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From 1824 to 1843 Newman was an active clergyman of the Church of
England; during this time, he entered the pulpit about 1,270 times.
Newman published 217 of the sermons which he wrote during these
years; a further 246 sermons survive in manuscript in the Archives
of the Birmingham Oratory, some only as fragments but the majority
as full texts. These sermons will be published in a series of five
volumes, the aim being to transcribe them accurately, with
sufficient editorial apparatus for the theological development
within them to be understood, and their historical situation to be
clear. The forty-three sermons contained in Volume I reveal
Newman's attitude to his pastoral charge, his theology of liturgy
based on the Book of Common Prayer; his gradual acceptance of the
doctrine of baptismal regeneration as a substitute for his earlier
belief in conversion as understood by the Evangelicals; the
eventual supremacy of the Eucharist in his own spiritual life; his
growing reserve about preaching on the Atonement; his faith in the
divinity of Christ the Mediator; and finally, his understanding of
the Church as the remedial and mediatorial kingdom of Christ on
earth.
From 1824 to 1843, Newman was an active clergyman of the Church of
England. Throughout these twenty years, he entered the pulpit about
1,270 times and wrote about 604 sermons. Of these, he eventually
published 217 sermons which he had written and delivered; a further
246 sermons survive in manuscript in the Archives of the Birmingham
Oratory, some only as fragments but the majority as full texts.
Volume I was published in 1991 and Volume II in 1993. When
completed, the series will consist of five volumes.
Volume III contains a further fifty hitherto unpublished sermons
belonging to this period. There are twenty-five sermons especially
composed for Saints' Days and Holy Days and, with one exception,
all preached at St Mary the Virgin University Church, Oxford,
between 1830 and 1843. Towards the end of 1831, after years of
dissatisfaction with his mode of writing and preaching sermons,
Newman hit upon a new mode of delivery.
There are also twenty-five sermons which Newman categorized as
General Theology. They cover such areas as: the Second Coming; the
efficacy of prayer; angels; baptismal regeneration; the Trinity,
religious mystery; the Creed; and the dogmatic principle. There is
also one particular sermon on slavery in which Newman argues that
slavery is 'a condition of life ordained by God in the same sense
that other conditions of life are'.
Since many of these sermons were preached and re-preached several
times over this twenty-year period, they are important for an
understanding of Newman's theological and spiritual development.
The unpublished Oratory Papers of Blessed John Henry Cardinal
Newman edited with an Introductory Study on the Continuity between
his Anglican and his Catholic Ministry.These are Newman's Chapter
Addresses and other writings on the purpose and characteristics of
Oratorian life. As Superior, Newman wanted his community to consist
of responsible persons bound together by tact and discretion,
obeying an unwritten law of love. He exercised endless patience in
his desire to preserve this 'weaponless state' of the Oratory in
spite of tensions, dissensions, opposition and even separation.Each
paper has been transcribed from the original manuscripts in the
Birmingham Oratory Archives, and has been provided with a succinct
introduction and notes.The editor has, moreover, furnished a
full-length introductory study on Newman's spirituality as a priest
against the background of the Anglican Ministry (1824-45), since it
is true to say that Newman learned to live as a priest while still
an Anglican. Four major areas of his Anglican ministry - the Care
of Souls, Preaching, the Eucharistic Ministry and Prayer - have
been closely examined both in themselves and in their renewed
appearance in Newman's life as a Catholic priest.The editor, Fr
Placid Murray, is a Benedictine monk of Glenstal Abbey, Ireland.
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