Review of: Schwanke, Johannes: John Henry Newmans Konversion (original) (raw)
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One of the Church’s responses to the struggles for its own standing and future amidst the changes of the nineteenth century in England was to address the issues of text and translation of the Scriptures. All church affiliations had constituencies pushing for change in the versions available to the English‐speaking society. In 1870, the Convocation of the Province of Canterbury in the Church of England resolved to revise the translation of the King James Version. It was resolved that the body charged with this task “shall be at liberty to invite the co‐operation of any eminent for scholarship, to whatever nation or religious body they may belong.” Arthur Stanley, Dean of Westminster Abbey, determined that leading scholars of all denominations in England should be invited. One in particular, John Henry Newman, declined, claiming that because he had never employed himself “on a critical study of the sacred text” he felt himself “unfit to take part in labours, to which such a study is a necessary preliminary”. In fact, Newman had received two previous invitations to revise a translation of the English Bible (the Rheims‐Douay version) and had engaged the task with considerable enthusiasm. This essay explores the various pressures that came to bear on Newman related to the three invitations to the revision of the Bible’s translation, the developing understanding of translation, inspiration and ecclesiology that impacted on the work, and why no contribution from Newman survives.
A Guide to John Henry Newman: His Life and Thought ed. by Juan R. Vélez (Review)
The Catholic Historical Review, 2023
In his latest work, A Guide to John Henry Newman, editor Vélez has brought together in this collection of essays not only the work of Catholic theologians, but also of professors of literature, historians, philosophers, and classicists to discuss the rich corpus of Newman’s thought. Each author shares valuable contributions that examine Newman’s approach to such fields as theology, faith and reason, sermons and preaching, morality and spirituality, and even poetry. These essays blend perspectives from bishops, priests, and laymen and women, as well as Protestant converts to Catholicism, in an attempt to provide a comprehensive picture of who Newman was and why he remains influential in the Catholic intellectual tradition.
The Philosophical Legacy of John Henry Newman: A Neglected Chapter in Newman Research
John Henry Newman is widely acknowledged to be an impor- tant theologian. However Newman commentators suggest that his work has received little recognition by philosophers. The general consensus has been that until the latter part of the twentieth cen- tury Newman has been an isolated philosophical figure. This essay offers an historical re-evaluation of Newman’s philosophical recep- tion in order to explore whether or not his significance has been underestimated. The historical method is used in the analysis and assessment of this question. The study therefore probes the general philosophical reaction to Newman’s work in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. In doing so the essay offers an historical investiga- tion and re-evaluation of the claims of Newman having a negligible philosophical legacy. DOI:10.1111/nbfr.12231
An Evangelical Adrift: The Making of John Henry Newman's Theology
An Evangelical Adrift: The Making of John Henry Newman's Theology, 2022
As a teaser for my forthcoming book on Newman, Catholic University of America Press is letting me share its Introduction. An Evangelical Adrift: The Making of John Henry Newman's Theology is a unique theological biography detailing the radical transformation of Newman's theology between his adolescent conversion in 1816 and the beginning of the Tractarian Movement in 1833.