| Supernatural Gift |
| A supernatural gift may be defined as something conferred on nature that is |
| above all the powers (vires) of created nature. When God created man, He was |
| not content with bestowing upon him the essential endowments required by |
| man's nature. He raised him to a higher state, adding certain gifts to which his |
| nature had no claim. They comprise qualities and perfections, forces and |
| energies, dignities and rights, destination to final objects, of which the essential |
| constitution of man is not the principle; which are not required for the attainment |
| of the final perfection of the natural order of man; and which can only be |
| communicated by the free operation of God's goodness and power. Some of |
| these are absolutely supernatural, i.e. beyond the reach of all created nature |
| (even of the angels), and elevate the creature to a dignity and perfection natural |
| to God alone; others are only relatively supernatural (preternatural), i.e. above |
| human nature only and elevate human nature to that state of higher perfection |
| which is natural to the angels. The original state of man comprised both of these, |
| and when he fell he lost both. Christ has restored to us the absolutely |
| supernatural gifts, but the preternatural gifts He has not restored. |
| The absolutely supernatural gifts, which alone are the supernatural properly so |
| called, are summed up in the divine adoption of man to be the son and heir of |
| God. This expression, and the explanations given of it by the sacred writers, |
| make it evident that the sonship is something far more than a relation founded |
| upon the absence of sin; it is of a thoroughly intimate character, raising the |
| creature from its naturally humble estate, and making it the object of a peculiar |
| benevolence and complaisance on God's part, admitting it to filial love, and |
| enabling it to become God's heir, i.e. a partaker of God's own beatitude. "God |
| sent his Son . . . that he might redeem them who were under the law: that we |
| might receive the adoption of sons (ten ouiothesian). And because you are sons, |
| God hath sent the spirit of his son into your hearts, crying: Abba, Father. |
| Therefore now he is (Gr. text: thou art) not a servant, but a son. And if a son, an |
| heir also through God" (Gal., iv, 4-7) "Who hath blessed us with [all] spiritual |
| blessings in heavenly places, in Christ . . . Who hath predestinated unto the |
| adoption of children (ouiothesian) through Jesus Christ unto himself" (Ephesians |
| i, 3- 5). "Behold what manner of charity the Father hath bestowed upon us, that |
| we should be called, and should be the sons of God" (I John, iii, 1). Further, this |
| exalted estate is described as a communication or partnership with the |
| only-begotten Son of God, a participation in the privileges which are peculiar to |
| Hirn in opposition to mere creatures. "That they all may be one, as thou, Father |
| in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us. . . . And the glory which |
| thou hast given me, I have given to them; that they may be one, as we also are |
| one: l in thee; and thou in me; that they may be made perfect in one" (John, xvii, |
| 21-23). It is also styled fellowship (koinonia) "with the Father, and with his Son" |
| (1 John, i, 3), and "the communication (he koinonia) of the Holy Ghost" (II Cor., |
| xiii, 13). Divine adoption is a new birth of the soul (John, i, 12, 13, iii, 5; I John, iii, |
| 9; v, 1; I Pet., i, 3; and i, 23; James, i, 18; Titus, iii, 5, Eph., ii 5). This |
| regeneration implies the foundation of a higher state ot being and life, resulting |
| from a special Divine influence, and admitting us to the dignity of sons of God. |
| "For whom he foreknew, he also predestinated to be made conformable to the |
| image of his Son; that he might be the firstborn amongst many brethren" (Rom., |
| viii, 29). cf. also II Cor., iii, 18; Gal., iii, 26, 27; iv, 19, Rom., xiii, 14. As a |
| consequence of this Divine adoption and new birth we are made "partakers of the |
| divine nature" (theias koinonoi physeos, II Pet., i, 4). The whole context of this |
| passage and the passages already quoted show that this expression is to be |
| taken as literally as possible not, indeed, as a generation from the substance of |
| God, but as a communication of Divine life by the power of God, and a most |
| intimate indwelling of His substance in the creature. Hence, too, the inheritance |
| is not confined to natural goods. It embraces the possession and fruition of the |
| good which is the natural inheritance of the Son of God, viz., the beatific vision. |
| "We are now the sons of God; and it hath not yet appeared what we shall be. We |
| know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like to him because we shall see |
| him as he is" (I John, iii, 2). "We see now through a glass in a dark manner; but |
| then [in the beatific vision] face to face" (I Cor., xiii, 12). The Fathers have not |
| hesitated to call supernatural union of the creature with God the deification of the |
| creature. This is a favorite expression of St. Irenæus ("Adv. Haer.", III, xvii, xix; |
| IV, xx, etc.), and is frequently used by St. Athanasius (see Newman, "St. |
| Athanasius", II, 88). See also St. Augustine (? Serm. cxci, "In Nat. Dom."), |
| quoted by St. Thomas (III:1:3). |
| In order to live worthy of our Divine dignity and to attain our Divine end, we stand |
| in need of supernatural aid. This supernatural aid to a supernatural end is called |
| grace (q.v.). For our present purpose it will be sufficient to note that grace is |
| either habitual (i.e. sanctitying, making us pleasing to God) or actual (i.e. |
| enabling us to produce works deserving of salvation). There are other aids |
| sometimes bestowed less for our own benefit than for the benefit of others. These |
| are called gratiae gratis datae (charismata). They do not directly and immediately |
| help to the attainment of our end, but assist as it were from without. The |
| theological virtues and the moral virtues are graces properly so called. So. too, |
| are the gifts of the Holy Ghost (see HOLY GHOST). |
| It may be well here to say a few words on the preternatural (relatively |
| supernatural) gifts bestowed on our first parents, which are sometimes confused |
| with the supernatural gifts properly so called. In the beginning God exempted |
| man from the inherent weakness of his nature, i.e. the infirmities of the flesh and |
| the consequent infirmities of the spirit. He made man immortal, impassible, free |
| from concupiscence and ignorance, sinless, and lord of the earth. These |
| privileges are beyond man's nature, but not beyond that of some higher creature |
| (e.g. the angels); hence they are preternatural (praeter naturam). The Fathers |
| look upon them as a glorification of nature, applying the words of Ps. viii, 5-9. In |
| point of fact these gifts were not conferred apart from the supernatural gifts; a |
| preternatural state is, however, conceivable, and the separability of the two sets |
| of gifts is clear from our now possessing the supernatural without the |
| preternatural gifts. "Although distinct and separable, unite into one harmonious |
| and organic whole. The Fathers look upon this union in the original state of man |
| as an anticipation of his state of final beatitude in the vision of God, so that grace |
| bears to integrity the same relation which the future glory of the soul bears to the |
| future glory of the body. Integrity and grace, when combined, elevate man to the |
| most perfect likeness with God attainable in this life; they dispose and prepare |
| him for the still more complete likeness of eternal life". |
| T. B. Scannell |
| Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VI |
| Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company |
| Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight |
| Nihil Obstat, September 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor |
| Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia: NewAdvent.org |