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81. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Michael Eades Newman’s Adaptation of Bacci’s The Life of St. Philip Neri
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This essay explores a relatively unknown and previously unstudied Newman work, The Life of St. Philip: Arranged for the Days of the Year, that he prepared for the use of his nascent English Oratorian community.
82. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
John R. Griffin Victorian Churches and Churchmen: Essays Presented to Vincent Alan McClelland
83. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Todd Ream Tales from Two Cities: The Evolving Identity of John Henry Newman’s The Idea of a University
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This essay describes not only the evolving identity of Newman’s The Idea of a University, but also the way in which this process points to a larger tension between what Augustine referred to as the City of God and the city of this world.While no other work is perhaps more quoted than Newman’s Idea in relation to theoretical conceptions of university life, the origins of this work are often little understood. As a result, Newman’s Idea frequently goes from being a work whose identity is derived from the City of God to being a book whose identity is derived from various manifestations of the city of this world.
84. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Drew Morgan John Henry Newman—Doctor of Conscience: Doctor of the Church?
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Should Newman be designated a “Doctor of the Church”? This essay responds first by considering the history and meaning of the title “Doctor of the Church,” and then by examining the recent Norms and Criteria proposed by the Vatican Congregation for designating Doctrine of the Church
85. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Marty Miller Maddox Newman: Certain Knowledge and “The Problem of the Criterion”
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This essay examines Newman’s approach to the age-old skeptical “problem of the criterion” in his An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent. By examining Newman’s accent on the illative sense as right judgment in rationation, especially in the justification of first principles of knowledge, this essay depicts Newman as offering a proceduralist approach to answering “the problem of the criterion.”
86. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Daniel Callam Newman’s Sense of the Real
87. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Announcements
88. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Newman Chronology
89. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 1
Newman Bibliography
90. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
John Wayne Love Lessons In Virtue: Nineteenth-Century Lectures And Sermons To English And American Medical Students And Physicians
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This article surveys the themes of six nineteenth-century Christian leaders—Frederick Denison Maurice, LaRue Thompson, William Bacon Stevens, John Henry Newman, Flodoardo Howard, and Henry Parry Liddon—in their preaching to medical students and physicians. Usually delivered at the behest of the medical students and medical schools, these sermons to the medical community clearly illustrate the impact of religious thought on medical training in Western Europe and the United States, shed important light on the historical dialogue between the worlds of science and religion, and offer an eloquent apologia of why virtue and ethics are important in medicine.
91. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Damon McGraw Prayer in Newman
92. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
John T. Ford John Henry Newman: The Relationship Between Theology And Science
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This essay examines Newman’s Dublin lecture on the relationship between Theology and Science—their inevitable intersections and their circumstantial collisions. What lessons can be learned from Newman’s “view” of Theology and Science in considering the confrontations between Theology and Science in the twenty-first century?
93. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
T. L. Holtzen Newman’s Via Media Theology of Justification
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This essay argues that Newman’s theology of justification is a true via media between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism because of its Trinitarian character. While conceding that Newman misunderstood Luther’s theology of justification, this essay explores Newman’s theology of justification through Christ’s divine indwelling in the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the formal cause of the soul’s justice, because through the Spirit, both Christ’s alien righteousness and an actual inherent righteousness are brought to the soul.Accordingly, justification is a Trinitarian action of “the two hands of God.”
94. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Walter E. Conn Newman Versus Subjectivism: The Context Of Liberalism, Evangelicalism, And Rationalism
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As a way of overcoming the conflict between the Apologia’s focus on Liberalism and Frank Turner’s recent insistence that the real Tractarian target was Evangelicalism, this essay proposes that Newman’s fundamental opponent was subjectivism.
95. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Keith Andrew Massey Vergilian Allusions In Newman’s “Kindly Light”
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What is the literary antecedent to Newman’s famous “Lead, Kindly Light”? This essay proposes that Newman’s phrase—“Kindly Light”— is an allusion to a specific passage of Vergil’s Aeneid. Understood in this light, Newman’s poem is a prologue to the epic journey Newman began as he returned to England to commence the Oxford Movement.
96. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Gary B. Selin “The Danger of Accomplishments”
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Newman’s Anglican sermon—“The Danger of Accomplishments”— warned his Oxford audience of the dangers both of higher education and of a life of luxury. Yet how can this sermon’s rejection of flowery literature that entertains and arouses pleasant feelings in its readers be reconciled with Newman’s later advocacy in his The Idea of a University that classical literature is an important aspect of a liberal education?
97. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Todd C. Ream, Brian C. Clark Progressive Illumination: A Journey with John Henry Cardinal Newman, 1980–2005
98. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
John T. Ford Benedict XVI and Cardinal Newman
99. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Kevin Mongrain Newman On Theology And Contemplative Receptivity In The Liberal Arts
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This essay—a revised version of a presentation at the Twelfth Annual Conference of the Association for Core Texts and Courses (8 April 2006)—examines the role of theology in liberal education as both a restraint on sophisticated ideologies and as an avenue towards contemplative receptivity.
100. Newman Studies Journal: Volume > 4 > Issue: 2
Newman Bibliography and General Resources