Through the Church Fathers: April 30
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Summary
Athenagoras pulls back the curtain on pagan religion, arguing that what appears to be divine activity in idols is actually the work of fallen spiritual beings—demons who exploit human imagination, stir disorder, and draw people into false worship, creating the illusion that chance rules the world when, in reality, God’s providence orders all things; alongside this, Augustine turns inward and shows the existential weight of that confusion, wrestling deeply with the origin of evil—not as a detached question, but as a personal crisis that exposes how pride blinds the soul and drives it away from God, even while God quietly sustains and draws it back; and Aquinas brings clarity to the nature of the human person, distinguishing what is passed down through generation from what must come directly from God, affirming that while the body and its life are formed through natural processes, the rational soul is immediately created by God, preserving both human dignity and divine sovereignty over life itself.
Readings:
Athenagoras of Athens — A Plea for the Christians, Chapters 25–27 Augustine of Hippo — The Confessions, Book 7, Chapter 7 (Section 11) Thomas Aquinas — Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 118 (Articles 1–3 Combined)
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