Thomas Aquinas spent forty years building the most ambitious intellectual project in Western history, a single unified framework to explain God, creation, evil, the soul, and everything in between. Thousands of pages. Hundreds of arguments. A system so rigorous that the Catholic Church made it their official theology for seven centuries.
Then, on December 6th, 1273, he stopped writing. Mid-sentence. Mid-project. And when his secretary begged him to continue, he said: “Everything I have written seems like straw compared to what I have seen.”
Not incomplete. Not a rough draft. Straw.
In this episode of Theology Made, we trace what Aquinas was actually attempting and what it means that the most disciplined theological mind in history reached the edge of what reason could hold, and found that the edge wasn’t the end.
For anyone who has ever understood a great deal about God and still felt like something essential remained just out of reach.










