Abstract
The topic of the paper is the role of assensus, and consequently of divine
and human will, in Walter Chatton’s theory of prophecy (Reportatio super Sententias
I, dd. 39-41). Starting from the question “how God knows the future contingents?”,
the first step will be to consider Chatton’s analysis of Scotus’s voluntarism in the light
of the concept of divine assensus, meaning as a model for the prophet’s will and, more
generally, for the human wills. The paper will then focus on the role of assensus in the
act whereby which a truth is being revealed to the prophet; it is described as a sort of
“induced” assent, where the will is bypassed and so, paradoxically, “unwilling”. Finally,
the role of the will returns to be crucial on a third level, namely the viator’s assent
to the prophetic statements, where assensus makes freedom of will possible, consistent
with the divine foreknowledge, avoiding the danger of deterministic consequences.