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Description

From the architecture of creation to the ticking chambers of the human mind—and even the hidden chain of command among fallen spirits—today’s readings uncover divine (and distorted) order at every level: Irenaeus defends a universe woven directly by the Father and the Word, contrasts Eve’s disobedience with Mary’s “yes,” and urges flight from the splintered paths of heresy; Augustine listens to a hymn, discovers that neither note nor silence can be timed except by memory’s inner yardstick, and begs God to anchor him beyond the flux; Aquinas shows that demons, though stripped of grace, still keep the graded intellects God first bestowed, forming a perverse hierarchy that mirrors—yet corrupts—the angelic ranks (John 1:1-3; John 14:10; Genesis 3:15; Psalm 90:12; Matthew 12:24; Ephesians 6:12).

Readings:

Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 5, Chapters 18–20

Augustine, The Confessions, Book 11, Chapter 27 (Sections 35–36)

Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part 1, Question 109, Articles 1–2

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#Irenaeus #Confessions #SummaTheologica #Creation #Hierarchy #HistoricalTheology