Aquinas College Podcast

Informações:

Synopsis

Aquinas College, a Catholic liberal arts college in Nashville, TN, owned and operated by the "Nashville Dominicans." This podcast includes audio from various events associated with the College, from Center for Faith and Culture lectures to radio interviews.

Episodes

  • Seminar - Person, Nature, and Human Flourishing Session 4 Created In Imago Dei

    17/02/2020 Duration: 29min

    Seminar, "Person, Nature, and Human Flourishing" Part 4 of 10. This session was originally given February 17, 2020 at Aquinas College in Nashville. What is a human person? Do we have a common human nature? Are there principles of life common to all members of the human race? How do we interact with each other, with society, and the world? What does it mean to “flourish” – and can that really happen in today’s culture? In ten sessions using Aristotle, Aquinas, Sacred Scripture, and other texts of the Church, Sister Mary Diana Dreger, O.P., M.D. explores these questions and more using a Christian view of the human person, family, society, culture, and the world.

  • Seminar - Person, Nature, and Human Flourishing Session 3 Human Nature

    14/02/2020 Duration: 31min

    Seminar, "Person, Nature, and Human Flourishing" Part 3 of 10. This session was given February 10, 2020 at Aquinas College. What is a human person? Do we have a common human nature? Are there principles of life common to all members of the human race? How do we interact with each other, with society, and the world? What does it mean to “flourish” – and can that really happen in today’s culture? In ten sessions using Aristotle, Aquinas, Sacred Scripture, and other texts of the Church, Sister Mary Diana Dreger, O.P., M.D. explores these questions and more using a Christian view of the human person, family, society, culture, and the world. The seminar was given at Aquinas College in Nashville, Spring 2020.

  • Seminar - Person, Nature, and Human Flourishing Session 2 The Human Person

    13/02/2020 Duration: 31min

    Seminar - Person, Nature, and Human Flourishing Session 2 The Human Person by Aquinas College Nashville

  • St. Thomas Aquinas on the Blessed Mother | Fr. Thomas Petri, OP

    11/02/2020 Duration: 57min

    Fr. Thomas Petri, OP presents “St. Thomas Aquinas on the Blessed Mother: Her Genius, Her Beauty, Her Freedom, and Her Love.” The lecture was given January 28, 2020 at St. Cecilia Motherhouse, Nashville, Tennessee, part of a week-long celebration of the Angelic Doctor, St. Thomas Aquinas at Aquinas College. Fr. Petri entered the Order of Preachers in 2004 and was ordained a priest in 2009. He holds a Doctorate in Sacred Theology from The Catholic University of America and has been a professor of Moral Theology and the Dean of the Pontifical Faculty at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C. since 2013. Prior to his appointment in Washington, he was a professor of theology at Providence College in Rhode Island. He has published articles in Nova et Vetera and in The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly. He is also a frequent contributor to The Catholic News Agency and The National Catholic Register. His book, Aquinas and the Theology of the Body: The Thomistic Foundations of John Paul II’s Anthropol

  • Homily for the Mass of St. Thomas Aquinas | Fr. Thomas Petri, OP

    09/02/2020 Duration: 15min

    Fr. Thomas Petri, OP preaches the homily for the Mass of St. Thomas Aquinas at Aquinas College, Nashville, January 28, 2020. Fr. Petri reflects on the personal devotion of St. Thomas Aquinas, the role of the prayers of the saints for us, and the widespread devotion to St. Thomas Aquinas as patron of students, teachers, and among other things, booksellers and pencil makers. Fr. Petri entered the Order of Preachers in 2004 and was ordained a priest in 2009. He holds a Doctorate in Sacred Theology from The Catholic University of America and has been a professor of Moral Theology and the Dean of the Pontifical Faculty at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C. since 2013. Prior to his appointment in Washington, he was a professor of theology at Providence College in Rhode Island. He has published articles in Nova et Vetera and in The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly. He is also a frequent contributor to The Catholic News Agency and The National Catholic Register. His book, Aquinas and the Theolog