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A poetical work. Includes "Firmly I believe and truly" as well as "Praise to the Holiest in the height." In plain text, HTML (uses Unicode), or Adobe Acrobat format. With portraits of Newman.
www.ccel.org
From "Discourses to Mixed Congregations". A sermon preached at St. Chad's Cathedral on the first Sunday in Lent of 1848. About mortification.
www.cin.org
Poem. In The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse.
www.bartleby.com
Cyber Hymnal: John Henry Newman
Six hymn texts or translations, including "Lead, Kindly Light" for which John Bacchus Dykes composed the tune "Lux Benigna." Portrait, historical background, lyrics, MIDI files and NoteWorthy Composer score for suggested tunes.
cyberhymnal.org
One of Newman's most famous sermons, and his last as an Anglican. Preached 25 September, 1843, at Littlemore.
www.newmanreader.org
A poem by Newman, included in The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse.
www.bartleby.com
The "longer" stations, written in 1860. With notes by Roger J. Smith.
landru.i-link-2.net
The "shorter" Newman stations, from his "Meditations and Devotions", published 1893.
landru.i-link-2.net
The Theory of Developments in Religious Doctrine
The last of Newman's University Sermons, delivered in 1843. The roles of faith and reason, the limitations of language, the purpose of dogma, are all explored in this brilliant lecture, undergirded by a keen understanding of human psychology.
www.fordham.edu
A provocative sermon on the virtue of faith, from "Discourses to Mixed Congregations".
www.ewtn.com
A remarkably moving sermon about the reorganization of the English hierarchy, preached before the bishops at the First Provincial Synod of Westminster, 13 July, 1852.
users.stargate.net