SANTA PAULA, CALIF On Friday, January 28, 2005, 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ Aquinas College hosted a lecture by Rev. Romanus Cessario, O.P., on Aquinas on New Law Sacrifice as part of the colleges traditional celebration of the feast day of its patron saint. On the vigil of the feast day, the colleges faculty enjoyed a private dinner with Fr. Cessario, and on the holiday itself, students were free from classes; they instead attended the lecture, a votive Mass in honor of St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ, and a formal dinner.
Noting that Fr. Cessario is a lecturer much in demand throughout the United States and Europe as well as in Australia, the Bahamas, and at the Vatican, college president Dr. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ Dillon said, We are indeed grateful and honored that this great disciple of the Angelic Doctor made the long trek from Massachusetts to our campus to celebrate the feast of St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ with us.
Dr. Michael McLean, dean of the college, later remarked that Fr. Cessario gave an excellent lecture explaining the sacrificial nature of the Mass as a re-presentation of Our Lords sacrifice on Calvary. He stressed the necessity of the Mass for the forgiveness of sins, the important differences between sacrifice and gift, and the contribution of St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ Aquinas to the Churchs teaching on these matters.
Popes throughout the centuries have exhorted theologians and philosophers alike to study the writings of St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ. In his encyclical, Aeterni Patris, Pope St. Leo XIII declared him the prince and master of all Scholastic doctors and designated him patron of all Catholic academic institutions throughout the world. Pope John Paul II refers to St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ as the guide and model for theological studies. The updated Code of Canon Law, written in 1983, urges seminarians to study theology with St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ in particular as their teacher. (Can. 252 Β§3)
Today, 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ Aquinas College is at the forefront of American academic institutions that keep the rich theological tradition of St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ alive. Indeed, the College was founded on the primacy of his thought, and the faculty, themselves disciples of the Angelic Doctor, nurtures the intellectual formation of the students under the guidance of the teaching Church.
During the Q & A session that followed the St. 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ Day lecture, students asked Fr. Cessario to elaborate on topics such as how the Mass is the same sacrifice as Christs sacrifice on Calvary, and the nature of the relationship between sacrifice and communion.
Fr. Cessario, who holds advanced degrees in philosophy from St. Stephens College in Massachusetts, the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C., and the UniversitΓ© de Fribourg in Switzerland, is highly esteemed as a theologian in academic circles throughout the world.
Currently he is professor of systematic theology at St. Johns Seminary School of Theology in Massachusetts and visiting professor at the American and Australian campuses of the John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family. Fr. Cessario is also associate editor of The Thomist, editor of Moral Philosophy and Moral Theology Series, and senior editor of Magnificat. A prolific writer, his contributions to academic journals are manifold; his most recently published book is John Capreolus: Treatise on the Virtues (CUA Press, 2001).