Monday, April 5, 2010

Ratzinger and Newman


The thought of the Venerable (and soon to be beatified [19 September 2010 in Coventry, England by Pope Benedict) John Henry Cardinal Newman was formative in the thought of the young seminarian Joseph Ratzinger. He attests to this in his published memoirs Milestones, p. 43 and in his 28 April 1990 presentation on the centenary of the death of the Cardinal.

"In January 1946, when I began my study of theology in the Seminary in Freising which had finally reopened after the confusion of the war, an older student was assigned as prefect to our group, who had begun to work on a dissertation on Newman's theology of conscience even before the beginning of the war. In all the years of his military service he had not lost sight of this theme, which he now turned to with new enthusiasm and energy.

"We were soon bonded by a personal friendship, wholly centred on the great problems of philosophy and theology. Of course, Newman was always present. Alfred Läpple - the name of the above-mentioned prefect - published his dissertation in 1952 with the title: Der Einzelne in der Kirche (The Individual in the Church).

"For us at that time, Newman's teaching on conscience became an important foundation for theological personalism, which was drawing us all in its sway. Our image of the human being as well as our image of the Church was permeated by this point of departure."




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