Part IV (Tertia Pars) Part 46 (2/2)
womb.” Nevertheless we do not for this reason say that he was sanctified in the womb. Neither therefore are we bound to say that Jeremias and John the Baptist were sanctified in the womb.
_On the contrary,_ It is written of Jeremias (Jer. 1:5): ”Before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee.” And of John the Baptist it is written (Luke 1:15): ”He shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb.”
_I answer that,_ Augustine (Ep. ad Dardan.) seems to speak dubiously of their (Jeremias' and John the Baptist's) sanctification in the womb. For the leaping of John in the womb ”might,” as he says, ”signify the great truth,” viz. that the woman was the mother of G.o.d, ”which was to be made known to his elders, though as yet unknown to the infant. Hence in the Gospel it is written, not that the infant in her womb believed, but that it 'leaped': and our eyes are witness that not only infants leap but also cattle. But this was unwonted because it was in the womb. And therefore, just as other miracles are wont to be done, this was done divinely, in the infant; not humanly by the infant. Perhaps also in this child the use of reason and will was so far accelerated that while yet in his mother's womb he was able to acknowledge, believe, and consent, whereas in other children we have to wait for these things till they grow older: this again I count as a miraculous result of the divine power.”
But since it is expressly said (of John) in the Gospel that ”he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb”; and of Jeremias, ”Before thou camest forth out of the womb, I sanctified thee”; it seems that we must needs a.s.sert that they were sanctified in the womb, although, while in the womb, they had not the use of reason (which is the point discussed by Augustine); just as neither do children enjoy the use of free will as soon as they are sanctified by baptism.
Nor are we to believe that any others, not mentioned by Scripture, were sanctified in the womb. For such privileges of grace, which are bestowed on some, outside the common law, are ordered for the salvation of others, according to 1 Cor. 12:7: ”The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man unto profit,” which would not result from the sanctification of anyone unless it were made known to the Church.
And although it is not possible to a.s.sign a reason for G.o.d's judgments, for instance, why He bestows such a grace on one and not on another, yet there seems to be a certain fittingness in both of these being sanctified in the womb, by their foreshadowing the sanctification which was to be effected through Christ. First, as to His Pa.s.sion, according to Heb. 13:12: ”Jesus, that He might sanctify the people by His own blood, suffered without the gate”: which Pa.s.sion Jeremias foretold openly by words and by symbols, and most clearly foreshadowed by his own sufferings. Secondly, as to His Baptism (1 Cor. 6:11): ”But you are washed, but you are sanctified”; to which Baptism John prepared men by his baptism.
Reply Obj. 1: The blessed Virgin, who was chosen by G.o.d to be His Mother, received a fuller grace of sanctification than John the Baptist and Jeremias, who were chosen to foreshadow in a special way the sanctification effected by Christ. A sign of this is that it was granted to the Blessed Virgin thenceforward never to sin either mortally or venially: whereas to the others who were thus sanctified it was granted thenceforward not to sin mortally, through the protection of G.o.d's grace.
Reply Obj. 2: In other respects these saints might be more closely united to Christ than Jeremias and John the Baptist. But the latter were most closely united to Him by clearly foreshadowing His sanctification, as explained above.
Reply Obj. 3: The mercy of which Job speaks is not the infused virtue; but a certain natural inclination to the act of that virtue.
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QUESTION 28
OF THE VIRGINITY OF THE MOTHER OF G.o.d (In Four Articles)
We now have to consider the virginity of the Mother of G.o.d; concerning which there are four points of inquiry:
(1) Whether she was a virgin in conceiving?
(2) Whether she was a virgin in His Birth?
(3) Whether she remained a virgin after His Birth?
(4) Whether she took a vow of virginity?
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FIRST ARTICLE [III, Q. 28, Art. 1]
Whether the Mother of G.o.d Was a Virgin in Conceiving Christ?
Objection 1: It would seem that the Mother of G.o.d was not a virgin in conceiving Christ. For no child having father and mother is conceived by a virgin mother. But Christ is said to have had not only a mother, but also a father, according to Luke 2:33: ”His father and mother were wondering at those things which were spoken concerning Him”: and further on (Luke 2:48) in the same chapter she says: ”Behold I and Thy father [Vulg.: 'Thy father and I'] have sought Thee sorrowing.”
Therefore Christ was not conceived of a virgin mother.
Obj. 2: Further (Matt. 1) it is proved that Christ was the Son of Abraham and David, through Joseph being descended from David. But this proof would have availed nothing if Joseph were not the father of Christ. Therefore it seems that Christ's Mother conceived Him of the seed of Joseph; and consequently that she was not a virgin in conceiving Him.
Obj. 3: Further, it is written (Gal. 4:4): ”G.o.d sent His Son, made of a woman.” But according to the customary mode of speaking, the term ”woman” applies to one who is known of a man. Therefore Christ was not conceived by a virgin mother.
Obj. 4: Further, things of the same species have the same mode of generation: since generation is specified by its terminus just as are other motions. But Christ belonged to the same species as other men, according to Phil. 2:7: ”Being made in the likeness of men, and in habit found as a man.” Since therefore other men are begotten of the mingling of male and female, it seems that Christ was begotten in the same manner; and that consequently He was not conceived of a virgin mother.
Obj. 5: Further, every natural form has its determinate matter, outside which it cannot be. But the matter of human form appears to be the s.e.m.e.n of male and female. If therefore Christ's body was not conceived of the s.e.m.e.n of male and female, it would not have been truly a human body; which cannot be a.s.serted. It seems therefore that He was not conceived of a virgin mother.
_On the contrary,_ It is written (Isa. 7:14): ”Behold a virgin shall conceive.”
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