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6 ssss1 Jasper Hopkins and Herbert Richardson, eds. and trans, Anselm of Canterbury Vol. 3 (Toronto and New York: Edwin Mellen Press 1976), 135. I am grateful to Daniel Deme for his good summary of Anselm’s position, which put simply is that “the man Jesus will never have ignorance with regard to his humanity. … [T]his man will be omniscient, even if he will not always manifest it in public.” See Daniel Deme, The Christology of Anselm of Canterbury (Aldershot, UK and Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing 2003), 158.

7 ssss1 Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae (hereafter ST), 3a.9.2.

8 ssss1 Aquinas, ST, 3a.9.3.

9 ssss1 Aquinas, ST, 3a.11.1.

10 ssss1 Aquinas, ST, 3a.9.4.

11 ssss1 Michael Gorman is helpful here. The perfections are in Christ insofar as it furthers the salvific mission. Therefore, Gorman points out when it comes to knowledge: “Christ’s human knowledge was as extensive as human knowledge could be: he had the beatific vision, full infused knowledge, and full acquired knowledge. Of his possession of the beatific vision, Aquinas notes that this enabled Christ to be, in virtue of his humanity, the source of truth for other humans. He also had a human will and the ability to perform authentically human actions.” See Michael Gorman, “Incarnation,” in Brian Davies and Eleonore Stump, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Aquinas (New York: Oxford University Press 2012), 430.

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