The Portal Archive November 2011 | Page 12

THE P RTAL November 2011 Page 12 The Beatus and the Brute: The Conversions of Two Oriel Men by Br Sean of The Work Many of Newman’s friends at Oxford proved to have, all in their particular ways, very significant roles to play in his religious development. In a real sense the Senior Common Room of Oriel provided an ideal opportunity for a meeting of minds and hearts among some of the Nineteenth Century’s most influential Anglican Churchmen. Yet perhaps no two men at Oriel shared so much in common, on a personal basis, and displayed such sympathies, as Newman and Joseph Blanco White. Joseph Blanco White Joseph Blanco White (right) was an intriguing figure who had a rather impromptu career in the academic circles at Oxford during the height of Newman’s position as an Anglican in the 1820s. It gave them an opportunity to write works for a theological library for which they had both been commissioned. The publication of books would see the eventual divergence of these two friends. While Newman’s work had become almost entirely a work on the dangers Born in 1775 in Seville of an of Arianism and a sharp polemic Irish Father and a Spanish mother against the heterodoxy of his day, Blanco White was ordained to the Blanco White’s work was essentially Roman Catholic priesthood at the an apology of his rejection of a age of 23. In 1802 he underwent a Trinitarian faith. Reading Blanco profound spiritual crisis which saw him abandon not only his priestly ministry but also White’s work Newman was genuinely convinced that the Roman Catholic Church. Suffering from a near he had lost his mind. nervous breakdown he moved to Madrid and later to With the rise of the Oxford Movement Blanco White London in 1810, in what can only be described as an impassioned but contorted attempt to find the Truth. moved to Dublin and later to Liverpool. By 1839 in Oxford it was said of him that he had “collapsed into grand and beautiful visions complete infidelity.” Blanco White and Newman were Blanco White claimed in his autobiography that he both gifted with sharp intellects and a keen religious “shared grand and beautiful visions” with Newman. sense which led them both in an untiring search for They both had a love for Beethoven, whom Newman God. called “the Dutchman” and they frequently played duets on their violins. The arduous search which both undertook in the search for authenticity and truth led both men along Quite tellingly Thomas Mozley, Newman’s student, the way of life-changing decisions. While Newman observed the difference in the characters of the two men progressed from Evangelicalism to High-Church when they played music together: “Most interesting Anglicanism, and eventually to Roman Catholicism, in was it to contrast Blanco White’s excited and indeed which he was recently proclaimed a Beatus, the story agitated countenance with Newman’s sphinx-like of the equally gifted Blanco White was much different. immobility.” Further it was also Blanco White who, in 1827, explained to both Hurrell Froude and Newman His journey of faith took him from Roman Catholicism how to use the Roman Breviary. In the Long Vacation to Anglicanism and eventually to a complete denial of of 1831 both Newman and Blanco White were the sole the doctrine of the Trinity and the acceptance of a form residents at Oriel. of Unitarian belief, dying in obscurity in Liverpool.