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The next step in the Thomistic synthesis is to apply its fundamental
principles to the manner and nature of God's omniscience. The
essential points are.
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1. God's knowledge in general.
2. God's knowledge of the conditional future.
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Article 1: God's Knowledge In General [369]
Immateriality is the root of knowledge. The more immaterial a being
is, the more capable it is of knowing. Now God is altogether
immaterial, because He transcends the limits, not of matter merely,
but even of essence, since He is infinite in perfection. Hence He
is transcendently intelligent. [370] .
Hence God knows Himself, rather, comprehends Himself, since He
knows Himself as far as He is knowable, that is, infinitely.
[371] His intellect is not a faculty, distinct from its act and
from its object, since He is the self-subsistent act of
understanding. Nor does He have to form first an idea of Himself,
that is, form an interior accidental concept and word, because His
essence is not only actually intelligible, but is subsistent truth,
actually and eternally understood. [372] When revelation tells
us that God the Father expresses Himself in His Word, we are meant
to understand this as an expression of superabundance, not of
indigence. Besides, the divine Word is not, as in us, an
accident, but substance. Hence all elements of thought (thinking
subject, faculty of thought, actual thinking, idea, and object) are
all identified in God, who is pure act. And His actual thinking,
far from being an accident, is identified with His substance.
[373] God, says Aristotle, is understanding of
understanding, an unmixed intellectual splendor eternally
self-subsistent.
How does God know what He Himself is not, that is, realities that
are possible, realities that actually exist, and future events?
First of all, divine knowledge, cannot, like ours, depend on, be
measured by, created things. Such dependence, being passive, is
irreconcilable with the perfection of pure act. On the contrary,
nothing can be possible, existent, or future except in dependence on
essential existence, since it is clear that any conceivable existence
outside of the First Cause must necessarily carry with it a relation
of dependence on that First Cause. Things other than Himself, says
St. Thomas, are known by God not in themselves (by dependence on
them): but in Himself. [374] Whereas we, in order to know
God, must look up from below, from the sense world which mirrors
God, God, on the contrary, does not have to look down, but knows
us there on high, in Himself as mirror. By knowing His own creative
power God knows all that He could do if He willed, all that He is
doing now, all that He still will do, all that He would do did He
not have some higher purpose, all, lastly, that He permits for the
sake of a higher good. There is no need of neologisms, of new special
terms. The traditional terms of common usage suffice to express well
this omniscience of God. In Himself, the creative mirror, God
knows all things.
How does God know the possible world, that absolutely numberless and
truly infinite multitude of worlds which could exist but never will in
fact exist? The answer is: God knows them by knowing the omnipotence
of His creative power. [375] .
Further, by knowing what He willed to do in the past and what He
wills to do in the future and what He is actually doing now, God
knows all things, past, present, and future, all that creatures have
done, are doing now, and will do. And all this world of time,
past, present, and future, He knows not in general and confusedly,
but in particular and distinctly, since from Him, the First Cause,
comes all reality, even prime matter, which is the source of all
individual differences in the corporeal world. Hence even the minutest
particularity in creatures, since it is a reality, depends on God for
its existence, even when it gets that existence, not by creation, but
by God's concurrence with created causes. But this knowledge,
infinitely distinct and particularized, is still not discursive, but
intuitive, taking in with one instantaneous glance all that God does
or could do. [376] .
This divine knowledge is the cause of things, since it is united to
God's free will, which, among all possible things, chooses one
particular thing to exist rather than another. [377] God's
knowledge of possible things, since it presupposes no decree of the
divine will, is called simple intelligence. But His knowledge of
actual things, since it does presuppose such a decree, is called
"knowledge of approbation," approbation, not of evil, but of all
that is real and good in the created universe.
How then does God know evil? He knows it by its opposition to the
good wherein alone evil can exist. Hence God knows evil by knowing
what He permits, what He does not hinder. [378] No evil,
physical or moral, can come to be unless, for a higher good, God
permits it to be. Knowing what He permits, God knows by that
permission all evil that has been, is, or will ever be.
Article 2: God's Knowledge Of The Conditional Future
When God permits evil, what is His will regarding the good opposed
to that evil? That good cannot be willed efficaciously, otherwise it
would be. But it can be willed by God conditionally. Thus God
would wish to preserve the life of the gazelle, did He not will to
permit that death for the life of the lion. He would hinder
persecution, did He not judge good to permit it for the sanctification
of the just and the glory of the martyrs; He would will the salvation
of the sinner, Judas, for example, did He not permit his loss as
manifestation of divine justice.
Starting from this point, we understand how God knows the conditional
future. [379] God knows all that He would will to be
realized, all that He would bring to pass, did He not renounce it
for a higher end. Hence God's knowledge of the conditioned future
presupposes a conditional decree of God's will. The futuribilia are
a medium between a merely possible future and a future really to be.
It would be a grave error to confound them with the merely possible.
This is the teaching of all Thomists, in opposition to the
Molinistic theory, that is, an intermediate knowledge (scientia
media): a knowledge, preceding any divine decree, of the conditional
future free acts of the creature. This theory, Thomists maintain,
leads to admitting in God's knowledge a passivity, dependent on
something in the created order. If God does not determine (by His
own decree): then He is determined (made to know) by something
else. This dilemma seems to Thomists to be insoluble.
As regards the knowledge of the contingent future, of what a free
creature, say, will be actually willing a hundred years from now,
God knows it not as future, but as present. For this knowledge is
not measured by time, does not have to wait until future becomes
present. It is measured, as God Himself is measured, by the
unchangeable now of eternity, which surrounds [380] and envelops
all other durations. Thus, to illustrate, the culminating point of a
pyramid is simultaneously present to all points of its base. An
observer, on the summit of a mountain, sees the entire army defiling
in the valley below. [381] .
Now it is evident that the event, in itself future, would not be
present even in eternity, had not God willed it (if it is good): or
permitted it (if it is evil). The conversion of St. Paul is
present in eternity only because God willed it, and the impenitence of
Judas only because God permitted it.
This knowledge too is intuitive, because it is the knowledge of what
God either wills to be or permits to be. God sees His own eternal
action, creative or permissive, though the effect of that action is in
time, coming into existence at the instant chosen for it by God from
eternity. His eternal permissions He sees in relation to that higher
good of which He alone is judge.
Our free and salutary acts God sees in His own eternal decision to
give us the grace to accomplish those acts. In Himself, in His own
creative light, He sees them freely done, under that grace which,
far from destroying our liberty, actualizes it, strongly and sweetly,
[382] so that we cooperate with that grace for His glory and our
own. This doctrine will become more explicit in the following
chapter, where we study God's will and love.
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