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Why the name?
The "Newman Movement" had its origins just over 100 years ago when a group of Catholic students in Wisconsin formed the "Melvin Club" named after the person at whose house they met. Similar groups of Catholic support were starting all over the country. In 1893, the Catholic Club at the University of Pennsylvania chose to call themselves the "Newman Club" in honor of the great scholar who had just died three years earlier. During the 1900’s, the Newman movement grew, and today Newman Clubs (Catholic Centers) can be found on most college campuses throughout the United States. Why is ours called the The unity, harmony and continuity of faith and reason, of revealed and natural human knowledge, pervade the writings of Aquinas. As a Dominican priest and man of the Gospel, he was an ardent defender of revealed truth. Yet, he was broad enough and deep enough to see the whole natural order as coming from God the Creator, and to see reason as a divine gift to be highly cherished. When asked why he stopped working on the Summa Theologica, Aquinas replied, "I cannot go on . . . All that I have written seems to me like so much straw compared to what I have seen and what has been revealed to me." From his Summa Theologica: "Hence we must say that for the knowledge of any truth whatsoever man needs divine help, that the intellect may be moved by God to its act. But he does not need a new light added to his natural light, in order to know the truth in all things, but only in some that surpasses his natural knowledge." (1-2, 109, 1)
Information about St. Thomas Aquinas & Cardinal Newman
graciously borrowed from the Southeast Missouri State Newman Club. |
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