Oxford University Sermons
John Henry Newman
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Dedication
TO THE
VERY REV. RICHARD WILLIAM CHURCH, M.A.
DEAN OF ST. PAUL'S
MY DEAR DEAN,
{v} WHEN I lately asked your leave to prefix your name to this Volume of
Sermons preached before the University of Oxford, I felt I had to
explain to myself and to my readers, why I had not offered it to you
on its first publication, rather than now, when the long delay of
nearly thirty years might seem to have destroyed the graciousness of
my act.
For you were one of those dear friends, resident in Oxford, (some,
as Charles Marriott and Charles Cornish now no more,) who in those
trying five years, from 1841 to 1845, in the course of which this
Volume was given to the world, did so much to comfort and uphold me by
their patient, tender kindness, and their zealous services in my
behalf.
I cannot forget, how, in the February of 1841, you suffered me day
after day to open to you my anxieties and plans, as events
successively elicited them; and much less can I lose the memory of
your great act of friendship, as well as of justice and courage, in
the {vi} February of 1845, your Proctor's year, when you, with another now
departed, shielded me from the "civium ardor prava jubentium,"
by the interposition of a prerogative belonging to your academical
position.
But much as I felt your generous conduct towards me at the time,
those very circumstances which gave occasion to it deprived me then of
the power of acknowledging it. That was no season to do what I am
doing now, when an association with any work of mine would have been a
burden to another, not a service; nor did I, in the Volumes which I
published during those years, think of laying it upon any of my
friends, except in the case of one who had had duties with me up at
Littlemore, and overcame me by his loyal and urgent sympathy.
Accept then, my dear Church, though it be late, this expression of
my gratitude, now that the lapse of years, the judgment passed on me
by (what may be called) posterity, and the dignity of your present
position, encourage me to think that, in thus gratifying myself, I am
not inconsiderate towards you.
I am, my dear Dean,
Your very affectionate friend,
JOHN H. NEWMAN.
ADVENT, 1871.
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{vii} OF the following Sermons, the First, Third, and Sixth were preached
by the Author in Vice-Chancellor's Preaching Turns; the Second in his
own; the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth in his turns as
Select Preacher.
The Six since 1832, which close the series, were preached in
private College turns, which were made available to him, as being
either at his own disposal or at that of his personal friends.
Though he has employed himself for the most part in discussing
portions of one and the same subject, yet he need scarcely say, that
his Volume has not the method, completeness, or scientific exactness
in the use of language, which are necessary for a formal Treatise upon
{viii} it; nor, indeed, was such an undertaking compatible with the nature
and circumstances of the composition.
The above is the Advertisement prefixed to the Original Edition,
dated February 4, 1843, except that, an additional Sermon being added
to the present Edition—viz., No. 3—alterations in its wording were
unavoidable.
THE ORATORY,
December, 1871.
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Preface
{ix} THESE Discourses were originally published, except as regards some
verbal corrections, just as they were preached. The author would
gladly at that time have made considerable alterations in them, both
in the way of addition and of omission; but, professing, as they did,
to be "preached before the University," he did not feel
himself at liberty to do so. Much less does he alter them now; all
that he has thought it right to do has been, by notes in brackets at
the foot of the page, to draw attention to certain faults which are to
be found in them, either of thought or of language, and, as far as
possible, to set these right.
Such faults were only to be expected in discussions of so difficult
a character as some of them pursue, written at intervals, and on
accidental, not to say sudden opportunities, and with no aid from
Anglican, and no {x} knowledge of Catholic theologians. He is only
surprised himself, that, under such circumstances, the errors are not
of a more serious character. This remark especially applies to the
Discourses upon the relation of Faith to Reason, which are of the
nature of an exploring expedition into an all but unknown country, and
do not even venture on a definition of either Faith or Reason on
starting. As they proceed, however, they become more precise, as well
as more accurate, in their doctrine, which shall here be stated in a
categorical form; and, as far as possible, in the words used in the
course of them.
1. Before setting down a definition of Faith and of Reason, it will
be right to consider what is the popular notion of Faith and Reason,
in contrast with each other.
"I have not yet said what Reason really is, or what is its
relation to Faith, but have merely contrasted the two together,
taking Reason in the sense popularly ascribed to the word," x.
45.
Vide also xii. 7, 11, 36; xiii. 1, 4; xiv. 32.
2. According to this popular sense, Faith is the judging on weak
grounds in religious matters, and Reason on strong grounds. Faith
involves easiness, and Reason slowness in accepting the claims of
Religion; by Faith is meant a feeling or sentiment, by Reason an
exercise of common sense; Faith is conversant {xi} with conjectures or
presumptions, Reason with proofs.
"Whatever be the real distinction and relation between Faith
and Reason, the contrast which would be made between them on a
popular view, is this,—that Reason requires strong evidence before
it assents, and Faith is content with weaker evidence," x. 17.
"Faith and Reason are popularly contrasted with each other;
Faith consisting of certain exercises of Reason which proceed mainly
on presumption, and Reason of certain exercises which proceed mainly
upon proof," xii. 3.
Vide also 2, 7, 10, 36; and v. 19; x. 26, 32; xi. 17.
3. But now, to speak more definitely, what ought we to understand
by the faculty of Reason largely understood?
"By Reason is properly understood any process or act of the
mind, by which, from knowing one thing, it advances on to know
another," xii. 2.
Vide also xi. 6, 7; xiii. 7, 9; xiv. 28.
4. The process of the Reasoning Faculty is either explicit or
implicit: that is, either with or without a direct recognition, on the
part of the mind, of the starting-point and path of thought from and
through which it comes to its conclusion.
"All men have a reason, but not all men can give a reason.
We may denote these two exercises of mind as reasoning and
arguing," xiii. 9. Vide the whole of the discourse.
5. The process of reasoning, whether implicit or explicit, is the
act of one and the same faculty, to {xii} which also belongs the power of
analyzing that process, and of thereby passing from implicit to
explicit. Reasoning, thus retrospectively employed in analyzing
itself, results in a specific science or art, called logic, which is a
sort of rhetoric, bringing out to advantage the implicit acts on which
it has proceeded.
"Clearness in argument is not indispensable to reasoning
well. The process of reasoning is complete in itself, and
independent; the analysis is but an account of it," xiii. 10;
vide 8.
"The warfare between Error and Truth is necessarily
advantageous to the former, as being conducted by set speech or
treatise; and this, not only from ... the deficiency of truth in the
power of eloquence, and even of words, but moreover, from the very
neatness and definiteness of method, required in a written or spoken
argument. Truth is vast and far stretching, viewed as a system …
hence it can hardly be exhibited in a given number of sentences. …
Its advocate, unable to exhibit more than a fragment of the whole,
must round off its rugged extremities, etc. ... This, indeed, is the
very art of composition," &c., v. 21.
"They who wish to shorten the dispute, look out for some
strong and manifest argument, which may be stated tersely, handled
conveniently, and urged rhetorically," &c., xiii. 36.
Vide xiv. 30.
6. Again: there are two methods of reasoning—à priori,
and à posteriori; from antecedent probabilities, or
verisimilitudes, and from evidence, of which the method of
verisimilitude more naturally belongs to implicit reasoning, and the
method of evidence to explicit.
"Proofs may be strong or slight, not in themselves, but
according {xiii} to the circumstances under which the doctrine professes to
come to us, which they are brought to prove; and they will have a
great or small effect upon our minds, according as we admit those
circumstances or not. Now, the admission of those circumstances
involves a variety of antecedent views, presumptions, implications,
associations, and the like, many of which it is very difficult to
detect and analyze," &c., xiii. 33.
Vide also 9, and xii. 36.
7. Again:—though the Reasoning Faculty is in its nature one and
the same in all minds, it varies, without limit, in point of strength,
as existing in the concrete, that is, in individuals, and that,
according to the subject-matter to which it is applied. Thus, a man
may reason well on matters of trade, taken as his subject, but be
simply unable to bring out into shape his reasoning upon them, or to
write a book about them, because he has not the talent of analyzing—that
is, of reasoning upon his own reasonings, or finding his own middle
terms.
"How a man reasons is as much a mystery as how he remembers.
He remembers better and worse on different subject-matters, and he
reasons better and worse. The gift or talent may be distinct, but
the process of reasoning is the same," xiii. 10.
Vide also xi. 6.
8. This inequality of the faculty in one and the same individual,
with respect to different subject-matters, arises from two causes:—from
want of experience and familiarity in the details of a given
subject-matter; and {xiv} from ignorance of the principles or axioms, often
recondite, which belong to it.
"The man who neglected experiments, and trusted to his
vigour of talent, would be called a theorist; and the blind man who
seriously professed to lecture on light and colours could scarcely
hope to gain an audience … He might discourse with ease and
fluency, till we almost forgot his lamentable deprivation; at length
on a sudden, he would lose himself in some inexpressibly great
mistake," iv. 8.
"However full and however precise our producible grounds
may be, however systematic our method, however clear and tangible
our evidence, yet, when our argument is traced down to its simple
elements, there must ever be something which is incapable of
proof," xi. 18.
9. Hence there are three senses of the word "Reason,"
over and above the large and true sense. Since what is not brought out
into view cannot be acknowledged as existing, it comes to pass that
exercises of reasoning not explicit are commonly ignored. Hence by
Reason, relatively to Religion, is meant, first, expertness in logical
argument.
"Reason has a power of analysis and criticism in all
opinions and conduct, and nothing is true or right but what may be
justified, and, in a certain sense, proved by it; and unless the
doctrines received by Faith are approvable by Reason, they have no
claim to be regarded as true," x. 13.
Vide also 14, 16.
10. And again, since Evidences are more easily {xv} analyzed than
verisimilitudes, hence reasonings, that is, investigations, on the
subject of Religion, are commonly considered to be nothing but à
posteriori arguments; and Reason relatively to Religion becomes a
faculty of framing Evidences. This, again, is a popular sense of the
word, as applied to the subject of Religion, and a second sense in
which I have used it.
"Reason is influenced by direct and definite proof: the mind
is supposed to reason severely, when it rejects antecedent proof of
a fact, rejects every thing but the actual evidence producible in
its favour," x. 26.
"Reason, as the word is commonly used, rests on the
evidence," x. 32.
11. The word "Reason" is still more often used in these
Discourses in a third sense, viz., for a certain popular abuse of the
faculty; viz., when it occupies itself upon Religion, without a due
familiar acquaintance with its subject-matter, or without a use of the
first principles proper to it. This so-called Reason is in Scripture
designated "the wisdom of the world;" that is, the reasoning
of secular minds about Religion, or reasonings about Religion based
upon secular maxims, which are intrinsically foreign to it; parallel
to the abuse of Reason in other subject-matters, as when chemical
truths are made the axioms and starting-points in medical science, or
the doctrine of final causes {xvi} is introduced into astronomical or
geological inquiries.
Hence one of these Discourses is entitled "The Usurpations
of Reason;" and in the course of it mention is made of
"captious Reason," "forward Reason," &c.
Vide note on iv. 9.
12. Faith is properly an assent, and an assent without doubt, or a
certitude.
"Faith is an acceptance of things as real," xi. 9.
"Faith simply accepts testimony," x. 8.
"Faith is not identical with its grounds and its
object," xiii. 4
"Faith starts with probabilities, yet it ends in peremptory
statements; it believes an informant amid doubt, yet accepts his
information without doubt," xiv. 34.
Vide also 39; x. 34; xi. 1; xv. 3.
13. Since, in accepting a conclusion, there is a virtual
recognition of its premisses, an act of Faith may be said (improperly)
to include in it the reasoning process which is its antecedent, and to
be in a certain aspect an exercise of Reason; and thus is coordinate,
and in contrast, with the three (improper) senses of the word
"Reason" above enumerated, viz., explicit, evidential, and
secular Reason.
"If Reason is the faculty of gaining knowledge upon grounds
given, an act or process of Faith is an exercise of Reason, as being
an instrument of indirect knowledge concerning things external to
us," xi. 8, 9.
14. Faith, viewed in contrast with Reason in these {xvii} three senses, is
implicit in its acts, adopts the method of verisimilitude, and starts
from religious first principles.
Vide iv. 6; x. 27, 44; xi. 1, 25; xii. 3, 27, 37.
15. Faith is kept from abuse, e.g. from falling into superstition, by
a right moral state of mind, or such dispositions and tempers as
religiousness, love of holiness and truth, &c.
This is the subject of the twelfth discourse; in
which, however, stress ought to have been also laid upon the
availableness, against such an abuse of Faith, of Reason, in the first
and second (improper) senses of the word.
The Author has lately pursued this whole subject at considerable
length in his "Essay in Aid of a Grammar of
Assent."
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Title
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FIFTEEN SERMONS
PREACHED BEFORE
THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
BETWEEN A.D. 1826 AND 1843
By JOHN HENRY NEWMAN
SOMETIME FELLOW OF ORIEL
COLLEGE
"Mane semina tuum, et
vespere ne cesset manus tua. Quia nescis, quia
magis oriatur, hos aut illud; et si utrumque simul, melius
erit."
NEW
IMPRESSION
LONGMANS, GREEN,
AND CO.
39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
NEW YORK, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA
1909
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