ThePontifical Academy of Saint Thomas Aquinas (PAST;Latin:Pontificia Academia Sancti Thomae Aquinati) is apontifical academy established on 15 October 1879 byPope Leo XIII. The academy is one of the pontifical academies housed along with the academies of science atCasina Pio IV inVatican City, Rome.
The Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas was established on 15 October 1879 by Leo XIII, who approved its statutes with a brief of 9 May 1895.[1] Leo appointed his brother,Giuseppe Pecci (1879–1890) a prominentThomistic scholar, as first Prefect. The academy was founded with thirty members: ten from Rome, ten from the rest of Italy, and ten from other countries.[2] Through Pecci, PAST helped establishThomist programs atBologna,Fribourg (Switzerland),Paris, and Lowden.
Upon the death of Pecci in 1890,Tommaso Maria Zigliara, professor of theology at theCollegium Divi Thomae (the futurePontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas,Angelicum) became Prefect.The academy was confirmed byPope Pius X with hisapostolic letter of 23 January 1904. Under Pius X,neo-Thomism became the blueprint for theology.
Until 1965 the presidency of the PAST was held by a group of cardinals.Pope Paul VI appointed the first single cardinal as president, CardinalMichael Browne. After his death in 1971, the presidency remained vacant until the appointment of CardinalMario Luigi Ciappi in 1979. After his death in 1996,Pope John Paul II reformed the academy on 28 January 1999 with his apostolic letterInter munera Academiarium, issued shortly after hisencyclicalFides et ratio. The office of president would no longer be bestowed on a cardinal and its appointment would be for a five-year period. Abelardo Lobato, professor of philosophy at the College of Saint Thomas, the futurePontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas,Angelicum, served as president from 1999 to 2005.
With Pope Francis' reorganization of theRoman Curia as of 5 June 2022 as provided for in the apostolic constitutionPraedicate evangelium, the newDicastery for Culture and Education became responsible for coordinating the work of the academy with its own work and that of a number of other bodies.[3]
The academy was founded in 1879 by Pope Leo XIII to study and promote the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas in service to the Church and the world.[4]
The Pontifical Academy of Saint Thomas Aquinas is temporarily headquartered in theCasina Pio IV in theVatican City. Its objectives, as stated in the academy'sYearbook 2007, are the following:
The Academy meets annually in Rome. The scholars decided to adopt annual themes for their meetings to align with the interests and priorities expressed by the pope. In 2019 the theme was "salvation",[4] drawn from the letter "Placuit Deo" on aspects of Christian salvation.[6]
The current president of the PAST is Serge-Thomas Bonino.[7] The current secretary is BishopMarcelo Sánchez Sorondo.