Really bad, a book that contradicts itself. The whole problem of the book is that the author says, following Mr. Luther, that reason is the enemy of faith, he then goes on to attack St. Thomas, he says in the book that Thomas would teach that human reason is not fallen, which is false, he makes it very clear that he is very ignorant in the subjects he discusses. Further in the same book he goes into discussing the contemporary times, how the artists portray the universe as something chaotic and of the result of chance, and that this cannot be the world we live in. I agree with mr. Schaeffer in this second part, the only problem is that he is using reason to arrive at his conclusion, but isn’t reason the “whore of the devil”? That is what Mr. Luther would say.
According to St. Thomas, people would only believe absurdities like that if they are not using their mind well, for our intellect has an end which is truth. But he would not say that we can have supernatural faith without the aid of grace, nor would he say that faith is rational, he would actually say that it is above reason, but it cannot contradict reason. Right reason can teach us how to behave, can bring us to truth, beauty, and goodness, but many times we are not using our reason rightly because of our fallenness.
Thomas Neill sums up Luther’s attitude towards philosophy.
“There have been many persons - many, like Luther, with doctor’s degrees-who were happily nonrational. But there are few, indeed, who have made as vicious an attack on reason as [Luther]. All philosophers were anathema to him. He calls Aristotle an “urchin who must be put in the pis-sty or donkey’s stable”; the Sorbonne is “that mother of all errors”; the theologians of Louvain are ‘coarse donkeys, cursed sows, bellies of blasphemers, epicurean swine, heretics and idolators, putrid puddles, the cursed broth of hell.’ Not only philosophers, but philosophy itself is viciously attacked by Luther. In 1536 he wrote:’I shall have to chop off the head of philosophy’. Again: ‘One should learn philosophy only as one learns witchcraft, that is to destroy it.’ Luther carries his assault to reason itself by attacking man’s very mind. ‘Reason,’ he wrote, ‘is contrary to faith... In believers it should be killed and buried.’ It ‘is the devil’s handmaid and does nothing but blaspheme and dishonor all that God says or does.’
And of course Mr. Luther attacked thomism like Schaeffer:
“The opinions of the Thomists, even though approved by Pope or Council, remain opinions and do not become articles of faith, though an angel from heaven should say the contrary.”
Fr. Paul Robinson concludes therefore:
“Occam drove a wedge between natural and supernatural, between reason and faith; Luther cuts them off completely. For Occam, it is impossible to make faith and reason agree, but that’s no reason to throw out one or the other. No, we will keep both, and be uncertain about both. Luther will not have any of this. For him, there is only one truth, that of faith. For him, like Occam, faith and reason cannot get along. Instead of trying to give them their territories, so as to allow them both to exist, he tosses reason overboard. The Occamist spirit contributed to Luther’s own system of thought. For Luther had a certain rational system at the heart of his worldview, even while proclaiming irrationality to the world with his entertaining and zoological vituperation. Occamism lent quite a contribution to the formation of this worldview. Firstly, Luther imbibed the Occamist questioning and critical attitude, by which one subjects everything to one’s judgement. Even in his Commentary on Romans, written before his break with the Catholic Church. Thus, Luther did not see dogmas in terms of degrees of certitude, where one Church decision is infallible, another holds great weight, while another is mere opinion. For him, everything was in the realm of opinion; there were no fixed truths.“
A Catholic submits his beliefs to the judgment of the Church’s infallible teaching authority- the Magisterium. A Catholic will submit to the Magisterium even when, if left to his own judgement, he would choose otherwise. Very difficult personal circumstances, the pressures of society, and popular opinion may tempt a Catholic to follow a course of action condemned by the Magisterium - contraception, abortion, divorce- but a true Catholic will submit to the authority of the Church no matter how difficult this may be. A rationalist will not submit to any authority exterior to his own reason. A rationalist makes his own reason the arbiter of what he will or will not believe, for how he will or will not behave. Protestantism is the direct link between the renaissance humanism and nineteenth century rationalism. The sixteenth century Protestants, in final analysis are rationalists. They would deny this in that they would submit to the authority of the Bible. But if pressed they would admit that it is their own interpretation of the Bible using their reason. Luther did exactly this, he substituted the interpretation of the Church for his own, but was furious if other Protestants had the temerity to differ from his own theories. He saw nothing incongruous in expecting others to treat his opinion as infallible when he repudiated the infallible authority of the Church. The history of Protestantism has been one of fragmentation from it’s very inception.