Pints With Aquinas - The Assumption of Mary
Episode Date: August 15, 2019Click here to listen to Munificentissimus Deus, by Pope Pius XII (PATRONS ONLY) --- Happy feast of the assumption of Mary, y’all! Today I talk a little about the assumption of Mary. I respond to wh...at Protestant apologist Norm Geisler has to say regarding Aquinas and the dogma of the assumption. And then (….drum roll….), I share a portion of a brand new audio book, Pope Pius XII’s apostolic constitution in which he defines as dogma Mary’s assumption into Heaven
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Pints with Aquinas. My name is Matt Fradd. In today's episode, we're going to be talking about the Assumption of Mary,
because today is the Feast of the Assumption of Mary, or as we call it in the East, the Feast of the Dormition of Mary.
I want to play for you a podcast that I recorded a couple of years ago in which I respond to systematic theologian and philosopher Norm
Geisler, who claimed in an article that Aquinas denied the assumption of Mary.
And in that podcast, I explained why he was wrong.
And so I want to play that for you today.
And then I want to play for you about 10 minutes of an audio book that my patrons have at their disposal at patreon.com
slash Matt Fradd. Oh gosh, Munificentissimus Deus. I'm never good at saying that. That's why I just
said oh gosh. Munificentissimus Deus by Pope Pius XII. It is Latin for the most bountiful God.
God. It is an apostolic constitution that was written, and in it, Pope Pius XII defined ex cathedra, the dogma of the assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. So this is actually an
audiobook that I had professionally recorded. You'll hear, as I say, about 10 minutes at the
end of this episode. You'll see how lovely it is. But I would suggest, you know, if you want to
become a patron, you get a bunch of free stuff in return, would suggest, you know, if you want to become a patron,
you get a bunch of free stuff in return,
like things that I post to you,
access to post-show wrap-up videos on the Matt Fradd Show and all else besides.
But you also get access
to an ever-growing audio library of content.
So this is a great episodic constitution
that you ought to read.
And if you don't want to read it,
you should at least listen to it.
So the recording is 41 minutes.
So I'll put a link to it at the top of the show notes. You can click that, become a patron,
you'll get immediate access to it right away. But all right, here is the episode in which I
respond to Norm Geisler, the late Norm Geisler, who passed away last month, actually. And I want
to apologize before you listen to this episode, and you'll know why perhaps halfway through the
episode. I come off a little prickly in this episode,
a little condescending even.
I think I was just so put off
that Norm Geisler would dispute the fact
that Aquinas accepted the assumption of Mary
that honestly, I come off a little jerky.
So I'm sorry.
And I'm also sorry to you, Norm,
if you're up with the Lord,
and I hope that you are.
But if you can just get past
the annoying Australian who hosts this episode, I think you'll find it really interesting. Also,
since this episode is about two years old, if I have things at the end that I say about my ministry
and stuff, it's two years old. So I can't promise that all the information is up to date. All right,
have a beautiful feast. Here is the episode.
all the information is up to date. All right, have a beautiful feast. Here is the episode.
The assumption of the mother of God, what is it? Well, let's first take a look at what the catechism of the Catholic Church has to say. Finally, the Immaculate Virgin, preserved free
from all stain of original sin, when the course of her earthly life was finished,
was taken up, body and soul, into heavenly glory,
and exalted by the Lord as Queen over all things,
so that she might be the more fully conformed to her Son,
the Lord of Lords and conqueror of sin and death.
The assumption of the Blessed Virgin is a singular participation in her Son's resurrection
and an anticipation of the end of her earthly life, Mary, it wasn't defined whether or not she died or not.
Most people or the tradition seems to be that she did die and then was assumed body and soul into heaven.
That's why in the East, we call it the Dormition of Mary. Now, so that was defined in 1950 by Pope Pius XII,
as I've already said. But here's something that's kind of bothered me. Sometimes people think that, what, 1950? And they mistakenly
think that a dogma is essentially coming up with a belief. But that's not true. The church
infallibly defines things, not all from the get-go, right, at 33 AD, AD 33, I should say.
go, right? At 33 AD, AD 33, I should say. But when a dispute arises and the magisterium, that is the teaching authority of the church wants to make something clear, right? That this was part of
the deposit of faith. So look, let's just read from Norm Geisel here. This is from Christianity
Today. Norm Geisel, I've read some of his apologetic stuff and I find it quite interesting.
from Christianity Today. Norman Geist, I've read some of his apologetic stuff and I find it quite interesting. He's got some really great stuff to read, but he does tend to lean towards the,
you know, not favorable to Catholic side, which is fine, right? I mean,
at least he's consistent. He's not wanting a false ecumenism or something.
Okay, but it really bothered me when he brought Aquinas into the issue. So, the whole point of
this article is it's called Thomas Aquinas, he's our man. All right, so he's trying to say like we
as evangelicals can learn from Aquinas too, which I obviously agree with. But to say or to insinuate
that Aquinas really wasn't Catholic in the sense that he didn't accept these core beliefs of Catholics. It's just nonsense. All right, so here's a quote from him. He says,
many of the Catholic beliefs that concern Protestants, most were not declared dogma
until long after Aquinas. For example, Aquinas defined the immaculate conception of Mary,
oh sorry, Aquinas denied the Immaculate Conception of Mary,
and it was not declared dogma until 1854. Look, we've done whole episodes on this. It is true
that Aquinas was wrong about the Immaculate Conception of Mary. But it's interesting when
people say this, like he denied this. Yeah, but guess what? He did believe that she was sinless her entire life. He just wasn't sure
how to reconcile that or how to explain when it occurred. All right. So, I think he perhaps
played with the idea that she may have been sanctified in utero or something like that,
but okay, let's move on. And then he says,
Aquinas never believed in the bodily assumption of Mary, which was defined in 1950.
Look, and what's crazy is later on, he says, we just have to read Aquinas,
right? He's like, just read the man yourself, and then you'll see how he's our man.
right? Like he's like, just read the man yourself and then you'll see how he's our man. Let me read two direct excerpts from St. Thomas Aquinas to show that he absolutely did accept
bodily assumption of Mary. Now it's true that he never addressed the assumption of Mary directly
as an article in the Summa Theologiae or elsewhere, but it doesn't mean he didn't accept it.
an article in the Summa Theologiae or elsewhere, but it doesn't mean he didn't accept it.
For example, in the Summa Theologiae in the third part, question 27, article 1, he's talking about there whether the Blessed Virgin was sanctified before her birth from the womb. Now, check this
out. Not only does he share that he accepts and believes the
assumption of Mary, but he even quotes Augustine, right? Augustine as believing it too. Here's a
quote from Aquinas. But as Augustine in his tractate on the assumption of the Virgin argues
with reason, since her body was assumed into into heaven and yet scripture does not relate this
blah blah blah blah blah so um right there uh we can see that he's mistaken now of course it's
interesting too that he would quote saint augustine right augustine was born in the fourth century, died in around 420, 430,
sometime around then. So, there you go. I mean, not only does Aquinas show that he believes in
the Assumption of Mary, but he's talking about its pedigree in the early church. It's, I don't
mean that, sorry, ancient pedigree, I guess I'm trying to say. Here's another thing. This is directly, we've talked about this as well on a previous podcast. This is St. Thomas
Aquinas' beautiful writings on the angelic salutation, on the Hail Mary. You can go back
and find that in a previous podcast. We read through the whole thing. It's gorgeous. But if
Norman Geisler would just do what he encouraged us to do and read Thomas Aquinas, he would know that Thomas Aquinas accepted the assumption of Mary.
Here's another quote from Aquinas.
The Blessed Virgin was free of this because she was assumed in the body into heaven, for we believe that after death, she was raised up and born to heaven.
There you go. Did you see Aquinas said that? After death. That goes back to my point that
the general consensus was that she died first. And then he quotes Psalm 131.8 that says,
O Lord, into thy resting place thou and the ark of thy majesty, right? This idea that the Ark of the Covenant of the Old Testament was a type
of the Blessed Virgin Mary who contained God within her womb. So, I hope that settles it.
But to this issue that, again, I brought it up in the beginning that, you know, this dogma wasn't
defined until then. Yeah, but again, dogmas aren't defined until disputes arise in the church and
the church wants to settle a question. For example, it wasn't until the Council of Nicaea
that the Trinity was officially defined, okay? It wasn't until the Council of Trent,
and that was well after Aquinas, that the canon of Scripture was infallibly defined. That doesn't
mean it was the first time it was discussed, obviously. If memory serves, the first enumeration
we have of Holy Scripture comes from Pope Damasus I in the year 8382 at the Council of Rome.
All right. That was further ratified by the councils of Hippo and Carthage, okay, but it wasn't actually defined infallibly until Trent. So, it's just, a dogma isn't when, you know, a belief is invented. Again, a dogma, by the way, what does dogma mean? Probably should have defined that a long time ago.
mean. Probably should have defined that a long time ago. Dogma originally just meant opinion,
but it doesn't really have that connotation today. Here's a somewhat recent definition from the late Cardinal Avery Dulles. He says, in current Catholic usage, the term dogma means a
divinely revealed truth proclaimed as such by the infallible teaching authority of the church and hence
binding on all the faithful without exception now and forever. And that's from his work,
The Survival of Dogma. So, a dogma is part of the original deposit of faith, right? It's not
something that the apostles didn't believe and then someone else began to believe. It's something that the
apostles actually taught in seed form. Yeah, perhaps. For example, the Trinity. Clearly,
the apostles and how they understood and explained the Trinity would be primitive compared to, say,
St. Athanasius. Okay, but just because St. Athanasius has a more robust understanding of the Trinity, that doesn't mean that the apostles didn't teach it. Anyway, so have a beautiful feast of the
Assumption of Mary today. Have a beer, have a pint of beer if you're not having one already,
and ask our blessed mother to lead you and please to lead me closer to her Son, Jesus Christ.
Now, as I mentioned in the beginning of the show, because of your support on Patreon,
we've been able to pay an official voiceover book reading dude, again, I'm pretty sure that's the
official title, to read Pope Pius XII's Apostolic Constitution, in which he defines Mary as having
been, not defined, but
defined infallibly, as Mary being assumed into heaven. So, I'm going to play a bit of that now,
and I really want to encourage you to support Pints with Aquinas so you can listen to the
whole of this book for, you know, five bucks a month, and also realize that we're going to be
uploading new audio books. I've got a couple in mind that you'll have
access to by supporting the show as well. Again, if you want to support the show, go to pintswithaquinas.com,
click the Patreon banner, or click support, and that's how you can do it. So, you know, if you
don't want to just listen to like a teaser, maybe just go do that right now and you can listen to
the whole thing. Otherwise, here's five to ten minutes of that beautiful, beautiful letter. God bless at pintswithaquinas.com.
The most bountiful God, who is Almighty, the plan of whose providence rests upon wisdom and love,
tempers in the secret purpose of his own mind the sorrows of peoples and of individual men
by means of joys that he interposes in their lives from time to time,
in such a way that, under different conditions and in different ways,
all things may work together unto good for those who love him.
Now, just like the present age, our pontificate is weighed down by ever so many cares, anxieties,
and troubles, by reason of very severe calamities
that have taken place, and by reason of the fact that many have strayed away from truth and virtue.
Nevertheless, we are greatly consoled to see that, while the Catholic faith is being professed
publicly and vigorously, piety toward the Virgin Mother of God is flourishing
and daily growing more fervent, and that almost everywhere on earth it is showing indications
of a better and holier life.
Thus, while the Blessed Virgin is fulfilling in the most affectionate manner her maternal
duties on behalf of those redeemed by the blood of Christ, the minds and the hearts
of her children are being vigorously aroused to a more assiduous consideration of her prerogatives.
Actually, God, who from all eternity regards Mary with the most favorable and unique affection,
has, when the fullness of time came, put the plan of his providence into effect in such a way
that all the privileges and prerogatives he had granted to her in his sovereign generosity
were to shine forth in her in a kind of perfect harmony. And although the church has always
recognized this supreme generosity and the perfect harmony of graces, and has daily studied them more and
more throughout the course of the centuries, still it is our own age that the privilege of
the bodily assumption into heaven of Mary, the Virgin Mother of God, has certainly shown forth
more clearly. That privilege has shown forth in new radiance since our predecessor of immortal memory,
Pius IX, solemnly proclaimed the dogma of the living Mother of God's Immaculate Conception.
These two privileges are most closely bound to one another.
Christ overcame sin and death by His own death,
and one who through baptism has been born again in a supernatural way
has conquered sin and death through the same Christ. Yet, according to the general rule,
God does not will to grant to the just the full effect of the victory over death
until the end of time has come. And so it is that the bodies of even the just are corrupted after
death, and only on the last day will they be joined, each to its own glorious soul.
Now God has willed that the Blessed Virgin Mary should be exempted from this general rule.
She, by an entirely unique privilege, completely overcame sin by her immaculate conception,
and as a result, she was not subject to the law of remaining in the corruption of the grave,
and she did not have to wait until the end of time for the redemption of her body.
Thus, when it was solemnly proclaimed that Mary, the virgin mother of God,
was from the very beginning free from the taint of original sin,
the minds of the faithful were filled with a stronger hope that the day might soon come when
the dogma of the Virgin Mary's bodily assumption into heaven would also be defined by the church's
supreme teaching authority. Actually, it was seen that not only individual Catholics,
but also those who could speak for nations or ecclesiastical provinces,
and even a considerable number of the fathers of the Vatican Council,
urgently petitioned the Apostolic See to this effect.
During the course of time, such postulations and petitions did not decrease,
but rather grew continually
in number and in urgency. In this cause, there were pious crusades of prayer. Many outstanding
theologians eagerly and zealously carried out investigations on this subject, either privately
or in public ecclesiastical institutions and in other schools where the sacred disciplines are taught.
Marian Congresses, both national and international in scope,
have been held in many parts of the Catholic world.
These studies and investigations have brought out into even clearer light
the fact that the dogma of the Virgin Mary's assumption into heaven
is contained in the deposit of Christian faith entrusted to the Church.
They have resulted in many more petitions,
begging and urging the apostolic see that this truth be solemnly defined.
All right, that's all the time we have for you this week.
I hope you enjoyed that little snippet of the beautiful Apostolic Constitution.
As I said, you want to listen to the whole thing,
go to pineswithaquinas.com
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God bless you. Bye.