The Portal February 2019 | Page 10

THE P RTAL February 2019 Page 10 Thoughts on Newman Septuagesima Some reflections by The Revd Dr Stephen Morgan O f course, the cycle of Saints days needed to be pruned – that happens periodically to ensure room for newer saints – and the priority given to Sundays was, I suppose, inevitable, but other changes were less necessary and, with the benefit of hindsight appear to be not entirely unalloyed blessings. One such change was the abolition of the pre-lenten season of “the gesimas”: Septuagesima, Sexagesima (often the occasion of sniggers amongst choirboys) and Quinquagesima. Here is not the place to set out the respective arguments for and against that change. Suffice it to say that, first, with the clarification of the perennial legitimacy of what we are encouraged to call the Extraordinary Form and, secondly, with the establishment of the Ordinariate “Use” of the Ordinary Form, this season is now back amongst us and I, for one, am glad, mightily so. There is a stark difference between the evidence for the respective preaching styles of Blessèd John Henry Newman during his Anglican and Catholic periods. For the period prior to his submission to the Church, we have five volumes of sermons, often reused and revised, but always a complete speaking text, written in his own very careful style. After his conversion, we have mostly only outline notes: we are left to our own devices to construct exactly what Newman might have said from our wider knowledge both of Newman and of the symphonic whole of Catholic doctrine left to us, as Pope St John XXIII put it, by God’s good providence, by the Great Council of Trent.   Septuagesima Sunday, the Sunday occurring seventy (for which the Latin is “septugesima”) days before Easter is a case in point. Newman’s Anglican Sermons preached on this annually recurring Sunday exist in full prose form and, another sharp distinction between the Anglican and the Catholic Newman, are significantly longer, more extensive, closely argued and wider- ranging than those from after October 1845. Newman the Catholic might well have preached each year on this Sunday but, since homilies were obligatory only at the main Sunday Mass before Vatican II, it is unlikely. We do, however, have at least one set of notes of a Septuagesima sermon: the set published in his Sermon Notes, edited by the Fathers of the Birmingham Oratory and published first in 1913. Frankly, I can do no better in this column of occasional reflections of Newman and the Faith than to let him speak through those notes but before I do, I can wish you a holy and fruitful season: On Labour—Our Work Here 1. Introduction—Before Lent the Church begins by setting before us work as an introduction. 2. Epistle and gospel—beginning of Genesis. Even before the fall, and much more after— thorns and thistles. 3. This the contrast between before the fall and after. The ground typifies our hearts—and now we have labour. 4. And this will show us the heinousness of the fall, for before it, the labour, the effort, was to sin—before as difficult to sin as now to be a hero. Grace was so great. 5. But grace being gone, the lower nature rose against the upper as the upper against God. 6. This then, I say, our work—labour of one kind or another. It has different names—self- discipline, self-denial, penance, reformation, mortification—all meaning the bringing under of ourselves. Don’t think it hard if you find a thing difficult; it is your work. 7. This implied in the subduing our ‘ruling passion,’ so called. 8. Also exemplified in particular examination. 9. Also done in suffering. Suffering is a work. On satisfaction and satispassio; on bearing pain with sweetness or patience, with sweet faces, ways, voice, etc., etc. On the discipline when associated with the thought of Christ’s sufferings, more meritorious; for the mind goes with it and is not otiose. 10. Thus let us begin this sacred time.