I noticed a recent tribute in relation to the canonization
on the 13th October this year of Cardinal John Henry in
the Tablet.
But I found the following of interest in relation to his views
on slavery. In 'A Church That Can and Cannot Change' - By JOHN T.
NOONAN, JR. - Published: May 22, 2005 the author notes that on
October 26, 1863, Thomas William Allies, a lecturer on history at Oxford
University and a convert to the Catholic Church, sent Newman the draft of a
lecture in which he pronounced slavery to be intrinsically evil. He wanted his
friend's opinion. Newman replied cautiously: "I do not materially differ
from you, though I do still startle at some of the sentences of your
Lecture." The source of his startle was St. Paul.
The reply by Newman was as follows: :
"That which is intrinsically and per se evil, we
cannot give way to for an hour. That which is only accidentally evil, we can
meet according to what is expedient, giving different rules, according to the
particular case. St. Paul would have got rid of despotism if he could. He could
not, he left the desirable object to the slow working of Christian principles.
So he would have got rid of slavery, if he could. He did not, because he could
not, but had it been intrinsically evil, had it been in se a sin, it must have
been said to Philemon, liberate all your slaves at once."
The author Noonan then notes that Newman appears to let his imagination wander
from the slaveowner to the slave, declaring:
"I had rather have been a slave in the Holy Land,
than a courtier of Xerxes or a solider of Zingis Khan." This fantasy is
not a digression. In putting himself in the place of a slave, Newman is
following a classic pattern.
He supposes his soul to be unaffected by the body's
servile state. Imagined in this way, slavery does not destroy or even impair
the essential self. Newman's vision of slavery is the antithesis of an
account of slavery that sees it as an assault upon the person.
The dualism implicit in this view is a prime reason why
slavery was so long seen as acceptable.
Another perspective is the conclusion of scholar
Professor Gerard Magill of Duquesne University-in his book ‘Religious Morality in John Henry Newman”, Gerald Magill,
Springer International Publishing, taken from page 121.
What I find interesting in the defence by Magill(
if you can call it that ) of Newman, since it is rests on 2 claims. He
references St Paul- whereas I think it very likely St Paul would have condemned
slavery it if he could, but at that time he would have faced the wrath of the
authorities. For he never comes out and endorses it either or seeks to uphold
the practice of slavery. St Paul
aims to steer an impossible middle course to try and take way the resentment of
the slave but at the same time also rally against any brutality and abuse by
the owners. Calling on slaves to be obedient to their masters, was
interrupted as slavery was to be accepted since ‘liberty could only be expected
in the next world’. That doesn’t endorse it, nor could it provide any moral
justification.
The other defence is that things
were moving slowly in the church, so it was only just coming to grips with the
immorality of slavery.
But previous
Popes had condemned slavery, inclusive of Gregory XIV – 1639 and Benedict - 1741. The fact that these
concerns never filtered down into official teachings is yet another
story.
Hence I think Magill is being a
bit magnanimous.
"What is shocking for readers today is he [Newman] did not recognize
slavery as a “natural perception” of wrong that is “absolutely immoral.”
First,
it is astounding that he wrote his comments long after slavery had been
abolished across the British Empire – the Slavery Abolition Act occurred in
1833. Second, his remark about the “slow working of Christian principles”
appears to reflect his principle of economy about the progressive unfolding of
truth. In reality, it took until the late nineteenth century and beyond for the
modern world to recognize the abhorrence of slavery. Newman also recognized
that point (“to enslave is a horrible sin”), but seemed oblivious to viewing
slavery as being intrinsically wrong. In fairness, two points can be made to
explain his stance, On the one hand, the evangelical strain in his thought
perhaps found it too difficult to take a position that was not consistent with
that of St. Paul in Scripture. After all, biblical hermeneutics, especially in
Catholicism, developed in a very sophisticated manner after Newman’s time. On
the other hand, official Catholic teaching seems to have taken another 100
years to condemn slavery, not occurring effectively until Vatican II. 19 19 Pastoral
constitution (1966), number 27.
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