英語の表現が難しい文章を日本語訳してほしいです。
英語の本を訳さないといけないのですが、ここの部分がわからないので日本語訳してほしいです。長文でお手数ですが、よろしくお願い致します。
At this time there was still a widespread prejudice against the Catholic Church in the mind of the average Englishman, inherited from the religious controversies of the sixteenth century. Newman himself had shared in this prejudice during his Anglican days; and it was only after long and careful thought, as outlined in his Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, that he came to dispel his doubts. Many of his contemporaries were naturally unable to understand his conversion; and some even ventured to call in question the sincerity of his motives. Among the latter was the Victorian novelist, Charles Kingsley, who remarked that Newman did not seem to consider truth a necessary virtue. In order to defend not only his own integrity, but also the position of the Catholic Church, he set forth the history of his religious opinions in a new kind of spiritual autobiography, with the Latin title Apologia pro Vita Sua. In this book, which soon became a Christian classic, comparable to St. Augustine's Confessions and Pascal's Pensees, he exposed the deepest motives of his life, from the time of his first religious conversion, showing how he had been led from step to step by the "kindly light" shining in his conscience.
From first to last, in the depths of his mind and heart there is a fundamental awareness-akin to Descartes' philosophical intuition, but on the religious level-of "two luminous beings", himself and God. He is conscious not only of his own individual being-as in Descartes'" Cogito, ergo sum"-but also of the divine being within him and above him. This twofold awareness he discerns in his conscience, as the part of his being within which God speaks to him in an intimately personal encounter. What he finds in himself, he also receives from the Christian tradition-both Catholic and Protestant. It implies the twofold question, asked long ago by St. Augustine: " Who am I?"and "Who art Thou?"; and it finds the answer to each question in a loving union between the soul and God.
お礼
ありがとうございます。