St John Henry Newman: Dedicated
to the search for truth
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| The banner for the canonisation of St John Henry Newman (ANSA) |
Historian Donald Prudlo says the canonisation is a
definitive affirmation of what St John Henry Newman means for the Church.
By Christopher Wells
“John Henry Newman was a man who was dedicated to following
the truth wherever it might lead”, says Dr Donald Prudlo, who holds the Warren
Chair for Catholic Studies at the University of Tulsa. This included Newman’s
conversion from Anglicanism to Catholicism, which not only cost him his
position at Oxford University, but also damaged his reputation and led to the
loss of many friends.
Speaking with Vatican News prior to Newman’s canonisation on
Sunday, Prudlo said that the key for Newman, and the key to his conversion,
“was a search through the Fathers of the Church”. Newman “was a patristics
scholar, he was a classical scholar”, he said, “and as he deepened his
knowledge of the writings of the Fathers, as he looked into the early history
of the Church, he discerned that it was the Catholic Church that had preserved
all of these teachings, and that had taken them from their nascent stages in
the Bible and among the early and primitive Christian community, and had
developed them organically into the Christian faith that we receive today”.
Newman’s reflections on how Christian teaching developed
found fruition in his book “An Essay on the Development of Christian
Doctrine”, which he was writing at the time of his conversion; later, as a
Catholic, he would revise the work. Prudlo described the Essay as
one of the most important works in the post-Reformation period: “It is a
thorough analysis of the historical [and] contextual development of Christian
doctrines”. Newman, he explained, was very concerned to show how certain
doctrines present in seed form at the early Church matured [or] blossomed into
the fully formed doctrine and dogmas we have today”.
Prudlo said that Newman’s canonisation was “a final affirmation
of what Newman meant for the Church – not necessarily doctrinally, but as a
paragon of moral virtue; as a subject of veneration for the Christian people;
and an example for all of us, but particularly for those living the
intellectual life”. John Henry Newman, he said, in a singular way, “was able at
the same time able to study the very riches and depths of theology, and also
communicate it to others”.
Newman’s writing, Prudlo said, “recalls the work of Benedict
XVI as both a pastor and an intellectual attempting to speak to his own
age in ways that they can understand, but in ways that always are hedged about
and protected and give us insights into the depth of truth itself”.

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