Monday, 1 July 2019

DEDICATED TO CARDINAL NEWMAN'S CANONIZATION COME 13 OCTOBER 2019



NEWMAN AND NEW EVANGELIZATION

 By Rev. Dr. Gerald Jumbam Nyuykongmo

John Henry Newman, once spoke the truth about his entire life in few words: “from first to last, education…has been my line.”[1]. To him – and to use the benign words of the American educationist John Dewey – “education is not preparation for life, education is life itself.” And “Education is the most powerful weapon”, Nelson Mandela had said, “which you can use to change the world.”[2] Undoubtedly education is the lifeblood of human society - the crucial component that has given the Church energy and fortified its sanctuaries with many millions for Christ. But theological education would in the main, be Newman’s most arresting arsenal, for, he held that university teaching without Theology is simply unphilosophical – that is, unsound, arbitrary, truncated. When, saint John Paul II on the 9th of June 1979, at the sanctuary of Mogila in Nowa Huta, aired the expression “new evangelization” for the first time, little did he know he was a stimulus that would trigger off a remarkable missionary movement. New evangelization - the topmost business of the Church today – is education indeed.
Post-Vatican II Popes have put the issue of new evangelization front and center on the ecclesial stage. Pope Benedict XVI took over from the Polish Pope and created the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of the New Evangelization.  Pope Francis’ duty call to countries considered destitute by the world and his voice-of-the-voiceless public position in encyclicals and exhortations, have brought us to the consciousness of this new and revitalizing spirit animating missionary work in our times. These Popes spell out the mission of  “new evangelization”. as unlike the other kind of missionary work best labeled the Good News. They understand it as pastoral attention heading not merely for the pagan or the heathen, but most especially for the baptized and the Christian.
The African Church today looks at it from the point of view of Small Christian Communities (Church in the neighborhood). In Europe the coat of arms of Cardinal Newman, that compelling catchphrase Cor ad Cor Loquitur renders best the spirit of New Evangelization in the West.  Heart speaks to heart. God speaks to man heart to heart and then man’s heart speaks to his fellowman. And therefore in a cultural context eaten up by the cancer of individualism, relativism and spiritual liberalism, there is a crying need for the Sacred Heart of Jesus to speak to Europe’s heart once more.
Cor ad Cor loquitur suggests the Most Holy Trinity. In the Trinity is the language of love and dialogue. Inevitably God wills that men and women should among themselves raise, improve and advance the exchange of feelings between hearts, cor ad cor, since it is the deficiency of this condition that has shaken the foundations of European spiritual edifice today.
Dear listeners, I see in the English saint, John Henry Newman’s theological pedagogy, the solution to Europe’s faith predicament.
Let me explain myself. Suppose a man gets in class with the students, let us say, as a teacher and evangeliser, and becomes an expert in his material, and teaches his students academic concepts that enlighten, abstract and impersonal ideas that inspire. Or may be churns out doctrinal prescriptions and invites the students to commit them to memory. In our Christian schools you find that kind of thing today - where religious knowledge is just another subject to be learned and passed during examinations. But suppose this teacher never thinks to give himself a pause, to ponder and to wonder whether this knowledge has any concrete touch in his own soul, never pause to ponder whether to bring it down to the personal, whether to help his students understand what the teaching material means in their own lives; suppose this teacher gets into the rut of thoughtless routine, and does not ask himself whether the facts acquired will lead in the long run to the development or desolation of the community, in order to warn his students of impending danger – would such a man be called a outstanding catechist or teacher of the new evangelization, even if he were gifted with a tremendous teaching talent or with an intelligence sharp and powerful and was armed with a doctorate in theology?
My answer is: No. And saying no with me is one of the greatest authorities in theological education the world has ever seen - John Henry Newman.
For his part Newman decisively laid it down, without mincing words, that since “the heart is commonly reached, not through the reason, but through the imagination, by means of direct impressions, by the testimony of facts and events, by history, by description,” those destined to be teachers of faith must credibly do so by personal influence and personal presence, for, “persons influence us, voices melt us, looks subdue us, deeds inflame us. Many a man will live and die upon a dogma: no man will be a martyr for a conclusion.”[3] The person who thumbs the pages of Newman’s writings does not fail to be charmed by his personal presence even in his books. For all his excellence in writing, Newman did not disdain the irreplaceable place of personal integrity, - and not lip service – in Christian holiness. He advised his soul in prayer: “Let me preach Thee without preaching, not by words but by my example, by the catching force, the sympathetic influence of what I do, the evident fullness of the love my heart bears to Thee!”[4]  Pope Paul VI caps a memorable season by employing something similar to the just mentioned Newmanian superlative. Paul VI said that, “Modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses.” Newman describes this type of thing in a page of his Grammar of Assent: “I have no confidence, then in philosophers who…sit at home, and reach forward to distances which astonish us; but they hit without grasping, and are sometimes as confident about shadows as about realities. They have worked out by a calculation the lie of the country which they never saw, and mapped it by means of a gazeteer; and like blind men, though they can put a stranger on his way, they cannot walk straight themselves, and do not feel it quite their business to walk at all.”[5]
What then are those outstanding evangelizing principles, guiding principles that flow from Newman’s theological pedagogy which have an echo on the current spirit of New Evangelization? First of all, the epitaph John Henry Newman chose for his tombstone is the central message of all evangelizations: 'Ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem' ('Out of shadows and images into the truth'). These words are more than the expression of Newman's entire life – they summarize the pilgrimage of each genuine Christian, battling each day to look for, to reach out and come upon the fullness of Truth that is Christ. To Newman, Christ was everything: “We do not hesitate to say …. that it really does arise from practical neglect of our Saviour.”[6] Christ to him was Truth. This Truth was contained in the dogmas and revealed principles of the Church. So revealed truths were dynamic living thing. Newman’s adoration of dogmas can hardly be regarded exaggerated. The striking delineations, remarkable modeling and classification of revealed truths are the garlands “set up in record of the victories of the Faith”.[7] He calls the Athanasian creed “the war-song of faith”, “a hymn of praise to the Eternal Trinity.”[8] These revealed truths are ever “springing into life with inexhaustible fecundity”.[9] They are ever gushing forth from the wounded side of Christ’s Sacred Heart. And so dogma to him was truth. The challenge of the Church of today is to turn the heart of the modern faithful to the love again of Truth, of revealed truths, in this dispensation of new evangelization.
But to get to this truth there is need for another more important component. For us to reach the truth of things, Newman believed that we must search for it in all corners of the room, we must dig down to the beginnings and we must hunt higher up the heights. He would call it ‘the enlargement of the mind’ which involves,
not merely in the passive reception into the mind of a number of ideas unknown to it, but in the mind's energetic and simultaneous action upon and towards and among those new ideas, which are rushing in upon it…And therefore a truly great intellect, … such as the intellect of Aristotle, or of St. Thomas, or of Newton, or of Goethe, … is one which takes a connected view of old and new, past and present, far and near, and which has an insight into the influence of all these one on another; without which there is no whole, and no centre.[10]
One of the ways today’s Europe can fairly face itself, in enlarging its mind as Newman prescribes, is to do so by looking at its connection with other continents. The African angle is worth a thought.
The celebrated African novelist, Chinua Achebe, made some significant remarks about Africa and Europe. He named the geographical positioning of these two continents “joined together at a navel”; and he continues that  “It is a great irony of history and geography that Africa, whose landmass is closer than any other to the mainland of Europe, should come to occupy in the European psychological disposition the farthest point of otherness, should indeed become Europe’s very antithesis”.[11] ‘Joined together at a navel’ Achebe christens the African-European location. Few European theologians (if only there is any other) had so intimately seen Africa and Europe as joined together in a navel and had honored and spoken in high spirits about that persecuted continent as did John Henry Newman. Even as a European theologian, Newman’s two most appealing theological stars – Augustine of Hippo and Athanasius of Alessandria - are all Africans. Callista is Newman’s novel whose plot is in Africa ( Africa). The novel’s protagonist Callista is from the West(Greece). Peter and Paul the famed apostles, from the East, have carried the fresh faith from homeland and crossed to Rome. In the novel, they are already spoken of as examples and martyrs. The African saint, Bishop Cyprian evangelizes and baptizes Europe’s Callista. More than a fictional work therefore, the novel Callista is a sermon illustration. It demonstrates the contribution of Africa to the evangelization of other parts of the world during the early period of the Church. So in one novel Newman connects the continents into one brotherhood. In that novel, the author touches on the African world, the Western world and the Eastern world – three inviolable historic continental positions. Newman has, whether we like it or not, come to stand for something much more than England or Europe. He is a symbol for the catholic side of the Church, a more intercontinental Catholic Church, which is best captured in the wise words of Pope Francis, that “the People of God is incarnate in the peoples of the earth, each of which has its own culture”[12].. This is the spirit which the New Evangelization encourages among its faithful around the globe – a looking at things from loftier perspectives, a broadening of  our horizons because we are living, as never before, in intercultural times .
We come now to the most significant aspect of Newman’s evangelizing process. It is that which is called Holiness. Evangelization, in the truest interpretation of the word, is holiness. Of course, one of Pope Francis’s renown writings is dedicated to holiness with a modern face. In that work, he resonates so well with John Henry Newman’s down-to-earth idea of holiness. Newman saw holiness as ordinary life lived perfectly: “If you ask me what you are to do in order to be perfect, I say, first – Do not lie in bed beyond the due time of rising; give your first thoughts to God; make a good visit to the Blessed Sacrament; say the Angelus devoutly; eat and drink to God’s glory; say the Rosary well; be recollected; keep out bad thoughts; make your evening meditation well; examine yourself daily; go to bed in good time, and you are already perfect.”[13] It means we are next door to eternity, that we are close to the dead, and that our ancestors are around, for according to Pope Francis “the saints now in God’s presence preserve their bonds of love and communion with us”.[14] John Henry Newman venerated values; he esteemed books; he admired the best in good and inspiring men and women. But he put holiness of life as the measure of all things. It was not just holiness, but holiness not fabricated. It was to be unconscious holiness, - what Newman calls holiness embodied in personal form, presence, the silent conduct of a holy man[15] Undoubtedly holiness is the lifeblood of Christian life but there shouldn’t be any doubt if a saint is taken the wrong way because  “the holier a man is, the less he is understood by men of the world.”[16] Of course, God “wants us to be saints and not to settle for a bland and mediocre existence.”[17] The surest way to persuade people to God is through unconscious holiness: “The attraction, exerted by unconscious holiness, is of an urgent and irresistible nature; it persuades the weak, the timid the wavering and the inquiring; it draws forth the affections and loyalty of all who are in a measure likeminded.”[18] By this example, the disciple of Christ, the saint, the Christian of the new evangelization can help transform his faith-hostile and unchristian community into that spiritual public, the creation of which spiritual public should constitute the primary drive of his undertakings.
In Newman one hardly exhausts the discovery of hot-button realities presented with accomplished accuracy. His theme tunes are so hypnotic that their freshness, their enthralling magical spell holds minds and hearts always captive. Take for instance the subject matter of conscience which I feel is one garden-fresh area for new evangelization. New Evangelization is education to maturity. Because it is that type of evangelization where its emphasis is the baptized and not the pagan, it concerns itself with making Christians complete Christians. This means especially that lay people can make decisions for themselves, can use their consciences and decide what to them is God’s will in their lives. That is how Newman saw things and that is why he fought tooth and nail for the education and liberation of the laity in the Church. To him, conscience is “a consciousness of innocence and integrity.”[19] The Church of the new evangelization especially that of Pope Francis’ magisterium preaches the gospel of conscience in wonderful ways. He has opted for ripeness in faith. Newman once remarked:
If either the Pope or the Queen demanded of me an ‘Absolute Obedience’, he or she would be transgressing the laws of human nature and human society. I give an absolute obedience to neither. Further, if ever this double allegiance pulled me in contrary ways (…), then I should decide according to the particular case, which is beyond all rule, and must be decided on its own merits.[20]
Francis has done this most especially in his Amoris Laetitia: “We also find it hard to make room for the consciences of the faithful, who very often respond as best they can to the Gospel amid their limitations, and are capable of carrying out their own discernment in complex situations”.[21]  He challenges priests and encourages marriage couples into Christian maturity. Newman and Francis teaches us that conscience is a moral and authoritative critical sense; but they also firmly hold that conscience is a cerebral sentiment, an emotion, for it is “… something more than a moral sense; it is always, what the sense of the beautiful is only in certain cases; it is always emotional. No wonder then that it always implies what that sense only sometimes implies; that it always involves the recognition of a living object, towards which it is directed.”[22]  Because he is so universal on all-inclusive subjects like conscience, Newman gives meaning to the Church of the new evangelization and even today, the title of great is one that few will deny him.
One key area of interest in evangelization today is the role of the theologian. Newman was of the conviction that “religion cannot maintain its ground at all without theology. Sentiments, whether imaginative or emotional, falls back upon the intellect for its stay…and it is in this way that devotion falls back upon dogma.”[23]  It is individual theologians and not the Institutional Church, that have pioneered the inventiveness of faith, and been forerunners of the Catholic mind in the theological enterprise.[24] The individual genius of Augustine of Hippo, of Thomas Aquinas and today, of Newman of Birmingham, are the lights that have shone the way for the Church of their times and beyond.
Those who know him best know that it was in his personal letters – especially those to friends – that Newman’s profound wisdom sparkled. He defined theology - in the finest words that define the subject of theology – as “ like dancing on the tight rope some hundred feet above the ground. It is hard to keep from falling, and the fall is great. The questions are so subtle, the distinctions so fine, and critical jealous eyes so many.”[25] To Newman the theological position of loyal opposition defines the true theologian. Of course, “Newman’s theology is that of steadiness, dynamism and grace”[26]  Theological inquiry is a minority body whose critical look at the body of Church content is responsible, useful and obliging. For this to be active, thinkers must mount the tight-rope to dare dangers and take risks, though endowed with intellectual humility and honesty. He held magisterium-incumbents for derision concerning theologizing because there was no theology if the theologian kept on repeating what popes had said and had no critical challenging nerve in the theological enterprise.
Since the depths of Truth are unfathomable , since God’s grace is immeasurable, since the riches of beauty and goodness are inexhaustible, it follows that the genuine theologian must be a thorough researcher inquirer all his day. On these grounds Newman gave no quarter to mediocrity or a pandering to bigoted dogmatism:
Our theological philosophers are like the old nurses who wrap the unhappy infant in swaddling bands or boards – put a lot of blankets over him – and shut the windows that not a breath of fresh air may come to his skin – as if he were not healthy enough to bear wind and water in due measures. They move in a groove, and will not tolerate any one who does not move in the same.[27]
And so those uncharitable (in the name of orthodoxy) to new theological concepts of theologians of other continents or regions of the world, or those that put blankets here and there over theological debate or those who move in a groove, in one furrow of thought, in a theological single trench of mediocrity, must know they are doing untold damage to the blossoming of Christian thought. They should listen to Pope Francis that, “the theologian who is satisfied with his complete and conclusive thought is mediocre. The good theologian and philosopher has an open, that is, an incomplete, thought, always open to the maius of God and of the truth, always in development, according to the law that Saint Vincent of Lerins described in these words: annis consolidetur, dilatetur tempore, sublimetur aetate”[28] The goal of  Europe’s theologian today (and it seems to me, every theologian around the world) is to rehabilitate Christian thought in his present Christian-hostile ambient and doing so, to enlarge his mind with other worlds of reality hitherto unknown to him and combine standards of scholarship before unknown in Christian theology with attitudes critical of Church clericalism which have become likewise uncustomary.
Dear listeners, according to the president of the Vatican Council for New Evangelization, Archbishop Rino Fisichella,  New Evangelization is  “ the time for a new and mature apologetics of our faith, to offer hope to today’s world”[29]. It has never been about the individual. It is about the naked, the captive, the destitute, the sick. The great thing about the Church of the New Evangelization is that it gives voice to the voiceless. Pope Francis arises as the embodiment of this radicalism of the gospel spirit, and through meditated actions has been the vocal sound of those who have even lost the strength to cry; has spoken for those poor around the globe under the terrible tyranny of a callous colonialism of the underprivileged, of a hyper-capitalistic market gone mad. The mandate of every true Christian on earth is to help the helpless, defend the unarmed, and speak for the powerless. The Christian principle sparkles when the poor have a place at the table, when the weak are strengthened and the unarmed are armed. The Christian principle sparkles when the poor have a place at the table, when the weak are strengthened and the unarmed are armed. Newman was voice of the voiceless in the way he spoke for the laity, and the way he stood against the tyranny of the Anglican faithful over the minority and bewildered Catholic of England. He enriched the poor of his time with the goods he manufactured best – his articles and books. With the poor laity who did not know their right from their left in the Church gone too clerical, he refined and enriched their minds and hearts with On Consulting the Faithful in Matters of Doctrine. With the poor English and Irish Catholics in England who found no place in English politics and among Anglican compatriots, he enriched them with his open letter to the Duke of Norfolk and Lectures on the Position of Catholics in England. To the unenlightened Ireland about university studies he enriched them with The Idea of a University. When the Catholic Church’s clergy celibacy  was attacked by a fierce English writer, Newman singled out to bear the burden of so outrageous a charge, demanded that the author, the Rev. Charles Kingsley, either give evidence or surrender. When the Catholic Church’s clergy celibacy  was attacked by a fierce English writer, Newman singled out to bear the burden of so outrageous a charge, demanded that the author, the Rev. Charles Kingsley, either give evidence or surrender. What ensued for the defense of the Church and himself was the production of a remarkable record of self-disclosure baptized Apologia Pro Vita Sua, which has become a Christian classic. It was issued in seven weekly articles. The work was a success from the beginning to the end – a triumph not only for Newman but for the entire Roman Catholic Church in England. Newman’s words in that defence “carried conviction overwhelmingly; they revolutionized public opinion and from that hour Newman was restored to his old place as the object of England’s veneration.” Yet it would be shortsightedness to see the success of this writing only from that standpoint. It was a work that manifested the fighting spirit of a man who did not want to see the poor suffer for nothing. The Catholic Church was the poor person who was under pangs of pain in Anglican-infested Britain.. Newman took his pen up out also of pity for this oppressed and helpless body of Christ in a hyper-critical and arrogant England.
 “I have a work to do in England”, Newman remarked when he was about to leave Italy (Sicily) and return home, and so he had. But the work would turn out to be for the whole Catholic Church, a work that principally sparkles forever, a sparkle that is leading him to the high altars of canonization come October. In the spirit of his famous hymn ‘Lead Kindly Light’ composed in Italy, and “amid the encircling gloom” of pedagogical and pastoral mediocrity in the Church, Newman abidingly provided a “ kindly light” in the new evangelization with his edifying  personal presence in the Church.





[1]  IAN KER, Newman’s Idea of a University and its Relevance for the 21st Century, (April 2011), 1.
[2] NELSON MANDELA, Speech at Launch of Mindset Network, Johannesburg, 16 July 2003.
[3] J. H. NEWMAN, Grammar of Assent, Longman Green and Co.,  London 1909, 92-93.
[4] J: H. NEWMAN, in Totus Tuus, “Blessed John Henry Newman”http://totus2us.com/vocation/blesseds/bl-john-henry-newman/
[5] J. H. NEWMAN, Grammar of Assent.
[6] Newman, Letter to John Keble, 27 August 1837; lxxxvii(oct. 1972) p. 701.
[7] J. H. NEWMAN, Grammar of Assent, (London: Longman Green and Co. 1909), 133.
[8] J. H. NEWMAN, Parochial and Plain Sermons, (London: Longman Green and Co. 1908), II 270.
[9] J. H. NEWMAN, Grammar of Assent (London: Longman Green and Co. 1909), 148.
[10]  J. H. NEWMAN, The Idea of a University, 134.
[11] CHINUA ACHEBE, The Education of a British-Protected Child, New York, 2009, Alfred A. Knopt, 77.
[12] FRANCIS, Evangelii Gaudium, 115.
[13] J. H. NEWMAN, Meditations and Devotions, Christian Classics, Westminster, Md. 1975, p. 286.
[14] FRANCESCO, Apostolic Exortation, Gaudete et Exsultate, 19 March 2018, 4..
[15] J. H. NEWMAN, Fifteen Sermons Preached before the University Of Oxford, Longman Green and Co.,  London 1909,  91-92.
[16] J. H. NEWMAN, Parochial and Plain Sermons, vol. IV,  244.
[17] FRANCIS, Apostolic Exortation, Gaudete et Exsultate, 19 March 2018, 1.
[18] J. H. NEWMAN, Fifteen Sermons Preached before the University Of Oxford, Longman Green and Co.,  London 1909, 95.
[19] J.  H. Newman, PPS V, cit., 238.
[20] J. H. NEWMAN, Diff II, cit.,  243.
[21] FRANCIS, Apostolic Exhortation, Amoris Laetitia, 19 March 2016, 37.
[22] J. H. Newman, AG, cit., 109-110.                                                     
[23] H. NEWMAN, Grammar of Assent, Longman Green and Co.,  London 1909, 121.
[24] See Newman “it is individuals and not the Holy See, that have taken the initiative, and given the lead to the Catholic mind, in theological inquiry.”
[25] 'The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman (hereafter cited as LD) 22:215 (Newman to Bowles, April 16, 1866); the occasion for the letter was the appearance of his Letter to the Rev. E. B. Pusey, D.D., on his recent Eirencon (originally published in LondonLongmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1866; later published in the second volume of Certain difficulties felt by Anglicans in Catholic teaching considered, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1885 and subsequently). In an earlier letter to Miss Bowles (1818-19049 ) Newman acknowledged the limitations of his reply to Pusey: "Don't expect much from my Pamphlet, which is at last through the Press. Pusey's work is on too many subjects, not to allow of a dozen answers—and since I am only giving one, every reader will be expecting one or other of the eleven which I don't give. Mine is only upon our belief concerning the Blessed Virgin." LD 22:128 (Newman to Bowles, January 18, 1866).
[26] Cfr. GERALD JUMBAM NYUYKONGMO,  A Laity who Know their Religion., Demdel Edition, 2018.
[27] H. NEWMAN, Letters and Diary of John Henry Newman (LD). xxiv. 316.
[28] FRANCESCO, Apostolic Constitution, Veritatis Gaudium, 29 January 2018.
[29] RINO FISICHELLA, “We Need New Evangelizers”, in Year of Faith, 09-08-2012, http://www.annusfidei.va/content/novaevangelizatio/en/news/09-08-2012.html