Entry 0364: Dating of the Texts in which Aquinas
Uses the Expression actus essendi
Aquinas uses the expression actus essendi in four passages in his Commentary
on the Sentences:
But Torrell makes clear
that “it was not this return to the subject in Rome
that came down to posterity, but the Paris
lectura” (Ibid., 47).
Text no. 1: In I Sententiarum, distinction 8, question 1, article 1, corpus.
Text no. 2: In I Sententiarum, distinction 8, question 4, article 2, ad 2.
Text no. 3: In I Sententiarum, distinction 8, question 5, article 2, corpus.
Text no. 4: In III Sententiarum, distinction 11, question 1, article 2, ad 2.
The Commentary on the Sentences seems to have been written
between 1252-1256, and the date of composition has been framed within the
following setting:
After some difficulties with his
blood family concerning his vocation to the Dominican Order, and “since his
resolve remained unbroken, he [Aquinas] was permitted to rejoin the Dominican
confreres and made his way to Paris
in 1245. At Paris he first came into contact
with Albert the Great during the period 1245-1248, and in 1248 he accompanied
Albert to Cologne
in order to continue his theological formation there. In 1252 he was sent back
to Paris to
begin working for the highest degree offered by the University there, that of
Magister in Theology, and pursued the rigorous academic program required for
this until 1256. Not least among his duties during this period was his
responsibility to comment on the Sentences
of Peter the Lombard, and this resulted in the eventual publication of his
first major theological writing, his Commentary on the Sentences” (John F. Wippel, The Metaphysical Thought of Thomas
Aquinas [Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2000],
xiii-xiv).
These comments are in agreement
with what Jean-Pierre Torrell wrote on this subject:
“Upon his arrival in Cologne, after Naples and Paris (and whatever may have been the details
about his years of study), Thomas already had seven or eight years of formation behind him, even without counting what he
learned on his own during the imprisonment by his family. Some scholars (De Groot, Berthier,
Pelster) even think that he was already a lecturer in theology and probably the
biblical bachelor for Albert (Scheeben, Eschmann). Weisheipl takes up this hypothesis and suggests
that Thomas taught cursorie on
Jeremiah, Lamentations, and a part of Isaiah at Cologne . … Weisheipl’s arguments are not without weight. On the one hand, he
reminds us that Thomas was sent to Paris to lecture on the Sentences, not the
Bible. Besides, he emphasizes that, if
he had begun by reading the Bible,
Thomas would have been an exception, since none of the masters who had
occupied the second Dominican chair up until then had begun their teaching as bachelors with a cursory reading
of the Bible. All had begun with the Sentences.
Furthermore, by the middle of the thirteenth century it
was no longer an absolute rule that the bachelor of the Sentences would earlier have been a biblical bachelor. Weisheipl’s suggestion is, therefore,
well founded and it has been well received by accomplished scholars” (Jean-Pierre
Torrell, Saint Thomas Aquinas: The Person
and His Work - Volume 1, trans. Robert Royal [Washington . D.C.: The Catholic
University of America Press, 2005], 27-28).
Torrell then adds:
“The
ampleness of this work [the Commentary on the Sentences] fits only with
difficulty into the chronological framework that assigns the two first years in
Paris to
biblical teaching and the next two to the Sentences.
But if we accept the solution
that naturally suggests itself from the sources, we may spread out the
composition of this immense, five-thousand-page commentary over a little more
than four academic years (though the
teaching, according to the
university statutes, had to be completed within two years). All this accords with Tocco, who makes the time of
composition spill over into the following period, not just the time of the ‘formed’
bachelor, but that of the master as well. [Footnote:] Ystoria 15, p. 236 (Tocco 14, p. 81): ‘Scripsit in baccellaria et principio sui magisterii super quatuor
libros Sententiarum.’ We may thus
understand Thomas’s achievement much better. He was far from thinking
his work definitive, however, and, from all appearances, he modified it, trying to improve it, when he took it
up again to deliver to his students at Santa Sabina almost a decade later”
(Ibid., 45).