Joseph Fitzmyer

The Reverend Father
Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S.J.
Orders
Ordination 15 August 1951
Personal details
Born 4 November 1920
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Nationality American
Denomination Roman Catholic
Occupation Biblical Scholar, Theologian
Alma mater Loyola University Chicago
Catholic University of Leuven
Johns Hopkins University
Pontifical Biblical Institute

Joseph Augustine Fitzmyer, S.J. (born 1920), is an American Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and professor emeritus at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.. He specializes in biblical studies, particularly the New Testament, though he has also made contributions to the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and early Jewish literature.[1]

Life

Fitzmeyer was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1920. On 30 July 1938, he was admitted to the novitiate of the Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus, commonly known as the Jesuits, in Wernersville, Pennsylvania. After completing this stage of his formation in the summer of 1940, he was sent to study at Loyola University of Chicago, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree, then in 1945 a Master of Arts degree in Greek. He then studied theology in the Facultés Saint-Albert (Eegenhoven-Louvain), Belgium. He was ordained a Catholic priest on 15 August 1951. He was granted a Licentiate of Sacred Theology (S.T.L.) there by the Catholic University of Leuven in 1952, a doctorate in Semitics from the Johns Hopkins University in 1956, and an Licentiate in Sacred Scripture (S.S.L.) from the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome in 1957.

From 19581969, Fitzmyer taught New Testament and biblical languages at Woodstock College. Between 1969 and 1971, he taught Aramaic and Hebrew at the University of Chicago., then New Testament and biblical languages at Fordham University (19711974), at Weston School of Theology (in Cambridge, Massachusetts) (19741976) and finally in the Department of Biblical Studies at The Catholic University of America (19761986), as Professor of New Testament until his retirement in 1986. His publications cover Scripture, theology, Christology, catechesis and the Dead Sea Scrolls. He was a co-editor of the New Jerome Biblical Commentary, and also served as president of the Catholic Biblical Association of America (19691970), of the Society of Biblical Literature (1979) and of the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas (19921993). Fitzmyer was Speaker's Lecturer at the University of Oxford in 19741975, was the 1984 recipient of the Burkitt Medal of the British Academy and served on the Pontifical Biblical Commission from 19841995.[2][3]

Fitzmyer is currently part of the Jesuit community at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C..

Scholarship

Fitzmyer has published a large collection of works largely pertaining to biblical commentaries including scholarship within the Jerome Biblical Commentary,[4] the New Jerome Biblical Commentary,[5] and the Anchor Bible Commentary.[6] His contribution to the Anchor Bible Commentary includes work on The Gospel of Luke (in two volumes), Acts of the Apostles, 1 Corinthians, Romans and Philemon. As such, Fitzmyer has been a large contributor to the scholarship of the New Testament and to the scripture scholar's understanding of the writings of St. Paul. Fitzmyer has published three commentaries on Romans: The Jerome Biblical Commentary (1968), The New Jerome Biblical Commentary (1989), and the Anchor Bible Commentary (1993). This last work is a massive work over 800 pages in length. From this last work came a very practical and spiritually accessible work, Spiritual Exercises Based on Paul's Epistle to the Romans.[7]

The Spiritual Exercises Based on Paul's Epistle to the Romans is a creative endeavor to link biblical commentary and exegeses with modern spirituality. Through it, Fitzmyer lays out his interpretation of Paul's letter to the Romans in a more condensed form from his larger work in the Anchor Bible. Through heavy use of historical and rhetorical criticism, Fitzmyer opens up Paul's epistle on Paul's terms. In other words, Fitzmyer doesn't force Paul's message into the 21st century, but rather attempts to understand the apostle in his cultural context of the first century and bring that message to light in the modern era. By doing so, we learn that Paul was greatly influenced by his Jewish background and Greco-Roman setting. We also learn that Fitzmyer sees a sort of coherency in Paul's message. Some scholars will argue that Paul's theology is strictly dependent on the context that Paul is addressing. For example, the first letter to the Corinthians was written as a result of a crisis that had emerged amidst the community. As such, some scholars see the situational nature of the letter to be less applicable to outside situations. Fitzmyer rather sees that the work in Romans can and should be applied to our modern context in a way that can be life giving.

Fitzmyer claims that the essence of Paul's gospel can be summed up in Romans 3:21,24. "But now...all are justified freely by his grace through the redemption which comes in Christ Jesus." Though this clearly has shortcomings and misses the many nuances of what Paul has to say in Romans, one can see this as a sort of epicenter to Paul's writings. God's grace is given to all gratuitously, if one accepts it through faith in Christ Jesus. Furthermore, St. Paul uses the phrase "but now" in an eschatological fashion. Paul does not see the time of this gratuitous grace to be a future event, rather, all Christians currently reside in the love of God. It is through Fitzmyer's extensive textual criticism of Romans and other works that readers are able to come to a deeper understanding of St. Paul, the epistle to the Romans, as well as the modern applications and understanding of such a work.

Select publications

Books

Articles & Chapters

Festschriften

References

  1. "The Dead Sea Scrolls". Alba House.
  2. Schiffman, Lawrence. "Joseph Fitzmyer: An Appreciation".
  3. Donahue, John (2013). "Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S.J.: Scholar and Teacher of the Word of God". US Catholic Historian. 31 (4): 63–83.
  4. Brown, Raymond, S.S.; Fitzmyer, Joseph, S.J.; Murphy, Roland, O.Carm. (1969). The Jerome Biblical Commentary. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Inc.
  5. Brown, Raymond, S.S.; Fitzmyer, Joseph, S.J.; Murphy, Roland, O.Carm (1989). The New Jerome Biblical Commentary. Pearson.
  6. Fitzmyer, Joseph (1993). Romans: The Anchor Bible Commentary. Connecticut: Yale University Press.
  7. Fitzmyer, Joseph (1995). Spiritual Exercises Based on Paul's Epistle to the Romans. Maryland: Paulist Press.

External links

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