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Newman Review

An e-publication of the National Institute for Newman Studies (NINS) featuring scholarly, original articles on John Henry Newman’s legacy and its relevance for today.

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A Window into the Rambler Controversy
History
A Window into the Rambler Controversy

During my internship for NINS, I took great pleasure in reading the letters of Richard Simpson, a former Anglican priest numbered among the prominent Catholic converts of the time. He was most known for his involvement in the Liberal Catholic movement through the Rambler, a periodical which served to allow the prominent lay converts of the time to express their views to the masses. We currently have a total of 64 letters penned by Richard Simpson in the Digital Collections, of which most were directed to St. John Henry Newman. Despite their often-mundane nature (as is often the case with historical letters), they provide a window into the man Richard Simpson, as well as into the unfolding of the Rambler situation in 1859 as it suffered attacks by the English Bishops.

Miles Bertrand
Miles Bertrand
December 17, 2025
6 min
John Henry Newman’s Pneumatological Hermeneutics and <em>Dei Verbum</em>
John Henry Newman’s Pneumatological Hermeneutics and Dei Verbum

In the nineteenth century, tensions were acutely felt in religious controversies, such as the Protestant emphasis on sola scriptura, which often privileged individual interpretation over ecclesial tradition, and emerging Catholic debates over historical-critical methods, as exemplified by figures like Alfred Loisy and the Modernist Crisis. John Henry Newman navigated similar turbulent waters as an Anglican convert to Catholicism, developed an implicit pneumatological hermeneutics that positioned the Holy Spirit as the vital guide for both personal and communal engagement with the biblical text. 

Reverend Hussey's Astronomical History
A Sermon On Newman
Letters from Sir James Bernard Marshall (1829-1889)
Letters from W. T. Stead to Cardinal Newman
Enlightened and Holy, Yet Imperfect, Luminaries of the Faith: Newman’s Reflections on Doctors of the Universal Church
Enlightened and Holy, Yet Imperfect, Luminaries of the Faith: Newman’s Reflections on Doctors of the Universal Church

Imagine a candlestick resting on a table in the corner of a dark room, whose flame does not fade, does not flicker, and does not burn out, but perpetually illuminates the corner and draws others towards its light. This everlasting flame is like a teaching of a Doctor of the Universal Church, seeking not to illumine the entirety of the dark room, but keeps the corner of the room illuminated. Similarly, the teachings of the Church Doctors illumine some component(s) of the mysteries of the Catholic faith without trying to plumb the entirety of the mystery of God. 

The Letters of Fr. Frederick Bowles
Fr. Basil Maturin’s Letter to Bishop Amigo
Newman, Ratzinger, and the Sacramental Principle: A Reflection on Sacramental Formation

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