When the church orders its life under Christ, doctrine turns into a way of living. Hippolytus lays out election and ordination, the bishop’s first Eucharist, blessings for oil and simple foods, and how readers, widows, virgins, and deacons serve—prayerful, sober, and accountable. Augustine asks God to clear the mist from his eyes; only Scripture humbles his pride and draws him to confession. Aquinas begins the passions: our emotions live in the sensitive appetite, yet they can be trained by reason and grace to aid virtue rather than fight it (Psalm 8:2–3; Psalm 19:7; Romans 6:13).
Readings: Hippolytus, Apostolic Tradition, Part 1 — Prologue; Ordination of a Bishop; First Eucharist; Blessings (Oil, Cheese, Olives); Ordinations of Presbyter and Deacon; Confessors, Widows, Reader, Virgin, Subdeacon, Healers (LAT1; 2–6; 8–15)
Augustine, The Confessions, Book 13, Chapter 15 (Section 17)
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part 1–2, Question 22 (Of the Subject of the Soul’s Passions)
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