In many ways, the Modernist Controversy was fought over how to interpret the thought of John Henry Newman. Wilfrid Philip Ward (1856–1916), who was one of Newman’s principal biographers, was concerned for Newman’s reputation in the wake of Pascendi Dominici Gregis (1907). This presentation investigates why Wilfrid Ward feared that Newman had been condemned and how he defended Newman’s writings against figures associated with modernism and those associated with anti-modernism. It looks at how Ward adopted, interpreted, and defended John Henry Newman’s theory of doctrinal development during the Roman Catholic modernist controversy. A theological overview of Ward’s project is provided, which is followed by a historical and theological discussion of a series of disagreements that he had with various theologians and commentators who were central to the modernist controversy.
Attached Paper
In-person November Annual Meeting 2026
Clearing Newman's Name: Wilfrid Ward on Newman during the Modernist Controversy"
Papers Session: Working Papers on Roman Catholic Modernism
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
Authors
