Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honors on John Henry Newman, an Anglican convert
The Vatican said Leo confirmed the opinion of the Vatican's saint-making office during an audience Thursday with its prefect, Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, and would make the decision official soon.
The designation is one of the most significant decisions of Leo's young papacy and also carries deep personal meaning: Newman was strongly influenced by St. Augustine of Hippo, the inspiration of Leo's Augustinian religious order.
The title of doctor is reserved for people whose writings have greatly served the universal church. Only three-dozen people have been given the title over the course of the church's 2,000-year history, including St. Augustine, St. Francis de Sales and St. Teresa of Avila.
Newman's path to being declared a doctor has been exceptionally quick, after Pope Benedict XVI beatified him during a visit to Britain in 2010. Pope Francis made him a saint in 2019, with then-Prince Charles in attendance.
Newman, a theologian and poet, is admired by Catholics and Anglicans alike because he followed his conscience at great personal cost. When he defected from the Church of England to the Catholic Church in 1845, he lost friends, work and even family ties, believing the truth he was searching for could only be found in the Catholic faith.
Newman was one of the founders of the so-called Oxford Movement of the 1830s, which sought to revive certain Roman Catholic doctrines in the Church of England by looking back to the traditions of the earliest Christian church.
But he gave up a brilliant academic career at Oxford University and the pulpit of the university church to convert to Catholicism. As a Catholic, he became one of the most influential theologians of the era, bringing elements of the Anglican church into his new faith tradition. He died in Britain in 1890.
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
11 hours ago
- Washington Post
Sheep are so much more than livestock. They are literary influencers.
Sheep! Where to begin? How about early Western civilization. Jason, our most famous Argonaut, retrieved the Golden Fleece, the wool from a winged ram. Jesus Christ is the Lamb of God. In the Middle East and in Europe, sheep husbandry, along with the wool trade, shaped commerce. The pastoral, a literary genre, would not exist without sheep. Sheep wandered into fairy tales, nursery rhymes, puppetry and the terrific poem 'The Sheep Child' by James Dickey. Centuries after industrialization and technology transformed the natural world came Dolly, our first clone, a sheep.
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Amsterdam is building tiny staircases to help cats exit its canals
Amsterdam has allocated up to €100,000 to install steps along city centre canals to help cats out of the water. The tiny wooden staircases aim to save felines and other animals from drowning in areas with high walls. According to animal welfare organisation Dierenambulance Amsterdam, 19 cats have drowned in the city's canals in the last six months – six of them in the city centre. Judith Krom from the Party for the Animals (PvdD) proposed that Amsterdam spend an unused €100,000 fund found in the city's biodiversity plan to fund the wildlife exit points. Councillor for animal welfare Zita Pels had already supported the plan but had previously noted that 'funding was lacking', said PvdD. On 10 July, the Amsterdam City Council voted in favour of Krom's motion. Krom said: 'A simple measure can prevent enormous animal suffering. 'The adopted motion demonstrates that as a city, we take responsibility for protecting the lives of animals.' The Dutch capital will work with Dierenambulance to identify areas where cats are most likely to drown before the small animal escape routes are installed. Steps will then be built at the highest-risk locations later this year to help cats safely climb back onto the shore. It's not the only city taking steps to improve canal safety for animals. In June, Amersfoort, a nearby city in the Netherlands, announced the construction of around 300 cat traps along its quays and canals this year. Amersfoort councillor Johnas van Lammeren said: 'Unfortunately, animals that end up in water in areas with high quays or quay walls can't get out and drown. 'Together with the animal ambulance, a research agency, and residents from Vathorst and other areas, we've mapped out where cat traps are needed. We'll be installing hundreds of them in the coming period, preventing a great deal of animal suffering.' The municipality plans to install approximately 300 cat stairs per year as part of an animal welfare sub-environmental program that the municipal council adopted in 2024.


New York Times
15 hours ago
- New York Times
In a Spanish Vineyard, an Unsung Engineer Finally Gets a Toast
The long, butter-colored building with green stripes lies low in a Spanish vineyard like a steel caterpillar. It is a rare species — believed to be the only prefabricated metal house of its type in Europe by a prolific yet little remembered French engineer named Ferdinand Fillod. The building, the Tropical Pavilion, a 969-square-foot steel structure dating to 1951, will be on view through September at Terra Remota, a winery in northeastern Spain. After that, architecture buffs can travel to Vietnam, Martinique or Réunion Island, east of Madagascar, if they want to see another example. Or they can buy this one. The price is 900,000 euros (about $1.06 million). Born in 1891, Fillod began his career manufacturing steel agricultural equipment, including boilers, manure tanks and storage sheds. With the increased demand for housing in interwar France, he developed ideas for affordable dwellings made of metal. He filed his first architectural patent in the late 1920s, several years before similar experiments by his better-known countryman Jean Prouvé, as historians have pointed out. The pavilion in Spain, which includes a 323-square-foot terrace, went on display in June after a restoration by its owner, Clément Cividino, the founder of a modern design gallery in nearby Perpignan, France. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.