One major theme of Aquinas’s writing was hierarchy of order. The first is natural order and can be accessed to humans through physical senses and reason. However, beyond this order of basic reality is the order of nature. Beyond nature, there is another order of reality that is supernatural or the transcendent order. This order is not accessible to humans through our own powers. Another theme of Aquinas is that it’s impossible for humans to understand the supernatural order if God did not travel to us the meaning and existence. Without the power of grace God has granted, it will be difficult for our human minds to understand something that transcends our knowledge. On his third theme, Aquinas illustrates the supernatural order would transcend …show more content…
This is because God moves things according to nature and it is the nature of humans to have free will. Aquinas emphasis if a human does an evil action, it is the action the person alone and not the God. In other words, evil is through an individual’s action and should be blamed on the individual instead of God. Aquinas’s sixth major theme is humans have sinned because humans do possess free will. This sinning will break the human’s relationship with God. Although there were many sins throughout history, the original sin Aquinas mainly refers to is the Adam and Eve. Aquinas demonstrates that if the first human had not sinned, God would not have become human. In Aquinas’s seventh major theme, he states that in the sacraments we come into contact with the passion and death of Jesus. The sacraments are the instruments God uses to cause grace in humans. Because it is Jesus who acts in the sacraments, they are effective whether the human minster is worthy or not. In Aquinas last major theme, he conveys that humans receive the greatest happiness when in heaven to see the face to face vision of God. In order to achieve this, the human mind must be transformed and elevated by God’s