's
descent into hell.
Reply to Objection 1: From this passage of Augustine it cannot
be concluded that all who were in Purgatory were delivered from it, but
that such a benefit was bestowed upon some persons, that is to say,
upon such as were already cleansed sufficiently, or who in life, by
their faith and devotion towards Christ's death, so merited, that when
He descended, they were delivered from the temporal punishment of
Purgatory.
Reply to Objection 2: Christ's power operates in the sacraments
by way of healing and expiation. Consequently, the sacrament of the
Eucharist delivers men from Purgatory inasmuch as it is a satisfactory
sacrifice for sin. But Christ's descent into hell was not satisfactory;
yet it operated in virtue of the Passion, which was satisfactory, as
stated above (Question [48], Article [2]), but satisfactory in general,
since its virtue had to be applied to each individual by something
specially personal (Question [49], Article [1], ad 4,5). Consequently,
it does not follow of necessity that all were delivered from Purgatory
by Christ's descent into hell.
Reply to Objection 3: Those defects from which Christ altogether
delivered men in this world were purely personal, and concerned the
individual; whereas exclusion from God's glory was a general defect and
common to all human nature. Consequently, there was nothing to prevent
those detained in Purgatory being delivered by Christ from their
privation of glory, but not from the debt of punishment in Purgatory
which pertains to personal defect. Just as on the other hand, the holy
Fathers before Christ's coming were delivered from their personal
defects, but not from the common defect, as was stated above (Article
[7], ad 1; Question [49], Article [5], ad 1).
Question: 53
OF CHRIST'S RESURRECTION (FOUR ARTICLES)
We have now to consider those things that concern Christ's
Exaltation; and we shall deal with (1) His Resurrection; (2) His
Ascension; (3) His sitting at the right hand of God the Father; (4) His
Judiciary Power. Under the first heading there is a fourfold
consideration: (1) Christ's Resurrection in itself; (2) the quality of
the Person rising; (3) the manifestation of the Resurrection; (4) its
causality. Concerning the first there are four points of inquiry:
(1) The necessity of His Resurrection;
(2) The time of the Resurrection;
(3) Its order;
(4) Its cause.
Article: 1
Whether it was necessary for Christ to rise again?
Objection 1: It would seem that it was not necessary for Christ
to rise again. For Damascene says (De Fide Orth. iv): "Resurrection is
the rising again of an animate being, which was disintegrated and
fallen." But Christ did not fall by sinning, nor was His body
dissolved, as is manifest from what was stated above (Question [51],
Article [3]). Therefore, it does not properly belong to Him to rise
again.
Objection 2: Further, whoever rises again is promoted to a
higher state, since to rise is to be uplifted. But after death Christ's
body continued to be united with the Godhead, hence it could not be
uplifted to any higher condition. Therefore, it was not due to it to
rise again.
Objection 3: Further, all that befell Christ's humanity was
ordained for our salvation. But Christ's Passion sufficed for our
salvation, since by it we were loosed from guilt and punishment, as is
clear from what was said above (Question [49], Article [1],3).
Consequently, it was not necessary for Christ to rise again from the
dead.
On the contrary, It is written (Lk. 24:46): "It behooved Christ to suffer and to rise again from the dead."
I answer that, It behooved Christ to rise again, for five
reasons. First of all; for the commendation of Divine Justice, to which
it belongs to exalt them who humble themselves for God's sake,
according to Lk. 1:52: "He hath put down the mighty from their seat,
and hath exalted the humble." Consequently, because Christ humbled
Himself even to the death of the Cross, from love and obedience to God,
it behooved Him to be uplifted by God to a glorious resurrection; hence
it is said in His Person (Ps. 138:2): "Thou hast known," i.e. approved,
"my sitting down," i.e. My humiliation and Passion, "and my rising up,"
i.e. My glorification in the resurrection; as the gloss expounds.
Secondly, for our instruction in the faith, since our
belief in Christ's Godhead is confirmed by His rising again, because,
according to 2 Cor. 13:4, "although He was crucified through weakness,
yet He liveth by the power of God." And therefore it is written (1 Cor.
15:14): "If Christ be not risen again, then is our preaching vain, and
our [Vulg.: 'your'] faith is also vain": and (Ps. 29:10): "What profit
is there in my blood?" that is, in the shedding of My blood, "while I
go down," as by various degrees of evils, "into corruption?" As though
He were to answer: "None. 'For if I do not at once rise again but My
body be corrupted, I shall preach to no one, I shall gain no one,'" as
the gloss expounds.
Thirdly, for the raising of our hope, since through seeing
Christ, who is our head, rise again, we hope that we likewise shall
rise again. Hence it is written (1 Cor. 15:12): "Now if Christ be
preached that He rose from the dead, how do some among you say, that
there is no resurrection of the dead?" And (Job 19:25,27): "I know,"
that is with certainty of faith, "that my Redeemer," i.e. Christ,
"liveth," having risen from the dead; "and" therefore "in the last day
I shall rise out of the earth . . . this my hope is laid up in my
bosom."
Fourthly, to set in order the lives of the faithful:
according to Rm. 6:4: "As Christ is risen from the dead by the glory of
the Father, so we also may walk in newness of life": and further on;
"Christ rising from the dead dieth now no more; so do you also reckon
that you are dead to sin, but alive to God."
Fifthly, in order to complete the work of our salvation:
because, just as for this reason did He endure evil things in dying
that He might deliver us from evil, so was He glorified in rising again
in order to advance us towards good things; according to Rm. 4:25: "He
was delivered up for our sins, and rose again for our justification."
Reply to Objection 1: Although Christ did not fall by sin, yet
He fell by death, because as sin is a fall from righteousness, so death
is a fall from life: hence the words of Micheas 7:8 can be taken as
though spoken by Christ: "Rejoice not thou, my enemy, over me, because
I am fallen: I shall rise again." Likewise, although Christ's body was
not disintegrated by returning to dust, yet the separation of His soul
and body was a kind of disintegration.
Reply to Objection 2: The Godhead was united with Christ's flesh
after death by personal union, but not by natural union; thus the soul
is united with the body as its form, so as to constitute human nature.
Consequently, by the union of the body and soul, the body was uplifted
to a higher condition of nature, but not to a higher personal state.
Reply to Objection 3: Christ's Passion wrought our salvation,
properly speaking, by removing evils; but the Resurrection did so as
the beginning and exemplar of all good things.
Article: 2
Whether it was fitting for Christ to rise again on the third day?
Objection 1: It would seem unfitting that Christ should have
risen again on the third day. For the members ought to be in conformity
with their head. But we who are His members do not rise from death on
the third day, since our rising is put off until the end of the world.
Therefore, it seems that Christ, who is our head, should not have risen
on the third day, but that His Resurrection ought to have been deferred
until the end of the world.
Objection 2: Further, Peter said (Acts 2:24) that "it was
impossible for Christ to be held fast by hell" and death. Therefore it
seems that Christ's rising ought not to have been deferred until the
third day, but that He ought to have risen at once on the same day;
especially since the gloss quoted above (Article [1]) says that "there
is no profit in the shedding of Christ's blood, if He did not rise at
once."
Objection 3: The day seems to start with the rising of the sun,
the presence of which causes the day. But Christ rose before sunrise:
for it is related (Jn. 20:1) that "Mary Magdalen cometh early, when it
was yet dark, unto the sepulchre": but Christ was already risen, for it
goes on to say: "And she saw the stone taken away from the sepulchre."
Therefore Christ did not rise on the third day.
On the contrary, It is written (Mt. 20:19): "They shall deliver
Him to the Gentiles to be mocked, and scourged, and crucified, and the
third day He shall rise again."
I answer that, As stated above (Article [1]) Christ's
Resurrection was necessary for the instruction of our faith. But our
faith regards Christ's Godhead and humanity, for it is not enough to
believe the one without the other, as is evident from what has been
said (Question [36], Article [4]; cf. SS, Question [2], Articles
[7],8). Consequently, in order that our faith in the truth of His
Godhead might be confirmed it was necessary that He should rise
speedily, and that His Resurrection should not be deferred until the
end of the world. But to confirm our faith regarding the truth of His
humanity and death, it was needful that there should be some interval
between His death and rising. For if He had risen directly after death,
it might seem that His death was not genuine and consequently neither
would His Resurrection be true. But to establish the truth of Christ's
death, it was enough for His rising to be deferred until the third day,
for within that time some signs of life always appear in one who
appears to be dead whereas he is alive.
Furthermore, by His rising on the third day, the
perfection of the number "three" is commended, which is "the number of
everything," as having "beginning, middle, and end," as is said in De
Coelo i. Again in the mystical sense we are taught that Christ by "His
one death" (i.e. of the body) which was light, by reason of His
righteousness, "destroyed our two deaths" (i.e. of soul and body),
which are as darkness on account of sin; consequently, He remained in
death for one day and two nights, as Augustine observes (De Trin. iv).
And thereby is also signified that a third epoch began
with the Resurrection: for the first was before the Law; the second
under the Law; and the third under grace. Moreover the third state of
the saints began with the Resurrection of Christ: for, the first was
under figures of the Law; the second under the truth of faith; while
the third will be in the eternity of glory, which Christ inaugurated by
rising again.
Reply to Objection 1: The head and members are likened in
nature, but not in power; because the power of the head is more
excellent than that of the members. Accordingly, to show forth the
excellence of Christ's power, it was fitting that He should rise on the
third day, while the resurrection of the rest is put off until the end
of the world.
Reply to Objection 2: Detention implies a certain compulsion.
But Christ was not held fast by any necessity of death, but was "free
among the dead": and therefore He abode a while in death, not as one
held fast, but of His own will, just so long as He deemed necessary for
the instruction of our faith. And a task is said to be done "at once"
which is performed within a short space of time.
Reply to Objection 3: As stated above (Question [51], Article
[4], ad 1,2), Christ rose early when the day was beginning to dawn, to
denote that by His Resurrection He brought us to the light of glory;
just as He died when the day was drawing to its close, and nearing to
darkness, in order to signify that by His death He would destroy the
darkness of sin and its punishment. Nevertheless He is said to have
risen on the third day, taking day as a natural day which contains
twenty-four hours. And as Augustine says (De Trin. iv): "The night
until the dawn, when the Lord's Resurrection was proclaimed, belongs to
the third day. Because God, who made the light to shine forth from
darkness, in order that by the grace of the New Testament and partaking
of Christ's rising we might hear this---'once ye were darkness, but now
light in the Lord'---insinuates in a measure to us that day draws its
origin from night: for, as the first days are computed from light to
darkness on account of man's coming fall, so these days are reckoned
from darkness to light owing to man's restoration." And so it is
evident that even if He had risen at midnight, He could be said to have
risen on the third day, taking it as a natural day. But now that He
rose early, it can be affirmed that He rose on the third day, even
taking the artificial day which is caused by the sun's presence,
because the sun had already begun to brighten the sky. Hence it is
written (Mk. 16:2) that "the women come to the sepulchre, the sun being
now risen"; which is not contrary to John's statement "when it was yet
dark," as Augustine says (De Cons. Evang. iii), "because, as the day
advances the more the light rises, the more are the remaining shadows
dispelled." But when Mark says "'the sun being now risen,' it is not to
be taken as if the sun were already apparent over the horizon, but as
coming presently into those parts."
Article: 3
Whether Christ was the first to rise from the dead?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ was not the first to rise
from the dead, because we read in the Old Testament of some persons
raised to life by Elias and Eliseus, according to Heb. 11:35: "Women
received their dead raised to life again": also Christ before His
Passion raised three dead persons to life. Therefore Christ was not the
first to rise from the dead.
Objection 2: Further, among the other miracles which happened
during the Passion, it is narrated (Mt. 27:52) that "the monuments were
opened, and many bodies of the saints who had slept rose again."
Therefore Christ was not the first to rise from the dead.
Objection 3: Further, as Christ by His own rising is the cause
of our resurrection, so by His grace He is the cause of our grace,
according to Jn. 1:16: "Of His fulness we all have received." But in
point of time some others had grace previous to Christ---for instance
all the fathers of the Old Testament. Therefore some others came to the
resurrection of the body before Christ.
On the contrary, It is written (1 Cor. 15:20): "Christ is risen
from the dead, the first fruits of them that sleep---because," says the
gloss, "He rose first in point of time and dignity."
I answer that, Resurrection is a restoring from death to life.
Now a man is snatched from death in two ways: first of all, from actual
death, so that he begins in any way to live anew after being actually
dead: in another way, so that he is not only rescued from death, but
from the necessity, nay more, from the possibility of dying again. Such
is a true and perfect resurrection, because so long as a man lives,
subject to the necessity of dying, death has dominion over him in a
measure, according to Rm. 8:10: "The body indeed is dead because of
sin." Furthermore, what has the possibility of existence, is said to
exist in some respect, that is, in potentiality. Thus it is evident
that the resurrection, whereby one is rescued from actual death only,
is but an imperfect one.
Consequently, speaking of perfect resurrection, Christ is
the first of them who rise, because by rising He was the first to
attain life utterly immortal, according to Rm. 6:9: "Christ rising from
the dead dieth now no more." But by an imperfect resurrection, some
others have risen before Christ, so as to be a kind of figure of His
Resurrection.
And thus the answer to the first objection is clear:
because both those raised from the dead in the old Testament, and those
raised by Christ, so returned to life that they had to die again.
Reply to Objection 2: There are two opinions regarding them who
rose with Christ. Some hold that they rose to life so as to die no
more, because it would be a greater torment for them to die a second
time than not to rise at all. According to this view, as Jerome
observes on Mt. 27:52,53, we must understand that "they had not risen
before our Lord rose." Hence the Evangelist says that "coming out of
the tombs after His Resurrection, they came into the holy city, and
appeared to many." But Augustine (Ep. ad Evod. clxiv) while giving this
opinion, says: "I know that it appears some, that by the death of
Christ the Lord the same resurrection was bestowed upon the righteous
as is promised to us in the end; and if they slept not again by laying
aside their bodies, it remains to be seen how Christ can be understood
to be 'the first-born of the dead,' if so many preceded Him unto that
resurrection. Now if reply be made that this is said by anticipation,
so that the monuments be understood to have been opened by the
earthquake while Christ was still hanging on the cross, but that the
bodies of the just did not rise then but after He had risen, the
difficulty still arises---how is it that Peter asserts that it was
predicted not of David but of Christ, that His body would not see
corruption, since David's tomb was in their midst; and thus he did not
convince them, if David's body was no longer there; for even if he had
risen soon after his death, and his flesh had not seen corruption, his
tomb might nevertheless remain. Now it seems hard that David from whose
seed Christ is descended, was not in that rising of the just, if an
eternal rising was conferred upon them. Also that saying in the Epistle
to the Hebrews (11:40) regarding the ancient just would be hard to
explain, 'that they should not be perfected without us,' if they were
already established in that incorruption of the resurrection which is
promised at the end when we shall be made perfect": so that Augustine
would seem to think that they rose to die again. In this sense Jerome
also in commenting on Matthew (27:52,53) says: "As Lazarus rose, so
also many of the bodies of the saints rose, that they might bear
witness to the risen Christ." Nevertheless in a sermon for the
Assumption [*Ep. ix ad Paul. et Eustoch.; among the supposititious
works ascribed to St. Jerome] he seems to leave the matter doubtful.
But Augustine's reasons seem to be much more cogent.
Reply to Objection 3: As everything preceding Christ's coming
was preparatory for Christ, so is grace a disposition for glory.
Consequently, it behooved all things appertaining to glory, whether
they regard the soul, as the perfect fruition of God, or whether they
regard the body, as the glorious resurrection, to be first in Christ as
the author of glory: but that grace should be first in those that were
ordained unto Christ.
Article: 4
Whether Christ was the cause of His own Resurrection?
Objection 1: It seems that Christ was not the cause of His own
Resurrection. For whoever is raised up by another is not the cause of
his own rising. But Christ was raised up by another, according to Acts
2:24: "Whom God hath raised up, having loosed the sorrows of hell": and
Rm. 8:11: "He that raised up Jesus Christ from the dead, shall quicken
also your mortal bodies." Therefore Christ is not the cause of His own
Resurrection.
Objection 2: Further, no one is said to merit, or ask from
another, that of which he is himself the cause. But Christ by His
Passion merited the Resurrection, as Augustine says (Tract. civ in
Joan.): "The lowliness of the Passion is the meritorious cause of the
glory of the Resurrection." Moreover He asked the Father that He might
be raised up again, according to Ps. 40:11: "But thou, O Lord, have
mercy on me, and raise me up again." Therefore He was not the cause of
His rising again.
Objection 3: Further, as Damascene proves (De Fide Orth. iv), it
is not the soul that rises again, but the body, which is stricken by
death. But the body could not unite the soul with itself, since the
soul is nobler. Therefore what rose in Christ could not be the cause of
His Resurrection.
On the contrary, Our Lord says (Jn. 10:18): "No one taketh My
soul from Me, but I lay it down, and I take it up again." But to rise
is nothing else than to take the soul up again. Consequently, it
appears that Christ rose again of His own power.
I answer that, As stated above (Question [50], Articles [2],3)
in consequence of death Christ's Godhead was not separated from His
soul, nor from His flesh. Consequently, both the soul and the flesh of
the dead Christ can be considered in two respects: first, in respect of
His Godhead; secondly, in respect of His created nature. Therefore,
according to the virtue of the Godhead united to it, the body took back
again the soul which it had laid aside, and the soul took back again
the body which it had abandoned: and thus Christ rose by His own power.
And this is precisely what is written (2 Cor. 13:4): "For although He
was crucified through" our "weakness, yet He liveth by the power of
God." But if we consider the body and soul of the dead Christ according
to the power of created nature, they could not thus be reunited, but it
was necessary for Christ to be raised up by God.
Reply to Objection 1: The Divine power is the same thing as the
operation of the Father and the Son; accordingly these two things are
mutually consequent, that Christ was raised up by the Divine power of
the Father, and by His own power.
Reply to Objection 2: Christ by praying besought and merited His Resurrection, as man and not as God.
Reply to Objection 3: According to its created nature Christ's
body is not more powerful than His soul; yet according to its Divine
power it is more powerful. Again the soul by reason of the Godhead
united to it is more powerful than the body in respect of its created
nature. Consequently, it was by the Divine power that the body and soul
mutually resumed each other, but not by the power of their created
nature.
Question: 54
OF THE QUALITY OF CHRIST RISING AGAIN (FOUR ARTICLES)
We have now to consider the quality of the rising Christ, which presents four points of inquiry:
(1) Whether Christ had a true body after His Resurrection?
(2) Whether He rose with His complete body?
(3) Whether His was a glorified body?
(4) Of the scars which showed in His body.
Article: 1
Whether Christ had a true body after His Resurrection?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ did not have a true body
after His Resurrection. For a true body cannot be in the same place at
the same time with another body. But after the Resurrection Christ's
body was with another at the same time in the same place: since He
entered among the disciples "the doors being shut," as is related in
Jn. 20:26. Therefore it seems that Christ did not have a true body
after His Resurrection.
Objection 2: Further, a true body does not vanish from the
beholder's sight unless perchance it be corrupted. But Christ's body
"vanished out of the sight" of the disciples as they gazed upon Him, as
is related in Lk. 24:31. Therefore, it seems that Christ did not have a
true body after His Resurrection.
Objection 3: Further, every true body has its determinate shape.
But Christ's body appeared before the disciples "in another shape," as
is evident from Mk. 15:12. Therefore it seems that Christ did not
possess a true body after His Resurrection.
On the contrary, It is written (Lk. 24:37) that when Christ
appeared to His disciples "they being troubled and frightened, supposed
that they saw a spirit," as if He had not a true but an imaginary body:
but to remove their fears He presently added: "Handle and see, for a
spirit hath not flesh and bones, as you see Me to have." Consequently,
He had not an imaginary but a true body.
I answer that, As Damascene says (De Fide Orth. iv): that is
said to rise, which fell. But Christ's body fell by death; namely,
inasmuch as the soul which was its formal perfection was separated from
it. Hence, in order for it to be a true resurrection, it was necessary
for the same body of Christ to be once more united with the same soul.
And since the truth of the body's nature is from its form it follows
that Christ's body after His Resurrection was a true body, and of the
same nature as it was before. But had His been an imaginary body, then
His Resurrection would not have been true, but apparent.
Reply to Objection 1: Christ's body after His Resurrection, not
by miracle but from its glorified condition, as some say, entered in
among the disciples while the doors were shut, thus existing with
another body in the same place. But whether a glorified body can have
this from some hidden property, so as to be with another body at the
same time in the same place, will be discussed later (XP, Question
[83], Article [4]) when the common resurrection will be dealt with. For
the present let it suffice to say that it was not from any property
within the body, but by virtue of the Godhead united to it, that this
body, although a true one, entered in among the disciples while the
doors were shut. Accordingly Augustine says in a sermon for Easter
(ccxlvii) that some men argue in this fashion: "If it were a body; if
what rose from the sepulchre were what hung upon the tree, how could it
enter through closed doors?" And he answers: "If you understand how, it
is no miracle: where reason fails, faith abounds." And (Tract. cxxi
super Joan.) he says: "Closed doors were no obstacle to the substance
of a Body wherein was the Godhead; for truly He could enter in by doors
not open, in whose Birth His Mother's virginity remained inviolate."
And Gregory says the same in a homily for the octave of Easter (xxvi in
Evang.).
Reply to Objection 2: As stated above (Question [53], Article
[3]), Christ rose to the immortal life of glory. But such is the
disposition of a glorified body that it is spiritual, i.e. subject to
the spirit, as the Apostle says (1 Cor. 15:44). Now in order for the
body to be entirely subject to the spirit, it is necessary for the
body's every action to be subject to the will of the spirit. Again,
that an object be seen is due to the action of the visible object upon
the sight, as the Philosopher shows (De Anima ii). Consequently,
whoever has a glorified body has it in his power to be seen when he so
wishes, and not to be seen when he does not wish it. Moreover Christ
had this not only from the condition of His glorified body, but also
from the power of His Godhead, by which power it may happen that even
bodies not glorified are miraculously unseen: as was by a miracle
bestowed on the blessed Bartholomew, that "if he wished he could be
seen, and not be seen if he did not wish it" [*Apocryphal Historia
Apost. viii, 2]. Christ, then, is said to have vanished from the eyes
of the disciples, not as though He were corrupted or dissolved into
invisible elements; but because He ceased, of His own will, to be seen
by them, either while He was present or while He was departing by the
gift of agility.
Reply to Objection 3: As Severianus [*Peter Chrysologus: Serm.
lxxxii] says in a sermon for Easter: "Let no one suppose that Christ
changed His features at the Resurrection." This is to be understood of
the outline of His members; since there was nothing out of keeping or
deformed in the body of Christ which was conceived of the Holy Ghost,
that had to be righted at the Resurrection. Nevertheless He received
the glory of clarity in the Resurrection: accordingly the same writer
adds: "but the semblance is changed, when, ceasing to be mortal, it
becomes immortal; so that it acquired the glory of countenance, without
losing the substance of the countenance." Yet He did not come to those
disciples in glorified appearance; but, as it lay in His power for His
body to be seen or not, so it was within His power to present to the
eyes of the beholders His form either glorified or not glorified, or
partly glorified and partly not, or in any fashion whatsoever. Still it
requires but a slight difference for anyone to seem to appear another
shape.
Article: 2
Whether Christ's body rose glorified? [*Some editions give this article
as the third, following the order of the introduction to the question.
But this is evident from the first sentence of the body of Article [3]
(Article [2] in the aforesaid editions), that the order of the Leonine
edition is correct.]
Objection 1: It seems that Christ's body did not rise glorified.
For glorified bodies shine, according to Mt. 13:43: "Then shall the
just shine as the sun in the kingdom of their Father." But shining
bodies are seen under the aspect of light, but not of color. Therefore,
since Christ's body was beheld under the aspect of color, as it had
been hitherto, it seems that it was not a glorified one.
Objection 2: Further, a glorified body is incorruptible. But
Christ's body seems not to have been incorruptible; because it was
palpable, as He Himself says in Lk. 24:39: "Handle, and see." Now
Gregory says (Hom. in Evang. xxvi) that "what is handled must be
corruptible, and that which is incorruptible cannot be handled."
Consequently, Christ's body was not glorified.
Objection 3: Further, a glorified body is not animal, but
spiritual, as is clear from 1 Cor. 15. But after the Resurrection
Christ's body seems to have been animal, since He ate and drank with
His disciples, as we read in the closing chapters of Luke and John.
Therefore, it seems that Christ's body was not glorified.
On the contrary, The Apostle says (Phil. 3:21): "He will reform
the body of our lowness, made like to the body of His glory."
I answer that, Christ's was a glorified body in His
Resurrection, and this is evident from three reasons. First of all,
because His Resurrection was the exemplar and the cause of ours, as is
stated in 1 Cor. 15:43. But in the resurrection the saints will have
glorified bodies, as is written in the same place: "It is sown in
dishonor, it shall rise in glory." Hence, since the cause is mightier
than the effect, and the exemplar than the exemplate; much more
glorious, then, was the body of Christ in His Resurrection. Secondly,
because He merited the glory of His Resurrection by the lowliness of
His Passion. Hence He said (Jn. 12:27): "Now is My soul troubled,"
which refers to the Passion; and later He adds: "Father, glorify Thy
name," whereby He asks for the glory of the Resurrection. Thirdly,
because as stated above (Question [34], Article [4]), Christ's soul was
glorified from the instant of His conception by perfect fruition of the
Godhead. But, as stated above (Question [14], Article [1], ad 2), it
was owing to the Divine economy that the glory did not pass from His
soul to His body, in order that by the Passion He might accomplish the
mystery of our redemption. Consequently, when this mystery of Christ's
Passion and death was finished, straightway the soul communicated its
glory to the risen body in the Resurrection; and so that body was made
glorious.
Reply to Objection 1: Whatever is received within a subject is
received according to the subject's capacity. Therefore, since glory
flows from the soul into the body, it follows that, as Augustine says
(Ep. ad Dioscor. cxviii), the brightness or splendor of a glorified
body is after the manner of natural color in the human body; just as
variously colored glass derives its splendor from the sun's radiance,
according to the mode of the color. But as it lies within the power of
a glorified man whether his body be seen or not, as stated above
(Article [1], ad 2), so is it in his power whether its splendor be seen
or not. Accordingly it can be seen in its color without its brightness.
And it was in this way that Christ's body appeared to the disciples
after the Resurrection.
Reply to Objection 2: We say that a body can be handled not only
because of its resistance, but also on account of its density. But from
rarity and density follow weight and lightness, heat and cold, and
similar contraries, which are the principles of corruption in
elementary bodies. Consequently, a body that can be handled by human
touch is naturally corruptible. But if there be a body that resists
touch, and yet is not disposed according to the qualities mentioned,
which are the proper objects of human touch, such as a heavenly body,
then such body cannot be said to be handled. But Christ's body after
the Resurrection was truly made up of elements, and had tangible
qualities such as the nature of a human body requires, and therefore it
could naturally be handled; and if it had nothing beyond the nature of
a human body, it would likewise be corruptible. But it had something
else which made it incorruptible, and this was not the nature of a
heavenly body, as some maintain, and into which we shall make fuller
inquiry later (XP, Question [82], Article [1]), but it was glory
flowing from a beatified soul: because, as Augustine says (Ep. ad
Dioscor. cxviii): "God made the soul of such powerful nature, that from
its fullest beatitude the fulness of health overflows into the body,
that is, the vigor of incorruption." And therefore Gregory says (Hom.
in Evang. xxvi): "Christ's body is shown to be of the same nature, but
of different glory, after the Resurrection."
Reply to Objection 3: As Augustine says (De Civ. Dei xiii):
"After the Resurrection, our Saviour in spiritual but true flesh
partook of meat with the disciples, not from need of food, but because
it lay in His power." For as Bede says on Lk. 24:41: "The thirsty earth
sucks in the water, and the sun's burning ray absorbs it; the former
from need, the latter by its power." Hence after the Resurrection He
ate, "not as needing food, but in order thus to show the nature of His
risen body." Nor does it follow that His was an animal body that stands
in need of food.
Article: 3
Whether Christ's body rose again entire?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ's body did not rise
entire. For flesh and blood belong to the integrity of the body:
whereas Christ seems not to have had both, for it is written (1 Cor.
15:50): "Flesh and blood can not possess the kingdom of God." But
Christ rose in the glory of the kingdom of God. Therefore it seems that
He did not have flesh and blood.
Objection 2: Further, blood is one of the four humors.
Consequently, if Christ had blood, with equal reason He also had the
other humors, from which corruption is caused in animal bodies. It
would follow, then, that Christ's body was corruptible, which is
unseemly. Therefore Christ did not have flesh and blood.
Objection 3: Further, the body of Christ which rose, ascended to
heaven. But some of His blood is kept as relics in various churches.
Therefore Christ's body did not rise with the integrity of all its
parts.
On the contrary, our Lord said (Lk. 24:39) while addressing His
disciples after the Resurrection: "A spirit hath not flesh and bones as
you see Me to have."
I answer that, As stated above (Article [2]), Christ's body in
the Resurrection was "of the same nature, but differed in glory."
Accordingly, whatever goes with the nature of a human body, was
entirely in the body of Christ when He rose again. Now it is clear that
flesh, bones, blood, and other such things, are of the very nature of
the human body. Consequently, all these things were in Christ's body
when He rose again; and this also integrally, without any diminution;
otherwise it would not have been a complete resurrection, if whatever
was lost by death had not been restored. Hence our Lord assured His
faithful ones by saying (Mt. 10:30): "The very hairs of your head are
all numbered": and (Lk. 21:18): "A hair of your head shall not perish."
But to say that Christ's body had neither flesh, nor
bones, nor the other natural parts of a human body, belongs to the
error of Eutyches, Bishop of Constantinople, who maintained that "our
body in that glory of the resurrection will be impalpable, and more
subtle than wind and air: and that our Lord, after the hearts of the
disciples who handled Him were confirmed, brought back to subtlety
whatever could be handled in Him" [*St. Gregory, Moral. in Job 14:56].
Now Gregory condemns this in the same book, because Christ's body was
not changed after the Resurrection, according to Rm. 6:9: "Christ
rising from the dead, dieth now no more." Accordingly, the very man who
had said these things, himself retracted them at his death. For, if it
be unbecoming for Christ to take a body of another nature in His
conception, a heavenly one for instance, as Valentine asserted, it is
much more unbecoming for Him at His Resurrection to resume a body of
another nature, because in His Resurrection He resumed unto an
everlasting life, the body which in His conception He had assumed to a
mortal life.
Reply to Objection 1: Flesh and blood are not to be taken there
for the nature of flesh and blood, but, either for the guilt of flesh
and blood, as Gregory says [*St. Gregory, Moral. in Job 14:56], or else
for the corruption of flesh and blood: because, as Augustine says (Ad
Consent., De Resur. Carn.), "there will be neither corruption there,
nor mortality of flesh and blood." Therefore flesh according to its
substance possesses the kingdom of God, according to Lk. 24:39: "A
spirit hath not flesh and bones, as you see Me to have." But flesh, if
understood as to its corruption, will not possess it; hence it is
straightway added in the words of the Apostle: "Neither shall
corruption possess incorruption."
Reply to Objection 2: As Augustine says in the same book:
"Perchance by reason of the blood some keener critic will press us and
say; If the blood was" in the body of Christ when He rose, "why not the
rheum?" that is, the phlegm; "why not also the yellow gall?" that is,
the gall proper; "and why not the black gall?" that is, the bile, "with
which four humors the body is tempered, as medical science bears
witness. But whatever anyone may add, let him take heed not to add
corruption, lest he corrupt the health and purity of his own faith;
because Divine power is equal to taking away such qualities as it wills
from the visible and tractable body, while allowing others to remain,
so that there be no defilement," i.e. of corruption, "though the
features be there; motion without weariness, the power to eat, without
need of food."
Reply to Objection 3: All the blood which flowed from Christ's
body, belonging as it does to the integrity of human nature, rose again
with His body: and the same reason holds good for all the particles
which belong to the truth and integrity of human nature. But the blood
preserved as relics in some churches did not flow from Christ's side,
but is said to have flowed from some maltreated image of Christ.
Article: 4
Whether Christ's body ought to have risen with its scars?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ's body ought not to have
risen with its scars. For it is written (1 Cor. 15:52): "The dead shall
rise incorrupt." But scars and wounds imply corruption and defect.
Therefore it was not fitting for Christ, the author of the
resurrection, to rise again with scars.
Objection 2: Further, Christ's body rose entire, as stated above
(Article [3]). But open scars are opposed to bodily integrity, since
they interfere with the continuity of the tissue. It does not therefore
seem fitting for the open wounds to remain in Christ's body; although
the traces of the wounds might remain, which would satisfy the
beholder; thus it was that Thomas believed, to whom it was said:
"Because thou hast seen Me, Thomas, thou hast believed" (Jn. 20:29).
Objection 3: Further, Damascene says (De Fide Orth. iv) that
"some things are truly said of Christ after the Resurrection, which He
did not have from nature but from special dispensation, such as the
scars, in order to make it sure that it was the body which had suffered
that rose again." Now when the cause ceases, the effect ceases.
Therefore it seems that when the disciples were assured of the
Resurrection, He bore the scars no longer. But it ill became the
unchangeableness of His glory that He should assume anything which was
not to remain in Him for ever. Consequently, it seems that He ought not
at His Resurrection to have resumed a body with scars.
On the contrary, Our Lord said to Thomas (Jn. 20:27): "Put in
thy finger hither, and see My hands; and bring hither thy hand, and put
it into My side, and be not faithless but believing."
I answer that, It was fitting for Christ's soul at His
Resurrection to resume the body with its scars. In the first place, for
Christ's own glory. For Bede says on Lk. 24:40 that He kept His scars
not from inability to heal them, "but to wear them as an everlasting
trophy of His victory." Hence Augustine says (De Civ. Dei xxii):
"Perhaps in that kingdom we shall see on the bodies of the Martyrs the
traces of the wounds which they bore for Christ's name: because it will
not be a deformity, but a dignity in them; and a certain kind of beauty
will shine in them, in the body, though not of the body." Secondly, to
confirm the hearts of the disciples as to "the faith in His
Resurrection" (Bede, on Lk. 24:40). Thirdly, "that when He pleads for
us with the Father, He may always show the manner of death He endured
for us" (Bede, on Lk. 24:40). Fourthly, "that He may convince those
redeemed in His blood, how mercifully they have been helped, as He
exposes before them the traces of the same death" (Bede, on Lk. 24:40).
Lastly, "that in the Judgment-day He may upbraid them with their just
condemnation" (Bede, on Lk. 24:40). Hence, as Augustine says (De Symb.
ii): "Christ knew why He kept the scars in His body. For, as He showed
them to Thomas who would not believe except he handled and saw them, so
will He show His wounds to His enemies, so that He who is the Truth may
convict them, saying: 'Behold the man whom you crucified; see the
wounds you inflicted; recognize the side you pierced, since it was
opened by you and for you, yet you would not enter.'"
Reply to Objection 1: The scars that remained in Christ's body
belong neither to corruption nor defect, but to the greater increase of
glory, inasmuch as they are the trophies of His power; and a special
comeliness will appear in the places scarred by the wounds.
Reply to Objection 2: Although those openings of the wounds
break the continuity of the tissue, still the greater beauty of glory
compensates for all this, so that the body is not less entire, but more
perfected. Thomas, however, not only saw, but handled the wounds,
because as Pope Leo [*Cf. Append. Opp. August., Serm. clxii] says: "It
sufficed for his personal faith for him to have seen what he saw; but
it was on our behalf that he touched what he beheld."
Reply to Objection 3: Christ willed the scars of His wounds to
remain on His body, not only to confirm the faith of His disciples, but
for other reasons also. From these it seems that those scars will
always remain on His body; because, as Augustine says (Ad Consent., De
Resurr. Carn.): "I believe our Lord's body to be in heaven, such as it
was when He ascended into heaven." And Gregory (Moral. xiv) says that
"if aught could be changed in Christ's body after His Resurrection,
contrary to Paul's truthful teaching, then the Lord after His
Resurrection returned to death; and what fool would dare to say this,
save he that denies the true resurrection of the flesh?" Accordingly,
it is evident that the scars which Christ showed on His body after His
Resurrection, have never since been removed from His body.
Question: 55
OF THE MANIFESTATION OF THE RESURRECTION (SIX ARTICLES)
We have now to consider the manifestation of the Resurrection: concerning which there are six points of inquiry:
(1) Whether Christ's Resurrection ought to have been
manifested to all men or only to some special individuals?
(2) Whether it was fitting that they should see Him rise?
(3) Whether He ought to have lived with the disciples after the Resurrection?
(4) Whether it was fitting for Him to appeal to the disciples "in another shape"?
(5) Whether He ought to have demonstrated the Resurrection by proofs?
(6) Of the cogency of those proofs.
Article: 1
Whether Christ's Resurrection ought to have been manifested to all?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ's Resurrection ought to
have been manifested to all. For just as a public penalty is due for
public sin, according to 1 Tim. 5:20: "Them that sin reprove before
all," so is a public reward due for public merit. But, as Augustine
says (Tract. civ in Joan.), "the glory of the Resurrection is the
reward of the humility of the Passion." Therefore, since Christ's
Passion was manifested to all while He suffered in public, it seems
that the glory of the Resurrection ought to have been manifested to all.
Objection 2: Further, as Christ's Passion is ordained for our
salvation, so also is His Resurrection, according to Rm. 4:25: "He rose
again for our justification." But what belongs to the public weal ought
to be manifested to all. Therefore Christ's Resurrection ought to have
been manifested to all, and not to some specially.
Objection 3: Further, they to whom it was manifested were
witnesses of the Resurrection: hence it is said (Acts 3:15): "Whom God
hath raised from the dead, of which we are witnesses." Now they bore
witness by preaching in public: and this is unbecoming in women,
according to 1 Cor. 14:34: "Let women keep silence in the churches":
and 1 Tim. 2:12: "I suffer not a woman to teach." Therefore, it does
not seem becoming for Christ's Resurrection to be manifested first of
all to the women and afterwards to mankind in general.
On the contrary, It is written (Acts 10:40): "Him God raised up
the third day, and gave Him to be made manifest, not to all the people,
but to witnesses preordained by God."
I answer that, Some things come to our knowledge by nature's
common law, others by special favor of grace, as things divinely
revealed. Now, as Dionysius says (Coel. Hier. iv), the divinely
established law of such things is that they be revealed immediately by
God to higher persons, through whom they are imparted to others, as is
evident in the ordering of the heavenly spirits. But such things as
concern future glory are beyond the common ken of mankind, according to
Is. 64:4: "The eye hath not seen, O God, besides Thee, what things Thou
hast prepared for them that wait for Thee." Consequently, such things
are not known by man except through Divine revelation, as the Apostle
says (1 Cor. 2:10): "God hath revealed them to us by His spirit."
Since, then, Christ rose by a glorious Resurrection, consequently His
Resurrection was not manifested to everyone, but to some, by whose
testimony it could be brought to the knowledge of others.
Reply to Objection 1: Christ's Passion was consummated in a body
that still had a passible nature, which is known to all by general
laws: consequently His Passion could be directly manifested to all. But
the Resurrection was accomplished "through the glory of the Father," as
the Apostle says (Rm. 6:4). Therefore it was manifested directly to
some, but not to all.
But that a public penance is imposed upon public sinners,
is to be understood of the punishment of this present life. And in like
manner public merits should be rewarded in public, in order that others
may be stirred to emulation. But the punishments and rewards of the
future life are not publicly manifested to all, but to those specially
who are preordained thereto by God.
Reply to Objection 2: Just as Christ's Resurrection is for the
common salvation of all, so it came to the knowledge of all; yet not so
that it was directly manifested to all, but only to some, through whose
testimony it could be brought to the knowledge of all.
Reply to Objection 3: A woman is not to be allowed to teach
publicly in church; but she may be permitted to give familiar
instruction to some privately. And therefore as Ambrose says on Lk.
24:22, "a woman is sent to them who are of her household," but not to
the people to bear witness to the Resurrection. But Christ appeared to
the woman first, for this reason, that as a woman was the first to
bring the source of death to man, so she might be the first to announce
the dawn of Christ's glorious Resurrection. Hence Cyril says on Jn.
20:17: "Woman who formerly was the minister of death, is the first to
see and proclaim the adorable mystery of the Resurrection: thus
womankind has procured absolution from ignominy, and removal of the
curse." Hereby, moreover, it is shown, so far as the state of glory is
concerned, that the female sex shall suffer no hurt; but if women burn
with greater charity, they shall also attain greater glory from the
Divine vision: because the women whose love for our Lord was more
persistent---so much so that "when even the disciples withdrew" from
the sepulchre "they did not depart" [*Gregory, Hom. xxv in
Evang.]---were the first to see Him rising in glory.
Article: 2
Whether it was fitting that the disciples should see Him rise again?
Objection 1: It would seem fitting that the disciples should
have seen Him rise again, because it was their office to bear witness
to the Resurrection, according to Acts 4:33: "With great power did the
apostles give testimony to the Resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord."
But the surest witness of all is an eye-witness. Therefore it would
have been fitting for them to see the very Resurrection of Christ.
Objection 2: Further, in order to have the certainty of faith
the disciples saw Christ ascend into heaven, according to Acts 1:9:
"While they looked on, He was raised up." But it was also necessary for
them to have faith in the Resurrection. Therefore it seems that Christ
ought to have risen in sight of the disciples.
Objection 3: Further, the raising of Lazarus was a sign of
Christ's coming Resurrection. But the Lord raised up Lazarus in sight
of the disciples. Consequently, it seems that Christ ought to have
risen in sight of the disciples.
On the contrary, It is written (Mk. 16:9): The Lord "rising
early the first day of the week, appeared first to Mary Magdalen." Now
Mary Magdalen did not see Him rise; but, while searching for Him in the
sepulchre, she heard from the angel: "He is risen, He is not here."
Therefore no one saw Him rise again.
I answer that, As the Apostle says (Rm. 13:1): "Those things
that are of God, are well ordered [Vulg.: 'Those that are, are ordained
of God]." Now the divinely established order is this, that things above
men's ken are revealed to them by angels, as Dionysius says (Coel.
Hier. iv). But Christ on rising did not return to the familiar manner
of life, but to a kind of immortal and God-like condition, according to
Rm. 6:10: "For in that He liveth, He liveth unto God." And therefore it
was fitting for Christ's Resurrection not to be witnessed by men
directly, but to be proclaimed to them by angels. Accordingly, Hilary
(Comment. Matth. cap. ult.) says: "An angel is therefore the first
herald of the Resurrection, that it might be declared out of obedience
to the Father's will."
Reply to Objection 1: The apostles were able to testify to the
Resurrection even by sight, because from the testimony of their own
eyes they saw Christ alive, whom they had known to be dead. But just as
man comes from the hearing of faith to the beatific vision, so did men
come to the sight of the risen Christ through the message already
received from angels.
Reply to Objection 2: Christ's Ascension as to its term
wherefrom, was not above men's common knowledge, but only as to its
term whereunto. Consequently, the disciples were able to behold
Christ's Ascension as to the term wherefrom, that is, according as He
was uplifted from the earth; but they did not behold Him as to the term
whereunto, because they did not see how He was received into heaven.
But Christ's Resurrection transcended common knowledge as to the term
wherefrom, according as His soul returned from hell and His body from
the closed sepulchre; and likewise as to the term whereunto, according
as He attained to the life of glory. Consequently, the Resurrection
ought not to be accomplished so as to be seen by man.
Reply to Objection 3: Lazarus was raised so that he returned to
the same life as before, which life is not beyond man's common ken.
Consequently, there is no parity.
Article: 3
Whether Christ ought to have lived constantly with His disciples after the Resurrection?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ ought to have lived
constantly with His Disciples, because He appeared to them after His
Resurrection in order to confirm their faith in the Resurrection, and
to bring them comfort in their disturbed state, according to Jn. 20:20:
"The disciples were glad when they saw the Lord." But they would have
been more assured and consoled had He constantly shown them His
presence. Therefore it seems that He ought to have lived constantly
with them.
Objection 2: Further, Christ rising from the dead did not at
once ascend to heaven, but after forty days, as is narrated in Acts
1:3. But meanwhile He could have been in no more suitable place than
where the disciples were met together. Therefore it seems that He ought
to have lived with them continually.
Objection 3: Further, as Augustine says (De Consens. Evang.
iii), we read how Christ appeared five times on the very day of His
Resurrection: first "to the women at the sepulchre; secondly to the
same on the way from the sepulchre; thirdly to Peter; fourthly to the
two disciples going to the town; fifthly to several of them in
Jerusalem when Thomas was not present." Therefore it also seems that He
ought to have appeared several times on the other days before the
Ascension.
Objection 4: Further, our Lord had said to them before the
Passion (Mt. 26:32): "But after I shall be risen again, I will go
before you into Galilee"; moreover an angel and our Lord Himself
repeated the same to the women after the Resurrection: nevertheless He
was seen by them in Jerusalem on the very day of the Resurrection, as
stated above (Objection [3]); also on the eighth day, as we read in Jn.
20:26. It seems, therefore, that He did not live with the disciples in
a fitting way after the Resurrection.
On the contrary, It is written (Jn. 20:26) that "after eight
days" Christ appeared to the disciples. Therefore He did not live
constantly with them.
I answer that, Concerning the Resurrection two things had to be
manifested to the disciples, namely, the truth of the Resurrection, and
the glory of Him who rose. Now in order to manifest the truth of the
Resurrection, it sufficed for Him to appear several times before them,
to speak familiarly to them, to eat and drink, and let them touch Him.
But in order to manifest the glory of the risen Christ, He was not
desirous of living with them constantly as He had done before, lest it
might seem that He rose unto the same life as before. Hence (Lk. 24:44)
He said to them: "These are the words which I spoke to you, while I was
yet with you." For He was there with them by His bodily presence, but
hitherto He had been with them not merely by His bodily presence, but
also in mortal semblance. Hence Bede in explaining those words of Luke,
"while I was with you," says: "that is, while I was still in mortal
flesh, in which you are yet: for He had then risen in the same flesh,
but was not in the same state of mortality as they."
Reply to Objection 1: Christ's frequent appearing served to
assure the disciples of the truth of the Resurrection; but continual
intercourse might have led them into the error of believing that He had
risen to the same life as was His before. Yet by His constant presence
He promised them comfort in another life, according to Jn. 16:22: "I
will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice; and your joy no man
shall take from you."
Reply to Objection 2: That Christ did not stay continually with
the disciples was not because He deemed it more expedient for Him to be
elsewhere: but because He judged it to be more suitable for the
apostles' instruction that He should not abide continually with them,
for the reason given above. But it is quite unknown in what places He
was bodily present in the meantime, since Scripture is silent, and His
dominion is in every place (Cf. Ps. 102:22).
Reply to Objection 3: He appeared oftener on the first day,
because the disciples were to be admonished by many proofs to accept
the faith in His Resurrection from the very out set: but after they had
once accepted it, they had no further need of being instructed by so
many apparitions. Accordingly one reads in the Gospel that after the
first day He appeared again only five times. For, as Augustine says (De
Consens. Evang. iii), after the first five apparitions "He came again a
sixth time when Thomas saw Him; a seventh time was by the sea of
Tiberias at the capture of the fishes; the eighth was on the mountain
of Galilee, according to Matthew; the ninth occasion is expressed by
Mark, 'at length when they were at table,' because no more were they
going to eat with Him upon earth; the tenth was on the very day, when
no longer upon the earth, but uplifted into the cloud, He was ascending
into heaven. But, as John admits, not all things were written down. And
He visited them frequently before He went up to heaven," in order to
comfort them. Hence it is written (1 Cor. 15:6,7) that "He was seen by
more than five hundred brethren at once . . . after that He was seen by
James"; of which apparitions no mention is made in the Gospels.
Reply to Objection 4: Chrysostom in explaining Mt.
26:32---"after I shall be risen again, I will go before you into
Galilee," says (Hom. lxxxiii in Matth.), "He goes not to some far off
region in order to appear to them, but among His own people, and in
those very places" in which for the most part they had lived with Him;
"in order that they might thereby believe that He who was crucified was
the same as He who rose again." And on this account "He said that He
would go into Galilee, that they might be delivered from fear of the
Jews."
Consequently, as Ambrose says (Expos. in Luc.), "The Lord
had sent word to the disciples that they were to see Him in Galilee;
yet He showed Himself first to them when they were assembled together
in the room out of fear. (Nor is there any breaking of a promise here,
but rather a hastened fulfilling out of kindness)" [*Cf. Catena Aurea
in Luc. xxiv, 36]: "afterwards, however, when their minds were
comforted, they went into Galilee. Nor is there any reason to prevent
us from supposing that there were few in the room, and many more on the
mountain." For, as Eusebius [*Of Caesarea; Cf. Migne, P. G., xxii,
1003] says, "Two Evangelists, Luke and John, write that He appeared in
Jerusalem to the eleven only; but the other two said that an angel and
our Saviour commanded not merely the eleven, but all the disciples and
brethren, to go into Galilee. Paul makes mention of them when he says
(1 Cor. 15:6): 'Then He appeared to more then five hundred brethren at
once.'" The truer solution, however, is this, that while they were in
hiding in Jerusalem He appeared to them at first in order to comfort
them; but in Galilee it was not secretly, nor once or twice, that He
made Himself known to them with great power, "showing Himself to them
alive after His Passion, by many proofs," as Luke says (Acts 1:3). Or
as Augustine writes (De Consens. Evang. iii): "What was said by the
angel and by our Lord---that He would 'go before them into Galilee,'
must be taken prophetically. For if we take Galilee as meaning 'a
passing,' we must understand that they were going to pass from the
people of Israel to the Gentiles, who would not believe in the
preaching of the apostles unless He prepared the way for them in men's
hearts: and this is signified by the words 'He shall go before you into
Galilee.' But if by Galilee we understand 'revelation,' we are to
understand this as applying to Him not in the form of a servant, but in
that form wherein He is equal to the Father, and which He has promised
to them that love Him. Although He has gone before us in this sense, He
has not abandoned us."
Article: 4
Whether Christ should have appeared to the disciples "in another shape"?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ ought not to have
appeared to the disciples "in another shape." For a thing cannot appear
in very truth other than it is. But there was only one shape in Christ.
Therefore if He appeared under another, it was not a true but a false
apparition. Now this is not at all fitting, because as Augustine says
(Questions. lxxxiii, qu. 14): "If He deceives He is not the Truth; yet
Christ is the Truth." Consequently, it seems that Christ ought not to
have appeared to the disciples "in another s |