Abbreviations
Part I
Chapter 1 ‘No One Thinks That Any More!’
Chapter 2 ‘It’s Not in the Bible!’
Chapter 3 ‘It’s Not in the Fathers!’
Chapter 4 ‘It’s Not Good Theology!’
Part II
Chapter 5 ‘But Jesus Had Faith!’
Chapter 6 ‘But Jesus Didn’t Know!’
Chapter 7 ‘But Jesus Was Free!’
Chapter 8 ‘But Jesus Suffered!’
Bibliography
Index
An exploration of the theory that Jesus Christ possessed the beatific vision during his earthly lifetime, engaging with and countering common arguments levelled against this.
Simon Francis Gaine is the Regent of Blackfriars Hall, Oxford, UK.
This is a highly academic text that is also very accessible. It
demands careful reading, meditating and re-reading.
*The Catholic Herald*
The most surprisingly enjoyable book I read this year ... [A]n
exhilarating theological exercise.
*A Book of the Year, The Tablet*
This book reflects Gaine’s deep grasp of Catholic thought and its
tradition of theological interpretation. Additionally, the
meticulous development of his argument means that students should
find Gaine’s work accessible while the layers of original thought
should keep even the most senior scholar engaged ... What Gaine has
accomplished here is truly a model of theological research.
*Theology Journal*
Gaine combines control over the scriptural, patristic, and
theological resources with a modesty that refuses to see his own
skill and thoroughness as exceptional … This is an example of
theology and apologetic practiced at the highest level.
*The Heythrop Journal*
[Gaine's] book is painstakingly thorough in its presentation of the
debate and its protagonists, and quietly measured in its analysis
of the different positions.
*New Blackfriars*
Notable for its rigor and clarity of presentation. Gaine’s
meticulous research…makes this volume an important contribution to
the field.
*Horizons: The Journal of the College Theology Society*
An impressively structured and lucid work … Simon Gaine tackles
each set of objections with an admirable level of detail, robust
argumentation, and critical rigour.
*Faith*
There is so much that is illuminating in Fr Simon's careful
unravelling of the problems … [A] profound and learned work.
*Sobornost*
This eye-opening book exemplifies how to do Catholic theology in
attunement with the development of doctrine, rooted in the
Scriptures as interpreted by the Fathers of the Church. Gaine's
exposition of Aquinas's theology of the beatific vision, in
response to the full range of contemporary objections (as well as
to a number of standard Thomistic interpretations), is serene and
masterful. This was a topic that I thought I knew, but Gaine
delivers fresh insights that prove deeply satisfying. Here is
contemporary Christology at its very best.
*Matthew Levering, Mundelein Seminary, USA*
In the Christian religion what people believed long ago usually
turns out to be much more revolutionary than what modern ideas
about things would allow us to think. Drawing on his deep knowledge
of Thomas Aquinas, his eminent predecessor in the Dominican order,
Gaine mounts the case for holding that, according to the doctrine
of the Incarnation, Jesus of Nazareth must have been blessed with
the vision of God throughout his earthly historical life - a
challenging claim, which could not be more persuasively expounded
than in this rigorously argued and very readable book.
*Fergus Kerr, University of Edinburgh, UK*
With magisterial breadth and conceptual rigor, Fr Simon Francis
Gaine OP deftly illuminates and brilliantly illuminates a thesis at
the heart of Thomas Aquinas' Chalcedonian Christology. Gaine's
beautifully written and lucidly argued work is one of the most
important Thomist contributions to contemporary Catholic
Christology in recent years. This timely book is essential reading
for those eager to rediscover and reclaim the surpassing scope and
teh saving truth of orthodox Christology. A welcome exercise of
Dogmatic and speculative theology at its best!
*Reinhard Huetter, Duke Divinity School, USA*
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