Abstract
As I read the texts of Aquinas and the state of the discussion among his
interpreters on the question of the compatibility between creaturely freedom and divine providence, an alternative interpretation suggests itself. My impression is that traditional
interpreters left Aquinas’ account of the relationships among human freedom, providence
and divine goodness inadequately defended, while Maritain and Lonergan with fair
intention subverted it, because their readings were hampered by libertarian intuitions
about human freedom which Aquinas did not share.
Understanding Aquinas’ account of freedom in compatibilist terms reveals greater
coherence in his account of the nature of human freedom and the role our freedom plays
in the created order than do accounts infected with libertarian notions of freedom. Once
the compatibilist conception of freedom is comprehended, it functions like a lens of
superior clarity through which other aspects of Aquinas’ thought concerning the created
order can be seen afresh. Accordingly, our first task is to craft the lens itself: a
compatibilist conception of freedom will be ground from the material available in
Aquinas’ writing on the will, its acts, and their causes in a way unclouded by the apparent
tensions between causality and freedom which libertarian intuitions introduce. Then
grasping the compatibilist lens, we will see through it a coherent account of the high
purpose in the plan of providence for free creatures. Finally, we will observe coherence
in Aquinas’ account of the permission of sin and even the ultimate failure of free
creatures through the perspective afforded by compatibilist freedom.