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(3) What kind of parts are they?
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(4) Of its division into subjective parts.
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_______________________
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FIRST ARTICLE [III, Q. 90, Art. 1]
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Whether Penance Should Be Assigned Any Parts?
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Objection 1: It would seem that parts should not be assigned to
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Penance. For it is the Divine power that works our salvation most
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secretly in the sacraments. Now the Divine power is one and simple.
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Therefore Penance, being a sacrament, should have no parts assigned
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to it.
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Objection 2: Further, Penance is both a virtue and a sacrament. Now no
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parts are assigned to it as a virtue, since virtue is a habit, which
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is a simple quality of the mind. In like manner, it seems that parts
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should not be assigned to Penance as a sacrament, because no parts
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are assigned to Baptism and the other sacraments. Therefore no parts
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at all should be assigned to Penance.
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Objection 3: Further, the matter of Penance is sin, as stated above (Q.
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84, A. 2). But no parts are assigned to sin. Neither, therefore,
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should parts be assigned to Penance.
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Contrary: The parts of a thing are those out of which the
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whole is composed. Now the perfection of Penance is composed of
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several things, viz. contrition, confession, and satisfaction.
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Therefore Penance has parts.
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Response: The parts of a thing are those into which the whole
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is divided materially, for the parts of a thing are to the whole,
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what matter is to the form; wherefore the parts are reckoned as a
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kind of material cause, and the whole as a kind of formal cause
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(Phys. ii). Accordingly wherever, on the part of matter, we find a
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kind of plurality, there we shall find a reason for assigning parts.
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Now it has been stated above (Q. 84, AA. 2, 3), that, in the
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sacrament of Penance, human actions stand as matter: and so, since
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several actions are requisite for the perfection of Penance, viz.,
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contrition, confession, and satisfaction, as we shall show further on
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(A. 2), it follows that the sacrament of Penance has parts.
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Reply Objection 1: Every sacrament is something simple by reason of the
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Divine power, which operates therein: but the Divine power is so
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great that it can operate both through one and through many, and by
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reason of these many, parts may be assigned to a particular sacrament.
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Reply Objection 2: Parts are not assigned to penance as a virtue: because
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the human acts of which there are several in penance, are related to
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the habit of virtue, not as its parts, but as its effects. It
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follows, therefore, that parts are assigned to Penance as a
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sacrament, to which the human acts are related as matter: whereas in
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the other sacraments the matter does not consist of human acts, but
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of some one external thing, either simple, as water or oil, or
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compound, as chrism, and so parts are not assigned to the other
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sacraments.
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Reply Objection 3: Sins are the remote matter of Penance, inasmuch, to
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wit, as they are the matter or object of the human acts, which are
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the proper matter of Penance as a sacrament.
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_______________________
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SECOND ARTICLE [III, Q. 90, Art. 2]
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Whether Contrition, Confession, and Satisfaction Are Fittingly
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Assigned As Parts of Penance?
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Objection 1: It would seem that contrition, confession, and
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satisfaction are not fittingly assigned as parts of Penance. For
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contrition is in the heart, and so belongs to interior penance; while
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confession consists of words, and satisfaction in deeds; so that the
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two latter belong to interior penance. Now interior penance is not a
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sacrament, but only exterior penance which is perceptible by the
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senses. Therefore these three parts are not fittingly assigned to the
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sacrament of Penance.
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Objection 2: Further, grace is conferred in the sacraments of the New Law,
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as stated above (Q. 62, AA. 1, 3). But no grace is conferred in
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satisfaction. Therefore satisfaction is not part of a sacrament.
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Objection 3: Further, the fruit of a thing is not the same as its part.
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But satisfaction is a fruit of penance, according to Luke 3:8: "Bring
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forth . . . fruits worthy of penance." Therefore it is not a part of
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Penance.
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Objection 4: Further, Penance is ordained against sin. But sin can be
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completed merely in the thought by consent, as stated in the Second
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Part (I-II, Q. 72, A. 7): therefore Penance can also. Therefore
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confession in word and satisfaction in deed should not be reckoned as
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parts of Penance.
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Contrary: It seems that yet more parts should be assigned to
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Penance. For not only is the body assigned as a part of man, as being
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the matter, but also the soul, which is his form. But the aforesaid
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three, being the acts of the penitent, stand as matter, while the
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priestly absolution stands as form. Therefore the priestly absolution
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should be assigned as a fourth part of Penance.
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