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Lectures on Justification
Addressing salvation through faith or works, these lectures, published 1838, record Newman's journey towards becoming a Roman Catholic in 1845.
John Henry Newman (Author)
9781108053754, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 9 August 2012
462 pages
21.6 x 14 x 2.6 cm, 0.58 kg
One of the leading Christian theologians of the nineteenth century, John Henry Newman (1801–90) was already a famous and controversial figure, as the leader of the Oxford Movement, by the time he published these lectures in 1838. He was still a Church of England vicar, but in 1845 he would join the Roman Catholic Church and eventually become a cardinal. The thirteen lectures here, addressing the doctrine of salvation through faith, cover issues of obedience, righteousness, Christ's resurrection, faith as the sole source of justification, the role of rites and works, and that of preaching. Offering a complementary rather than dichotomous interpretation of the competing theological positions, this work reveals the progress of Newman's thinking and reflects his journey towards leaving the Church of England.
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1. Faith considered as an instrument of justification
2. Obedience considered as the formal cause of justification
3. Primary sense of the word justification
4. Derived senses of the word justification
5. Discordant senses given to the word righteousness
6. On the gift of righteousness
7. The characteristics of the gift of righteousness
8. Righteousness viewed as a gift and as a quality
9. Christ's resurrection the source of justification
10. Justification by faith only
11. On the nature of justifying faith
12. Faith viewed relatively to rites and works
13. On preaching the gospel
Appendix.
Subject Areas: Theology [HRLB]
