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Loading... Apologia Pro Vita Sua (Penguin Classics) (original 1864; edition 1995)by Ian KerThis book belongs to that small subset of the memoir genre, spiritual autobiography. How does one make drama of one’s personal faith and change of allegiance? Although Newman writes at length in an orotund, full-blown Victorian style, the book held my interest in all but the driest passages. The occasion for this book was a gratuitous attack on Newman by Charles Kingsley in an unrelated book review, followed by an unsatisfactory public exchange of letter and pamphlet. Newman felt the misrepresentation of what he believed severe enough to warrant this lengthy defense. However, he avers that his purpose is not to defend himself as much as the Roman church’s priesthood, membership, and teachings. I write “Roman” church on purpose. Newman, with few exceptions, distinguishes in his book between the terms Catholic and Roman. “Catholic” means for him the universal church, of which Roman Catholicism was a part, as was the Eastern Orthodox tradition. He also long held the belief that the Anglican church (though not continental Protestants) was as well, though he abandoned this conviction. One hundred and fifty years later, it seems to this reader that Kingsley came off the worse in this exchange. He is blind to the degree to which his anti-Roman bias causes him to misunderstand. Bon mots such as “While [Newman] tried to destroy others’ reason, he was at least fair enough to destroy his own” miss the mark. He doesn’t help his case by being so intemperate. While he has the better of this controversy, Newman is also a problematic figure to me. His is a profoundly conservative, reticent nature. His turn to Rome came because he lost confidence that the Anglican church could successfully oppose what he calls Liberalism (aka, so Newman, “the spirit of Antichrist”). By this, he not only means the political program that went under that name in the nineteenth century but also developments in theology such as higher criticism. The inevitable result, Newman is convinced, is atheism, and Rome is the only bulwark against it. In his mind, he converted in the interest of Truth (written, as he did, with a capital T). From the perspective of a time when even conservative Bible scholars accept many of the results of higher criticism as true (small “t”), it seems tragic that such a fine mind should adopt, as Newman did, this bunker mentality. Boy, did I not really get much out of this book. I was a bit curious, having also been one who sort of unexpectedly went Catholic one day, to some persons' surprise. To me the book is just rather locked in its timely position in 19th century English church life, and more universal aspects of faith and religion were passed aside. Fine, okay, no one says an autobiography has to be generational, but I expected more by this book's repuation. Important read for anyone who is Anglican but finds themselves drawn to Rome. I'm not really qualified to give a good review of this book, but will say this: know your church history and Anglican documents well before you read--for instance it's important to know the 39 Articles, or at least have access to them, so you understand what Newman was wrestling with before he wrote Tract 90 and later went to Rome. Boy, did I not really get much out of this book. I was a bit curious, having also been one who sort of unexpectedly went Catholic one day, to some persons' surprise. To me the book is just rather locked in its timely position in 19th century English church life, and more universal aspects of faith and religion were passed aside. Fine, okay, no one says an autobiography has to be generational, but I expected more by this book's repuation. Boy, did I not really get much out of this book. I was a bit curious, having also been one who sort of unexpectedly went Catholic one day, to some persons' surprise. To me the book is just rather locked in its timely position in 19th century English church life, and more universal aspects of faith and religion were passed aside. Fine, okay, no one says an autobiography has to be generational, but I expected more by this book's repuation. Boy, did I not really get much out of this book. I was a bit curious, having also been one who sort of unexpectedly went Catholic one day, to some persons' surprise. To me the book is just rather locked in its timely position in 19th century English church life, and more universal aspects of faith and religion were passed aside. Fine, okay, no one says an autobiography has to be generational, but I expected more by this book's repuation. A highly influential figure in the Church of England, John Henry Newman stunned the Anglican community in 1843, when he left his position as vicar of St. Mary's, Oxford, to join the Roman Catholic church. Perhaps no one took greater offense than Protestant clergyman Charles Kingsley, whose scathing attacks against Newman's faith and honor inspired this brilliant response. Apologia Pro Vita Sua, Newman's spiritual autobiography, explores the depths and nature of Christianity with flowing prose and a conversational style that has ensured its status as a classic. "False ideas may be refuted by argument, but by true ideas alone are they expelled. I will vanquish," Newman promised, "not my accuser, but my judges." His honest and passionate defense consists of a personal history of his religious convictions, from earliest memory through the Oxford movement and his ultimate conversion. His concluding point-by-point refutation of Kingsley's charges features thought-provoking contentions that strike at the very roots of the principles underlying Protestantism. Newman won respect and admiration with his Apologia, a work that has helped clarify perceptions of Roman Catholicism among readers of every faith. |
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