
Tag: rhetoric
The Healing of the Liturgical Imagination: The Sweet Rhetoric of John Henry Newman’s Liturgical Sermons
by Timothy O'Malley | May 14, 2020 | Theology | 0
Dr. Timothy O’Malley presented this lecture as the keynote address for the National Institute for Newman Studies Spring 2020 Newman Symposium. The full lecture is posted at the end of the blog article.
Read More
Subscribe

Subscribe To Our Newsletter
Join our mailing list to get notifications about new articles, events, and more.
You have Successfully Subscribed!
Recent Articles
History and Person: Newman’s Approach and Contemporary Issues
By Alessandro RovatiNovember 10, 2022Following in the footsteps of Benedict XVI, I, too, probe here whether and how Newman might shed light on some contemporary difficulties. […]Science’s Equivocal Crisis
By Samuel BellafioreSeptember 22, 2022This essay seeks to clarify the nature of science. It examines popular approaches to science, these approaches’ potential effects, and the perspective that theology can provide to our potential misunderstandings of science. […]Newman’s Campaign in Ireland: A Review of Paul Shrimpton’s New Edition (part II)
By Vincent and Rebecca VaccaroAugust 30, 2022In 2021, the Fathers of the Birmingham Oratory and Gracewing Press published My Campaign in Ireland Part I: Catholic University Reports and Other Papers and released the companion volume My Campaign in Ireland Part II: My Connection with the Catholic University in March 2022. […]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. […]
Tag Cloud
technology
Grammar of Assent
suffering
correspondence
biography
Vatican II
conversion
education
knowledge
Dream of Gerontius
Rome
devotional
memoirs
canonization
science
faith
liturgy
reflections
pandemic
Via Media
Idea of a University
Pusey
development
digital collections
historical profile
prayer
Robert Browning
COVID-19
Apologia Pro Vita Sua
Anglican
sermons
classes
hermeneutics
Truth
Lent
tria munera
reception of Newman
Philosophy
holiness
certainty
spirituality
archives
high school
book review
review