Saint Jude Thaddeus, Apostle
1. LIFE
A.
Born in Paneas, Galilee (
Northern Israel )
B.
Father: biblical scholars
agree St. Jude was a son of Cleophas
C.
Mother: Mary ( kin of Mary
the mother of Jesus )
D.
Brother: St, James the Less
(Luke 6:16)
E.
Brethren of Jesus (Matthew
13:55; Mark 6:3)
F.
One of the twelve apostles
(matthew 10:2; Mark 3:16-18; Luke 6:16);
different from Judas Iscariot (John 14:22)
G.
Jude: “giver of joy”;
Thaddeus: “generous”, “kind”
H.
King Abagar of Edessa ( in
northern Mesopotamia, present-day Iraq) asked Jesus to cure him of leprosy and
sent an artist to bring him a drawing of Jesus; impressed with Abagar’s great
faith, Jesus pressed His face on a cloth, leaving the image of his face on it;
he gave the cloth to St. Jude, who ttok the image to Abagar and cured him;
hence the icon; the flame of the Holy Spirit represents his presence at the
Pentecost; the club represents his martyrdom.
I.
At the Last Supper, asked Jesus why he (Jesus)
intended to show himself to the Apostles and not to the world after his
resurrection. (John 14:22)
J.
Preached in Judae, Samaria,
Idumaea, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Armenia, Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq), and
Libya.
K.
According to the historian
Eusebius, he returned to Jerusalem in 62 A.D. to help brother St. Simeon be
elected as bishop of Jerusalem.
L.
Wrote a letter to Jewish
converts in Mesopotamia and Persia (present day- Iran) about perseverance in
the environment of harsh, difficult circumstances.
M.
He is believed to have been
martyred either in Armenia (used to be part of Persia, present day Iran) or
Beirut (in Lebanon); according to the historian Annanias, he suffered martyrdom
in 65 A.D. in Lebanon together with the apostle Simon the Zealot
N.
Patron of desperate
situations
O.
Feast day: October 28
2. TEACHINGS
A.
Exposed the heresies of the
Simonians, Nicolaites, and Gnotics
B.
Simonian heresy: buying
God’s favors ( Acts 8:9-24)
C.
Nicolaitans: from Ephesus
(In Greece), Perganes, and Asia Minor (Present day Turkey); believers in
unrestrained indulgence (Revelation 2:6-15)’
D.
Gnotics: Gk. Gnostikos,
“having knowledge”; adherents to ancient religions who shunned the material
world which the viewed as created by the demiurge, a deity subordinate to the
Supreme Being, controller of the material world, antagonistics to everything
spiritual.
3. THE EPISTLE OF SAINT JUDE
A. Written
before A.D. 70; otherwise in vv. 5-7 he would have spoken of the destruction of
Jerusalem.
B. Written
in Palestine, and probably in Jerusalem
C. Addressed
not to all the Christians of the whole Christian world, but those of a
particular Church (vv. 3,4,18,23) not to the Gentile Christians of Asia Minor
(present-day Turkey), but to the Hebrew Christians of Palestine (Present day
Israel) or of a neighboring country
D. Occasion:
the epistle was occasioned by the spread of the dogmatic-moral errors amongst
the Hebrew Christians; pseudo-doctors” are secretly entered in”, who abuse
Christian Liberty to give themselves over to sovereign ruler, and our Lord
Jesus Christ” (v.4)
E. Purpose:
Jude’s intention was to caution his readers, the Hebrew Christians, against
such depraved teaching of the Apostles.
F. Exordium
(introductory part): Address and good wishes
(vv.1-2), occasion and purpose of the epistle (vv.3-4)
G. First
part: he inveighs against the pseudo-teachers; describes their life and errors
(vv. 5-16); they will be severly punished, as is evident from the severe
punishment of the unbelieving Israelites in the Desert (v.5), of the wicked angels
(v.,6),and of the inhabitants of Sodom (v.7); he mentions their wicked teaching
and life (v.8), and opposes the modesty of Michael the Archangel (v.9) to their pride (v.10); he foretells for the
heretics the punishment of Cain, Balaam, and the Sons of Core, for they have
imitated their errors (vv.11-13); Enoch
has already prophesied the judgement of God upon them (vv.14-6)
H. Second
part: he exorts the faithful (vv.17-23); they must remember the teaching of the
Apostles, by whom they had been warned
of the coming of such heretics (vv.17-19); they must maintain the faith,
keep themselves in the love of God, and
wait for life everlasting (vv. 20-21); what their behaviour should be towards
Christians that have any way fallen away (vv.22-23)
I.
Epilouge: a most beautiful
doxology (24-25)
A. Man’s capacity for God
1. MAN’S NATURAL DESIRE FOR GOD
A. We
all desire for what we perceived as good
B. What
we perceive as good in this world is imperfect
C. We
naturally seek the source of all good, the Ultimate Good
D. “you
have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in
you.” (Saint Augustine)
E. “For
now we see only a reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face.
Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.”
(1Corinthians 13:12)
2. KNOWING GOD BY HUMAN REASON ALONE:
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD CAN BE PROVED IN FIVE WAYS (SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS)
A. The
first way: argument from motion
1.
Our senses prove that some
things are in motion
2.
Things move when potential
motion becomes actual
3.
Only an actual motion can
convert a potential motion into an actual motion
4.
Nothing can be at once in
both actuality and potentiality in the same respect (i.e., if both actual and
potential, it is actual in one respect and potential in another)
5.
Therefore nothing can move
itself
6.
Therefore each thing in
motion is moved by something else
7.
The sequence of motion
cannot extend ad infinitum
8.
Therefore it is necessary to
arrive at a first mover, put in motion by no other; and this everyone
understands to be God.
B. The
second way: argument from efficient causes
1.
We perceive a series of
efficient causes of things in the world
2.
Nothing exists prior to
itself
3.
Therefore nothing (in the
world of things we perceive) is the efficient
cause of itself)
4.
If a previous efficient
cause does not exist, neither does the thing that results
5.
Therefore it is the first
thing in a series does not exist, nothing in the series exists
6.
If the series of efficient
causes extends ad infitinum into the past, for then there would be no things
existing now.
7.
That is plainly false (i.e.,
there are thi8ngs existing now that came about through efficient causes)
8.
Therefore efficient causes
do not extend ad infintum in the past
9.
Therefore it is necessary to
admit sa first efficient cause, to which everyone gives the name of God.
C. the
third way: argument from possibility and necessity (reduction argument)
1.
we find oin nature things
that are possible to be and not to be, that come into being and go out of being
(i.e., contingent beings)
2.
assume that every being is a contingent being
3.
for each contingent being,
there is a time it does not exist
4.
Therefore it is impossible
for these always to exists
5.
Therefore there could have
been a time when no things existed
6.
Therefore at that time there
would have been nothing to bring the currently existing contingent beings into
existence
7.
Therefore, nothing would be
in existence now
8.
We have reached an absurd
result from assuming that every being is a contingent being
9.
Therefore not every being is
a contingent being
10.
Therefore some being
exists of its own necessity, and does not receive the existence from another
being, but rather causes them. This all men speak of as God.
D. The
fourth way: argument from gradation of being
1.
There is a gradation to be
found in things: some are better or worse than others
2.
Predications of degree
require reference to the “uttermost” case (e.g., a thing is said to be hotter
according as it more nearly resembles that which is hottest)
3.
The maximum in any genus is
the cause of all that genus
4.
Therefore there must also be
something which is to all beings that cause of their being, goodness, and every
other perfection; and this we call God.
E. The
fifth way: argument from design
1.
We see that natural bodies
work toward some goal, and do not do so by chance
2.
Most natural things lack
knowledge
3.
But as an arrow reaches its
target because it is directed by an
archer, what lacks intelligence achieves goals by being directed by something
intelligence
4.
Therefore some intelligent
being exists by whom all natural things are directed to their end; and this
being we call God.
3. THE LIMITS OF HUMAN REASON
A. On
our own, we are unable to enter into the intimacy of the divine mystery
B. We
stand in need of being enlightened by God’s revelation
C. Not
only about those things that exceed our understanding
D. But
also those religious and moral truths which of themselves are not beyond the
grasps of human reason
E. We
must continually purify our language insorfar as it is image-bound and
imperfect, realizing that we can never fully express the infinite mystery of
God.
B. God’s revelation of himself
1. THE LIVING TRADITION
A. The
transmission of the message of Christ, brought about from the very beginnings
of Christianity by means of preaching, bearing witness, institutions, worship,
and inspired writings.
B. The
apostles transmitted all they received from Christ and learned from the Holy
Spirit to their successors, the bishops, and through them, to all generations
until the end of the world.
C. The
task of giving an authentic
interpretation of the deposit of faith has been entrusted to the living
teaching office of the Church alone, that is, to the successor of Peter,
the bishop of Rome, and to the bishops
in communion with him.
D. “I
will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you loose on
earth will be loosed in heaven.” (Matthew 16:19)
E. “Therefore
go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey allthat I have
commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
(Matthew 28:19-20)
F. “God,
our Savior.. desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the
truth.” (1Timothy 2:3-4)
G. “How
then can they call on the One they have not believed in? And how can they
believe in One whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone
to preach? And how can they preach unless they are sent?” (Romans 10:14-15)
2. THE WRITTEN TRADITION
A. The Old Testament
1. Choronology
covers from about 2000 B.C. to 400 B.C
2. Setting
covers Mesopotamia in the northeast down to Egypt in the southeast
3. portion
written as early as 1000 B.C
4. written
by different authors from different places over different epochs
5. Jews
(including Jesus) refer to the first five books as “the Law” of Moses, and the
rest of the Old Testament as “the Prophets” (Matthew 5:17; 7:12; 22:37-40; Luke
16:31)
6. In
382 A.D., the Council of Rome recognized 46 books of the Old Testmament;
Protestants recognize only 39 since 1549
B. The New Testament
1. The
first four books (biographies of Jesus)
are Gospels
2. The
rest are epistles (letters) of the discpiles addressed to Christians
individuals and communities, except Revelation which is a prophecy
3. The
first book was written in 40 A.D. ( James), and last ( Revelation ) in 95 A.D.
4. The
whole Bible as we have it today was first compiled by Saint Jerome 400 A.D.
C. Our Faith as our response to
God’s revelation
1. Faith in God the Father
A. The
creed, also called the proffesion of faith, isd a
composite formula which the Church, from its very beginning, has set forth
synthetically and handed on its own faith in a language that is normative and a
common to all the faithful,
B. The
most ancient profession of faith is the baptismal creed, when baptism is
conferred “in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit”
(Matthew 28:19; 3:16-17; John 14:9, 16-17)
C. God
has revealed himself to the people of Israel as the only “one God” (Deutronomy
6:4) and that “there is no other” (Isaiah 45:22)
D. God
revealed himself as YHWH, “I am Who I am” (Exodus 3:6 14-15; John 8:56-58)
E. God
is He who exists in order for anything to exists at all no origin, no end; from
everlasting to everlasting
2. Faith in Jesus Christ
A. Jesus:
“God saves” (Matthew 1:21); God exaited him to the highest place and has given
him the name which is above every other
name that at that name of Jesus every knee should bow; and every tounge confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:9-11)
B. “there
is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved” (Acts
4:12)
C. The
eternal Son of God, the incarnation of wisdom, was sent into the world “to bear
witness to the Truth” (John 18:37); Messiah: “the Annointed One” (2Samuel
7:12-16; Luke 1:32-33); Greek “Chrestos”
D. God
in himself “is love” (1 John 4:8-16), and he “so loved the world that he gave
his only begotten Son so that the world might be saved through him” (John
3:16-17)
E. God’s
Trinitarian being is inaccessible to reason alone or even to Israel’s faith
before the incarnation of the Son of God and the sending of the Holy Spirit.
F. This
mystery was revealed by Jesus Christ and it is the source ofn all the other
mysteries
G. Jesus
Christ revealed to us that God is “Father” because he eternally generated in
his bosom the Son who is word (John 1:1-5),
“the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being ,
sustaining all things by his powerful word” (Hebrews 1:3)
H. Jesus
brought in a new covenant (Exodus 24:3-8); Jeremiah 31:31-32; Luke 21:20 ;
Hebrews 8:6-9; 9:15; 12:24)
I.
His sacrifice took over the
insufficient sacrifices of the Old Testament (Levitivus 4:7-35; John 1:29-31;
Hebrews 1-:1-10)
3. Faith in the Holy Spirit
A. The
Holy Spirit is the Third Person of the Triune God (2Corinthians 3:17-18; Acts
5:3-4; Matthew 28:19; 2Corinthians 13,14)
B. The
Holy Spirit speak through those whom he sent (Matthew 10:19-20; John 14:15-17,
26)
C. The
Church is empowered by the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:8,2:1-4)
D. The
Holy Spirit is “sent into our hearts” (John 14:16; Galatians 4:4-7; Romans 8:26-27; 1Corinthians
12:1-11)
E. The
Holy Spirit is received, not in the baptism of water, but through the laying-on of
hand (Acts 8:14-17; 19:1-6)
D. Loving God: whole heart,
soul, mind (Deutronomy 6:4-8; Matthew 4:10; 22:36-40)
1. The first commandment;
worshipin God alone (Exodus 20:2-3;
Deutronomy 5:6-7; Leviticus 19:4)
Deutronomy 5:6-7; Leviticus 19:4)
A. Exodus
20:4-6 and Deutronomy 5:8-10 are specifications of the first commandment
B. God
himself gave instructrions to make images (Exodus 25: 18-22 ; Numbers 21:8-9; 2Chronicles
2:4-5; 3:5. 10:16; 4:1-4,21, 5:7-8)
C. What
was probihited was the act of
worshipping images, not the act of making them
D. To
adore God as the Lord of Everything that
exists
E. To
render to him the individual and community worship which is his due
F. To
offer him sacrifices, above all the spiritual sacrifices of one’s own life,
united with the perfect sacrifice of Christ
2. The second commandment:
Honoring God’s name (Exodus 20:7; Deutronomy 5:11; Leviticus 19:12)
A.
To bless, praise and Glorify
God’s name
B.
No blasphemy, curse, unkept
vow (Matthew 5:34-37)
C.
The name of God, who is
truth Himself, must not be called upon us witness to a lie
3. The Third Commandment:
Keeping the Lord’s day Holy (Exodus
20:8; Deutronomy 5:12; Leviticus 19:30)
A. In
remembrance of God’s day of rest after
creation (Genesis 2:2) of Israel’s liberation from slavery in Egypt
(Exodus 12:14-19), and of the covenant God sealed with is people (Exodus
23:10-12; 31:12-18)
B. Sunday
worship:day after the Sabbath ; day of Christ’s resurrection (Matthew 28:1-6,
Mark 16:1-6; Luke 24:1-60; first day of the week (John 20:1-8)
C. The
Lord’s day; symbolic of new creation; first of all days and feasts
D. Refraining
from activities which impede the worship of God and disturb the joy proper of
the day of the Lord (Exodus 20:9-11)
E. Loving neighbors as oneself
(Leviticus 19:18; Mark 12:28-31; Matthew 22:36-40)
1. The fourth commandment:
honouring one’s parents (Deutronomy 5:16; Leviticus 19:3; Exodus 20:12)
A.
God instituted the family
and endowed it with its fundamental
constitutions
B.
God does not give existence
to an individual without a mother and a father
C.
Marriage and the family are
ordered to the good of the spouses and to the precreation and education of
children
D.
In Christ the family becomes
the domestic Church because it is a community of faith, of hope, and of charity
E.
The family is the original
cell of human society and is therefore, prior to any recognition by public
authority
F.
Family life is an invitation
into the life of society
G.
In paying parents respect,
children contribute to the growth in harmony and holiness in family life.
2. The fifth commandment:
respect for life (Exodus 20:13; 23:7; Leviticus 19:16-17; Matthew 5:21-22)
A. From
it’s beginning, human life involves the creative action of God and it’s remain
forever in a special relationship with the creator, who is its sole end
B. In
choosing to legitimately defend oneself
one is respecting the right to life (either one’s own right or that of another)
and not choosing to kill.
C. For
someone responsible for life of another, legitimate defense can be not only a
right but a grave duty, provided not only that disproportionate force is not
used
D. Forbidden:
direct and intentional murder, direct abortion and cooperation in it; direct
euthanasia, suicide
E. The
human ovum is a living cell and has a human DNA; the human sperm is a living
cell and has a human DNA; therefore human life is already present in an egg
cell and a sperm cell even before conception
F. Respect
for life entails care for one’s own health and that of others
3. The sixth and ninth
commandments: appropriate sexuality (Exodus 20:14; Deutronomy 5:18, 21, Matthew
5:27-28)
A. God
has created human beings as male and female, equal in personal dignity, and has
called them to a vocation of love and communion
B. Sexuality
becomes truly human when it is integrated in a correct way into the
relationship of one person to another
C. The
goods of conjugal, which is sanctified by the sacrament of matrimony, are
unity, fidelity, indisollubility, and an openness to the procreation of life
D. The
conjugal act, as ordered by the creator, is
both unitive and procreative (Genesis 1:27; 2:24; Mark 10:6-9)
E. One
is obliged to overcome carnal concupiscence in thought and desire
F. It
is forbidden to cultivate thoughts and desires
towards a person who is not one’s spouse
G. One
is obliged to look at others and behave toward them in conformity with the
dignity of persons and their communion.
4. The seventh and tenth
commandments: respect for the property of others (Exodus 20:15, 17: Leviticus
19:11,13; Deutronomy 5:19,21)
A. The
right to private property proceeds from the right to life
B. The
right to private property exists provided the property is acquired or received
in a just way and that the universal destination of goods for the satisfaction
of the basic needs of all takes precedence
C. The
purpose of private property is to guarantee freedom and dignity of individual
persons by helping them to meet the basic needs of those in their change and
also of others who are in need
D. One
is required with respect fo the goods of others through the practice of justice
and charity, temperance and solidarity.
E. One
is forbidden to take or use another’s property against the reasonable will of
the other
F. Access
to secure and honest employment must be open to all without unjust
discrimination and with respect for the economic initiative and fair
compensation
G. Poverty
in spirit; self-abandonment to divine
providence; preferring God to everything and everyone (Matthew 5:3; 6:25-34)
5.
The
Eight commandment: upholding the truth (Exodus 20:16; Leviticus 19:11,16;
Deutronomy 5:20)
A. Everyone,
endowed by God with intellect, has the duty to seek the truth, to adhere to it,
and to order one’s whole life in accordance with its demand
B. The
eighth commandment forbids:
1.
False witness, perjury,
lying, harm intended by the perpetrator, suffered by the victim.
2.
Rash, judgement, slander,
defamation, calumny: diminishing or destroying the good reputation and honor to
which every person has a right
3.
Flattery, adulation,
complaisance: directed to serious sins or toward the achievement of unlawful
advantages.
C. Respect
for the truth accompanied by the discretion of charity in the field of
communication and the imparting of information
D. Information
provided by the media must be true, complete, and at the service of the common
good.
E. Sacred
art (e.g., painting, sculpture, music) must be expressions of truth, evoking,
ang glorifying the mystery of God made visible in Christ, and lead to the
adoration and love of God.
F. Life in Christ
1. The
dignity of the human person
A.
We are created in the image
and likeness of God (Genesis 1:26), i.e., with intellect and will (capacity to
think and decide)
B.
We are called to eternal
happiness (John 10:10, 2Peter 1:3-4)
C.
The freedom to choose tells
us apart from the rest of the animal kingdom; the more we choose good, the more
we became free; the more we choose evil, the more we are enslaved to sin
D.
The exercise of freedom is
inseparable from our dignity as human persons
E.
Christ’s sacrifice brought
about freedom from the slavery of sin
F.
God put into our hearts
conscience which enjoins us to do good and to avoid evil.
G.
The dignity of the human
person requires uprightness of a moral conscience.
H.
A virtue is a habitual and a
firm disposition to do good.
I.
There are three theological
virtues: Faith, Hope, and charity (1Corinthians 13:13)
J.
Faith “is the substance of
all the things hoped for, the evidence of things that appear not” Hebrews 11:1;
by hope we await God’s promise of eternal life (1Timothy 4:9-10; Ephesians
1:11-12, Romans 5:1-5); by charity we love God above all things and our
neighbours as ourselves.
2. The human community
A.
Love of neighbour is
inseparable from love of God (1John 4:20-21); the human person has a communal
dimension as an essential component of his nature and vocation
B.
The human person is and
ought to be the principle, the subject, and the end of all social institutions
C.
Principle of subsidiarity: a
community of a higher order should not assume the task belonging to a community
of a lower order and deprive it of its
authority
D.
Authentic human society
requires respect for justice, a just hierarchy of values, and the subordination
of material and instinctual dimensions to interior and spiritual ones.
E.
Authority is exercised
legitimately when it acts for the common good and employs morally licit means
to attain it.
F.
The common good: sum total
of those condition of social life, which allow people as groups and as
individuals to reach their proper
fulfilment
G.
The common good involves
respect for and promotion of the fundamental rights of a person, the
development of the spiritual and temporal goods of person and society, and the
peace and security of all.
3. God’s saving act through law
and grace
A.
Moral law: a work of divine
wisdom; prescribes the rule of conduct that lead to the promised beatitude;
forbids the ways that turn away from God.
B.
Participating in the wisdom
and goodness of God (by whom we were created in his image and likeness) natural
law is inscribed in our hearts (Deutronomy 30:11-16), enabling us to discern by
reason the good and the bad.
C.
The law of Gospel,
proclaimed and fulfilled by Christ, is the fullness and completion of divine
law, natural and revealed (Matthew 5:1-12)
D.
Justification is brought by
mans of the sanctifying grace of the Holy Spirit which has been merited for us
by the passion of Christ
E.
We of ourselves are not able
to merit anything: God gives us the possibility of acquiring merit through
Christ, who is the source of our merits before God.
F.
The fullness of Christian
life is te call to Christian holiness
G. Prayer in Christian life
1. The revelation of prayer
A.
Through creation, God first
calls every being from nothingness; we continue to be capable of recognizing
our Creator and retain a desire for him; it is God first who ceaselessly draws
us to encounter him in prayer
B.
Abraham serves as model in
walking in the presence of God, hearing
and obeying him even in times of trial (Genesis 12:1-3, 15:5, 17:5, 22:2)
C.
Moses lingered in personal
conversation with God. (Exodus 3:11, 4:1, 17:10-12, 32:1, 33:7-11)
D.
The prophets drew from
prayer the light and strength to exhort the people to faith and to conversion
of heart (1King 18:36-38; Isaiah 6:1-8; Jeremiah 1:4-10; Ezekiel 2:1-8; Daniel
6:10-22)
E.
Jesus drew apart to pray in
solitude, even at night (Matthew 14:23;
Mark 6:46; Luke 6:12)
F.
He prayed before the
decisive moments of his mission (Matthew 4:1, Luke 4:1-2; Mark 14:32; Matthew
26:42; John 17:1-5)
G.
He prays for us unceasingly
(Luke 5:16; 22:32, John 17:20, Hebrews 7:25; Romans 8:34)
2. The tradition of prayer
A.
In the Church is through
living tradition that the Holy Spirit teaches us how to pray (Romans 8:26)
B.
The Word of God is the
source of Christian prayer (Nehemiah 8:2-5)
C.
The Christian family is the
first place of education in prayer (Matthew 6:9-13; Luke 11:2-4)
3. Life in prayer
A. The
church proposes to the faithful certain
rhythms of praying intended to nourish continual prayer (Psalm 113:3; Malachi
1:11; 1Thessalonians 5:16-18)
B. Even
the most interior prayer cannot dispense with vocal prayer (Luke 18: 13-14)
C. Prayer
is a gift of grace but it always presupposes a determined response (Romans
12:12)
D. If
our prayer is united with that of Jesus, we know that he gives us much more
(1John 5:14-15; Matthew 18:19, 21:22, Mark 11:24; John 14:13)
Prayer and Christian life
are inseparable (Matthew 28:20; John 15:16; Acts 1
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento