The Portal Archive December 2011 | Page 19

THE P RTAL December 2011 Page 15 An Oxford Triumvirate by Brother Sean of The Work Surveying the Senior Common Room of Oriel College we find other Churchmen who figure prominently in the Oxford Movement, none more so than Joseph Blanco White, whom we previously reviewed. John Keble and Edward Bouverie Pusey were men of name and rank in Oxford. Together with Newman they would form the very nucleus of the Oxford Movement, giving it the intellectual vigour and influence it would need to have such wide ranging effect within Anglican life, worship and ecclesial discipline. Apologia Newman recounts in his Apologia of his bashfulness in the Senior Common Room in the presence of such towering figures in the very small world of Oxford academia. Yet these three men, who would stay in amicable contact throughout their whole lives, displayed interests which went beyond simply familiarity or personal sympathies. of Newman. He went up to Oxford at 14 and achieved a double first by the time he was 18. Keble’s controversial Assize Sermon of 14 July 1833 on “National Apostasy” was always considered by Newman as the beginning of the Oxford Movement. Keble was Newman’s senior by almost a decade. Born in Gloucestershire of a country vicar, he inherited his fathers High-Church tendencies and had been a fellow of Oriel since 1811. Edward Bouverie Pusey was in many ways similar to Newman. Born in 1800 he was a shy intellectual of aristocratic stock, gaining his Oriel Fellowship a year after Newman. Newman’s earliest memory of Pusey’s appearance paints a picture of a rather eccentric character: “His light curly head of hair was damp with cold water which his headaches made necessary for comfort; he walked fast with a young manner of carrying himself, and stood rather bowed, looking up from under his eye-brows, his shoulders rounded.” However Newman was impressed by his seriousness on matters of faith. The Christian Year Regius Professor of Hebrew Keble is perhaps most popularly known through his collection of devotional poetry, The Christian Year, which was published in 1827, went through some 158 editions, undeniably making it the single best selling volume of poetry in the nineteenth century. Academically Pusey was very much a linguist. He was appointed the Regius Professor of Hebrew in 1828. Aware of the liberal tenets which were being espoused by radical German biblical scholars, he set about learning German, spending several summers in a number of German universities. The providential interaction which Pusey, Newman and Keble exchanged over years at Oriel College saw them brought together in a common cause for the inner renewal of Anglicanism. Poetry would in fact become an important tool in the dissemination of the doctrinal ideals of the Tractarians. The Christian Year was intended to accompany the Book of Common Prayer, providing a High-Church commentary and devotional aid for prayer. The historian Owen Chadwick claims that when people met Keble they often found that his character was very much like his Christian Year – modest, quaint and unpretentious. Above all Pusey became aware of the very real dangers which rationalism were posing for theological research, and in this role he would have a defining influence in the Oxford Movement. It is no surprise that in the university the adherents of the Oxford Movement were in fact popularly known as the Puseyites, which confirms Newman’s own conviction that the contribution of men such as Pusey Despite his unpretentiousness Keble was certainly and Keble was not only valuable from a theological one of the University’s most illustrious men, and his perspective, but they also gave the cause for renewal academic career even more extraordinary than that weight, authority and influence.