Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Fr. James V. Schall (1928-2019): Generous heart, towering intellect
Fr. James V. Schall (1928-2019): Generous heart, towering intellect
Jun 16, 2026 1:25 PM

The first time I met Fr. James Schall it was around 1984 when I was a seminarian at the Catholic University of America in search of a spiritual director. We met and although Fr. Schall never became my spiritual director, he became an intellectual mentor instead, as well as a dear personal friend and longtime collaborator with the Acton Institute. As might be considered a reward for faithful service, Fr. James V. Schall, S.J., died during Holy Week. I first met Fr. Schall at Georgetown where he had faithfully taught from 1977 until his retirement in 2012. Prior to that he taught at the Gregorian University in Rome and then at the University of San Francisco. In the early 1990s he made time to lead an early Toward a Free and Virtuous Society conference for the Acton Institute, where I recall the ease of his Socratic approach to taking the participants through a reading of Thomas Aquinas’ Treatise on Government. He was a man of towering intellect, with a simple, clear and direct approach. He possessed a wide range of interests and indefatigable energy as is evidenced in the more than 30 books and countless essays and academic articles authored.

The Acton Institute was privileged to be one the many venues of publication that were graced with Fr. Schall’s contributions. Fr. Schall’s Acton published monograph, On Christians and Prosperity, is an excellent example of the generous heart and deeply analytical mind he brought to bear on so many issues throughout his long and fruitful life. For a taste of his thinking on these issues please see his interview on the subject in Religion and Liberty as well as two excerpts from the book ‘The moral dimension of work’ and ‘How do we help the poor?’. Fr. Schall was also an early contributor to the Journal of Markets and Morality and I mend his article ‘Justice: The Most Terrible of the Virtues’. Fr. Schall possessed the rare gift of being able to capably address a wide range of audiences from the academic to the popular.

Fr. Schall was a man of duty who saw his principal duty as his service to the Lord Jesus Christ,

We should see in duty not just something we “must” do but also something worth doing because it is good. The highest human purposes for which all the orders of economics and politics exist still need to be consciously recognized and articulated. The kingdom of God, as Augustine taught us, is the end of our being. Without it, we will spend our lives searching for it everywhere but where it is.

Fr. Schall’s life and work is an inspiration of how to bring one’s own to service of God and neighbor.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
International Day of the Girl, and a Lot of Them Are Missing
Today, October 11, has been declared the International Day of the Girl Child by the United Nations. According to the Day of the Girl Campaign located in Washington, DC, this day “serves to recognize girls as a population that faces difficult challenges, including gender violence, early marriage, child labor, and discrimination at work” for females under 18. Admirably, this day seeks to draw attention to global issues such as the high drop-out rate of girls from school, child marriage, and...
‘To Fail or To Flourish: Does My Life and Work Really Matter?’
On Tuesday, the Acton Institute co-sponsored, along with Regent University’s College of Arts & Sciences and School of Divinity, To Fail or To Flourish: Does My Life and Work Really Matter? The purpose of the event was to initiate a conversation on campus on the topic of human flourishing involving students, faculty, staff and administration. The day started with a session by Dr. Corné Bekker entitled, “Does the Bible Say Anything About Flourishing?” Dr. Bekker leads the Ph.D. in Organizational...
Monday: Calihan Scholarship Deadline
Don’t miss out on your chance to apply for a scholarship for the spring 2013 semester! If you or someone you know would like to be considered for a Calihan Academic Fellowship, the deadline to submit application materials is Monday, October 15. Eligible candidates include graduate students or seminarians pursuing fields such as theology, philosophy, economics, or related themes promoted by the Acton Institute. Visit the Calihan Academic Fellowship page on Acton’s website for more detailed information on eligibility and...
The Religious Liberty Case Against Religious Liberty Litigation
Current lawsuits against the HHS contraceptive mandate may undermine religious liberty in the long run, says Vincent Phillip Munoz. Not all religious objectors to the mandate are likely to be exempted even if the lawsuits are successful, and judges violate the core meaning of religious liberty when they assess plaintiffs’ religious character: The religious liberty lawsuits ask for exemptions from the HHS mandate for those religious believers who pliance conscientiously impossible. Exemptions would seem to be reasonable, and politically feasible,...
C. S. Lewis and the free market
C.S. Lewis may not have written specifically about economics, but as Harold B. Jones Jr. explains, there’s reason to consider him a defender of the free market: . . . C. S. Lewis had much mon with the great free-market thinkers of his time. He is discovered on careful examination to have been writing about many of the same issues as Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek and on these issues to have been in perfect agreement with them. The...
The Church is Not a Bomb Shelter
“The world thinks of the state’s sovereignty in terms of power; Catholic social doctrine understands the state to be in service to all,” says Patrick Brennan, a professor of law at Villanova University. Brennan has a new paper, ‘Religious Freedom,’ the Individual Mandate, and Gifts: On Why the Church is Not a Bomb Shelter.’ From the abstract: The Health and Human Services’ regulatory requirement that all but a narrow set of “religious” employers provide contraceptives to employees is an example...
Audio: Rev. Sirico on the Biden vs Ryan Debate
Acton Institute President and Co-Founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico was invited on America’s Morning News, a syndicated radio show, earlier this week to talk about tonight’s vice-presidential debate between Vice President Joe Biden and Rep. Paul Ryan. Rev. Sirico talks about how the candidates’ Catholic faith will play into the exchange. Click on the player below to listen in. [audio: If you haven’t read Rev. Sirico’s new book, Defending the Free Market: The Moral Case for a Free Economy, then...
The New and Improved AU Online
In case you haven’t already heard the rumor, allow me to fill you in: AU Online has an awesome, newly revamped website and digital learning platform. AU Online is designed to make the resources and tools of a typical Acton conference available through a university-level, online environment. The AU Online team hopes the new features and functions will make this program your go-to destination for the integration of faithful intentions and sound economic reason. To kick off the 2012-2013 schedule...
Angola Prison and Chuck Colson’s Legacy
In mid-September I ventured down to South Louisiana to visit and tour the Louisiana State Penitentiary, monly known as Angola Prison. mentary this week “Angola Prison, Moral Rehabilitation, and the Things Ahead” is based on that visit. Burl Cain, Angola’s warden, will be featured in an ing issue of Religion & Liberty. I will be providing more information on Angola and my time down there, but think of mentary as an introduction of sorts to what I witnessed. A portion...
Acton Commentary: Vincent de Paul, Welfare Statist?
Historical church figures are being recruited for partisan political purposes, which means it must be election season. In this mentary (published October 10), Acton Research Fellow Kevin E. Schmiesing looks at the case one HuffPo writer makes for St. Vincent de Paul as a supporter of President Barack Obama. But Schmiesing warns that “viewing Vincent’s work as little more than political activism not only distorts his biography; it reduces his extraordinary, grace-enabled sanctity to ordinary passion.”The full text of his...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved