
Tag: review
A Pilgrimage with Newman: Reading Patricia O’...
By Gerriet Suiter | Jul 1, 2021 | New and Noteworthy, Newman Today, Spirituality | 0
“Twelve Ways of Looking at a Saint”: Review of ...
By Austin Walker | Jul 15, 2020 | New and Noteworthy | 0
Reading Louis Bouyer with Keith Lemna: A Review of The Apocalypse of Wisdom
by Laura Eloe | Aug 18, 2021 | Ecclesiology, New and Noteworthy, Newman Today, Spirituality | 0
The primary purpose of Lemna’s masterful book The Apocalypse of Wisdom: Louis Bouyer’s Theological Recovery of the Cosmos is to shed light on the “twists and turns of the path Bouyer charts in Cosmos” (xiii).
Read MoreA Pilgrimage with Newman: Reading Patricia O’Leary’s The Gentleman Saint
by Gerriet Suiter | Jul 1, 2021 | New and Noteworthy, Newman Today, Spirituality | 0
Patricia O’Leary’s The Gentleman Saint (Gracewing, 2020) is a short and delightful introduction to John Henry Newman.
Read More“Twelve Ways of Looking at a Saint”: Review of “A Human Harp of Many Chords”
by Austin Walker | Jul 15, 2020 | New and Noteworthy | 0
Recently, a friend and I realized over a beer that we did not know what a good confession looked like. We had seen good (and bad) Masses; we had witnessed the efficacious baptism and confirmation.
Read More
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Recent Articles
Newman’s Detractors … at NINS?
By Christopher CimorelliJune 8, 2022It was all the more remarkable when I discovered a collection of “Newman detractors” on the premises, a collection indicating the conflict between Newman, the champion of Roman Catholicism in England, and mainly evangelical Free Church academics around the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century. […]Newman and Locke on the Epistemic Scope of Certitude
By Frederick D. AquinoApril 27, 2022In the scholarly literature, John Locke (1632–1704) features as a formative influence on Newman’s philosophical thought. What usually gets highlighted, for example in the Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent, are Newman’s criticism of Locke’s notion of degreed assent and his call for a broader and more nuanced account of the rationality of religious belief. However, some have argued that the Grammar largely focuses on the psychological conditions of religious belief. […]Unlikely Soul Mates: Robert Browning and St. John Henry Newman
By Joan Liguori PerilloApril 5, 2022Despite their differences, and although Newman and Browning never met, they shared similar life experiences, and literary techniques, and both were concerned with the justification of Christianity, as well as the struggle between faith and doubt. Another parallel between these writers concerns their poetic interests. […]NINS’s Expanding Collections
By Christopher CimorelliFebruary 23, 2022The National Institute for Newman Studies (NINS) is pleased to announce the ongoing expansion of our digital collections through formal agreements with several institutions in England. […]The Idea Idearum in Newman and Bouyer
By Keith LemnaDecember 16, 2021An important theological theme in the Christian tradition is that of the divine ideas or logoi in the mind or Word of God by which God knows and loves in himself eternally all the ways that creatures can or do participate in a living likeness of him. […]