Cardinal John Henry Newman to be
proclaimed a Saint
Cardinal John Henry Newman |
Pope Francis on Wednesday authorised the Congregation for
the Causes of Saints to issue a decree attributing a miracle to the
intercession of the Blessed Cardinal John Henry Newman. The move clears the
final hurdle in the cause for his canonisation.
By Veronica Scarisbrick and Linda
Bordoni
Cardinal John Henry Newman is close to becoming
Britain's first new saint since St. John Ogilvie was canonized by Pope Saint
Paul VI in 1976.
The last English saints, 40 martyrs of the Reformation, were
canonised in 1970.
Cardinal Newman, who was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in
2010, was born in 1801. He was ordained as a Church of England priest and went
on to found the Oxford Movement but converted to Catholicism in 1845.
He was later made a cardinal and, after he died at the age
of 89, more than 15,000 people lined the streets for his funeral.
The cause for his sainthood was opened in 1958 and he was
declared Venerable by Pope Saint John Paul II in 1991 after his life of ‘heroic
virtue’ was recognised.
Immediately after his beatification, Monsignor Roderick
Strange, a Newman scholar and author of a book entitled “John Henry Newman, A
Mind Alive” spoke to Veronica Scarisbrick about the British cardinal whom he
describes as one of the most significant figures of the 19th century.
“The mind was alive not because he was some icy intellectual
locked in a tower, but because he didn’t want to move minds without touching
hearts” explains Mons. Roderick Strange, who in an amicable and intimate chat
with Veronica Scarisbrick, talks about Newman: “the thinker, the friend, the
priest”.
First of all, he says, Newman “would be an example (and an
inspiration) for people who struggle, whose lives are a bit complicated, a bit
messy at times”, because, just as we can see in Newman’s life “that’s alright…
it’s really about how we handled the mess rather than have things perfect
all the while.”
The friend
Strange goes on to describe a man with a complex
personality: “somebody who was in many ways quite solitary, quite happy in his
own company, but also a man who had a great capacity for friendship”.
He got on well with all sorts of people, he says, “including
many women friends, aristocratic ladies, his sisters, some nuns… he had a great
capacity for engaging with people”.
The scholar
Remembered for being a great scholar, Strange points out
that Newman’s “scholarship was always ‘occasional’- not that he just did it
from time to time - but in the sense that it was provoked and prompted by
particular occasions and needs. There was always something very practical and
immediately pastoral about what he was concerned with”.
This salient aspect of Newman’s personality and teachings,
was deeply connected, Strange explains, to his “not wanting to touch
peoples’ minds without moving their hearts” meaning that his theology and his spiritual
guidance “had to be real, to touch people where problems existed”.
All in all, Strange says, he was very complete man: “he was
human, he was saintly, he was a theologian, he was literary figure, he was a
musician (he played the violin) and he was a good parish priest.
Newman and Manning
Strange contests the parallels and contrasts that, he says,
are too often made with his contemporary, Henry Edward Manning, the Archbishop
of Westminster who was also a convert.
He agrees there are all sorts of parallels in the lives of
the two men, but he says superficial caricatures are not really fair to either
of them.
So many stories have been told about Cardinal Newman, and
parallels and contrasts have been drawn with his contemporaries, but Strange
reiterates at the core of his life was a strong pastoral drive that shaped
everything that he did: “He wasn’t a remote academic”.
Legacy
Monsignor Strange also reflects on Newman’s legacy and on
how he can help us understand questions we may puzzle over, such as questions
of authority, the significance of Our Lady in ecumenical discussion, the place
of the laity in the Church, as well, of course, our attitudes to spirituality
and his example of faithfulness when things are difficult.
He talks at length about Newman’s friendship with Edward
Pusey, who was also part of the Oxford Movement, a movement that aimed to help
the Church of England retain and develop its Catholic tradition.
Strange says that Newman became a Catholic while Pusey
remained an Anglican, but they remained good friends and always kept in
contact. At one point, he notes, they became involved in a doctrinal
controversy: “although they were holding on one hand a public debate, they were
also writing to each other privately: a wonderful example of how to handle a
dispute in the most constructive fashion”.
“That personal trust is a vital feature in all ecumenical –
and human – relationships”, Strange says, underlining yet again, how Newman
exemplified this truth and how he is still so relevant regarding so many
matters that are still crucial in the Church today: “He’s not just some
figure from the distant past but somebody who really does have something that
is significant for us, still today”.
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