John Hardon
John Anthony Hardon was an American Jesuit priest, writer, teacher and theologian. A candidate for sainthood since 2005, he is recognized by the Catholic Church as a Servant of God.
Early life
John Hardon was born on June 18, 1914, to John and Anna Hardon in Midland, Pennsylvania. When he was a year old, John Hardon Sr. died in an industrial accident. After the accident, Hardon was raised by his 26-year-old mother Anna Hardon. The two moved to Cleveland, Ohio.A devout Catholic, Anna Hardon never remarried "out of concern for the influence a possible stepfather might have on her son's vocation." John Janaro, a Hardon biographer, described Anna as "a woman of deep faith, a Franciscan tertiary who embraced her poverty and her difficult circumstances with courage and grace." Anna "attended daily Mass and received Holy Communion" and her home "had sacred pictures, a family holy water font, and a good deal of spiritual conversation." Hardon later recalled that they only spoke Slav at home. He contrasted it to English which he believed was "the worst language in the world to try to talk Catholicism in."
Hardon was Anna's only child, and she supported him by cleaning offices in Cleveland, often working nights. Janaro reports that as a child Hardon was "willful and self-possessed; he was determined that no one was going to tell him what to do"; but he was soon affected by his mother's example. Hardon would often recall that his mother told him that the very purpose of knees "are for kneeling to pray before God".
For added income Anna took in two young Lutheran girls as boarders, who lived with the family for at least eight years. At one point, the three-year-old Hardon protested at having to abstain from meat on Friday, unlike "sisters". To solve the problem, Anna asked the girls "My boy is growing up: he's asking embarrassing questions. Would you mind either abstaining from eating meat on Friday or find yourselves somewhere else to board?" The girls choose to join the Friday fast with permission from their minister. Hardon's positive relationships with the two girls helped form his later religious thinking: "Years before the Ecumenical Movement I had come to respect and cherish Protestants."
At age six, John Hardon received religious instruction from a Sister Benedicta. She told her students "Whatever you ask Our Lord on your First Communion day, you will receive." Hardon later said that his first communion request was, "Make me a priest." Hardon then started attending daily mass with his mother. At age eight, he received his confirmation. Hardon later said that he called on the Holy Spirit to give him "the grace of martyrdom."
Early schooling
Hardon received his primary education at St. Wendelin School in Cleveland. During a Church History class in eighth grade, Hardon became impressed with the Jesuit order. He learned about Saint Peter Canisius, a 16th-century Dutch Jesuit priest who preached against the Protestant Reformation in Germany. Hardon then attended Cathedral Latin High School in Cleveland, operated by the Brothers of Mary.Unwilling to leave Anna on her own, Hardon decided not to pursue the priesthood immediately after high school. Instead, "with the help of savings his mother had put aside specifically for his future", he attended John Carroll University in Cleveland. He decided then to become a medical doctor; however, he later said that the Jesuit charism had a "profound impact" on him:
In his third year at John Carroll, under LeMay's guidance, Hardon decided to enter the priesthood. He changed his course of studies to include Latin, philosophy, and college theology, earning his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1936.
Entering the Jesuits
Although he wished to join the Jesuits, Hardon felt a duty to look after his increasingly ill mother. He again considered abandoning the priesthood and marrying a childhood friend. Hardon applied and was accepted to the medical school at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. LeMay insisted to Hardon that he "did indeed have a priestly vocation". Anna also told him "the very same God who was calling him would guard every hair on his mother's head," and "if the reason he was going to marry was so that she would not be alone without anyone to care for her, he was not to be concerned." Finally convinced that the priesthood was the right choice, Hardon entered the Society of Jesus as a novice on September 1, 1936.Hardon later confessed to LeMay that he felt he had abandoned his mother. LeMay told him "John, you belong in the Society of Jesus. What you are experiencing is a temptation. Put it out of your mind." Hardon continued regularly to correspond with his mother but to avoid temptation, he avoided visiting her for seven years until ordered to do so by his superior.
Priesthood
Studies
As a Jesuit novice, Hardon studied at West Baden College in West Baden Springs, Indiana. He published his first article in 1941 on the study of Latin. He obtained a Master of Philosophy degree at Loyola University Chicago in 1941. On June 18, 1947, Hardon was ordained to the priesthood. His mother attended the ordination, along with the now grown up girls from his childhood. Anna Hardon died in 1948.In 1949, the Jesuits sent Hardon to Rome to attend the Pontifical Gregorian University. While at the Gregorian, he was appointed director of the graduate library. His superiors tasked him with retrieving from borrowers a number of library books that the Vatican had recently declared as heretical. He recalled:
Hardon earned his Doctor of Sacred Theology degree from the Gregorian in 1951 with a dissertation on St. Robert Bellarmine: A Comparative Study of Bellarmine's Doctrine on the Relation of Sincere Non-Catholics to the Catholic Church. That same year, Hardon received a papal medal.
Teaching
After receiving his doctorate in 1951, Hardon petitioned the Jesuits to send him to Japan as a missionary. However, due to his chronic asthma, the Jesuits instead assigned him to the faculty of West Baden College, teaching theology to Jesuit students. He pronounced his final vows to the Jesuits on February 2, 1953, including the Fourth vow to the pope.Interested in other faiths, Hardon began to study comparative religion. In eastern religions, he found "not only areas that were compatible with Christianity but also sections of thought that were clearly influenced in a direct manner by contact with the Christian message." He began using his extensive knowledge of Asian customs and religions to train missionaries for Asia.
While still teaching full-time at West Baden, several Protestant schools invited him to their campuses as a visiting professor. They included Bethany Theological Seminary in Richmond, Indiana, the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, and Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. According to author Paul Likoudis,
When Hardon became a visiting professor at Seabury-Western, the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury in England sent a personal representative to the seminary to mark "the first time in history an Anglican/Episcopalian seminary had appointed a teacher who was a member of the once hated and feared Society of Jesus."
In 1962, Hardon joined Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Michigan, to teach Roman Catholicism and Comparative Religion. Five years later, in 1967, he returned to Illinois to teach Jesuit scholastics at two Jesuit theological schools. He also served as a visiting professor at St. Paul University in Ottawa, Ontario where he taught furloughed missionaries classes in missiology.
Hardon provided advice on liturgy to the participants in the mid-1960s to the Second Vatican Council in Rome. Hardon sympathized with Catholics who objected to some Council reforms, "but he never for a moment accepted the premise that a schismatic act was ever justified." He later worked for the Congregations for the Clergy in Rome to implement these reforms.
In 1974, Hardon was appointed as a professor at St. John's University in New York City at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Catholic Doctrine. He worked with the Sisters of Notre Dame of Chardon, Ohio to write Christ Our Life, a series of religious textbooks for elementary students.
Publishing
Hardon wrote over forty books on religion and theology. His book Protestant Churches in America received critical acclaim in both Catholic and Protestant circles. It was followed by Religions of the World.Hardon's most notable publication was Catholic Catechism: A Contemporary Catechism of the Catholic Church. Paul VI was displeased with doctrinal errors in the controversial Dutch Catechism, published in 1966. In line with his letter Solemni Hac Liturgia, the pope requested that Hardon produce a new English catechism. By the time of Hardon's death in 2000, The Catholic Catechism had sold over one million copies.
Hardon published the Modern Catholic Dictionary, a Catholic reference work. He also contributed articles to six encyclopedias. Hardon also wrote articles for Catholic newspapers and magazines and served as executive editor of The Catholic Faith magazine.
Establishments
In 1969, Hardon helped found the Consortium Perfectae Caritatis, a group of conservative American nuns who broke away from the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. In 1971, Pope Paul VI asked Abbot Ugo Modotti to increase Catholic evangelism through print, film, radio and television. Hardon told an interviewer in 2003 that, Modotti enlisted Hardon and several other American clerics in this social communication initiative. Two weeks before Modotti died, he asked the pope to put Hardon in charge of it.In 1972, Hardon founded Mark Communication in Canada and later the Pontifical Catechetical Institutes in the United States, to train religious educators. He also assisted those establishing similar organizations. Hardon in 1974 co-founded the Institute on Religious Life, an apostolate dedicated to increasing the number of men and women in religious orders.
Hardon founded several Catholic organizations, including Inter Mirifica and Holy Trinity Apostolate in Sterling Heights, Michigan He also served as an adviser to many Catholic organizations, including Catholics United for Faith, an international lay organization to promote evangelism.
In the early 1980s, Pope John Paul II instructed Mother Teresa of Calcutta to have the Missionaries of Charity, her order religious order, evangelize the poor. Cardinal Josef Ratzinger asked Hardon to instruct the sisters on evangelism. Hardon wrote a catechetical course for the Missionaries. Hardon later adapted the Missionaries course into a series of home study courses for lay Catholics. In 1985, Hardon founded the Marian Catechist Apostolate, which uses these home study courses to prepare lay people for catechetical ministry.
Beginning in 1988, Hardon started recording lectures with Eternal Life of Bardstown, Kentucky. Due to his halting voice, Eternal Life digitally remastered Hardon's recordings. Lecture topics included the Ignatian Exercises, the Apostles' Creed, the Eucharist, Catholic Sexual Morality, and Angels and Devils. Hardon's first lecture series was about artificial contraception. Hardon viewed it as having "greased the skids for the culture of death". By that, Hardon believed that it was the source for public acceptance of abortion rights for women and assisted suicide.
In 1996, Hardon helped establish the first Call to Holiness conference near Detroit.