Notas del episodio
What happens when the Church forgets that truth has a body, wisdom has a name, and authority has a shape? In today’s readings, Ignatius warns the Smyrnaeans that denying Christ’s flesh is not a harmless mistake but a deadly error that severs believers from the Eucharist, the Church, and the hope of resurrection, insisting that unity with the bishop safeguards both doctrine and love (John 1:14; 1 Corinthians 10:16–17). Augustine then reflects on how Cicero’s Hortensius awakened his longing for wisdom, turning his ambitions away from vanity and toward God, yet leaving him restless because the name of Christ was absent—a reminder that wisdom without Christ cannot fully satisfy the soul (1 Corinthians 1:24). Aquinas helps us see why this matters philosophically by distinguishing essence from existence: created things do not explain their own ...