George Barry O'Toole, OSB (1886 – 26 March 1944[1]) was an American Catholic priest and activist. He was a member of the Benedictines and a founding member of the Catholic Radical Alliance.[2]
The Reverend Barry O'Toole OSB | |
---|---|
1st President of Fu Jen Catholic University | |
In office 1925–1929 | |
Succeeded by | Chen Yuan (historian) |
Personal details | |
Born | 1886 Toledo, Ohio, U.S. |
Died | Washington, D.C., U.S. | 26 March 1944
Alma mater | St. John College, Toledo, Ohio |
Career
editHe was important for clarifying the right of Catholics to conscientious objector status. He began his religious career as a parish priest and as a U.S. Army chaplain in World War I.
Education career
editHe taught philosophy at both St. Vincent College, Latrobe, Pennsylvania and Seton Hill College. He was the first president (rector) of the Catholic University of Peking.[3] He also was the head of the Philosophy department at Duquesne University.
Labor activities
editHe was a founding member of the Catholic Radical Alliance, an early labor support organization in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was important to the foundation of St. Joseph's House of Hospitality, also in Pittsburgh.
Pacifist activities
editIn 1939, he stated that a just war was nearly impossible, because the "modern abuse of universal conscription" made wars on so gigantic a scale as to be unjustifiable.[4] Later he testified before a Senate hearing in opposition to the Burke-Wadsworth Act, a conscription act pending before Congress in 1940.
Creationism
editO'Toole was the author of the creationist book The Case Against Evolution (1925). The book was dismissed by academics as a "religious and not a scientific work".[5]
Science writer Martin Gardner noted that O'Toole endorsed the "naive criticism of strata chronology" from creationist George McCready Price.[6]
Publications
edit- George Barry O'Toole (1925). The Case Against Evolution. The Macmillan Company.
- Ch'ien-li Ying and George Barry O'Toole (1929). The Nestorian Tablet at Sianfu: A New English Translation of the Inscription and a History of the Stone. Peking Leader Press, Peking.
- George Barry O'Toole. (1929). John of Montecorvino, First Archbishop of Peking. Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
- George Barry O'Toole and Quianli Ying (1931). Luo ji xue: Zhong Ying dui zhao. Beijing. OCLC 26088581.
- George Barry O'Toole and Theodore Jeske-Choinski (1936). The Last Romans "Ostatni Rzymianie": A Tale of the Time of Theodosius the Great. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
- George Barry O'Toole (1941). War and Conscription at the Bar of Christian Morals. Catholic Worker Press.
- Bishop Joseph M. Corrigan and George Barry O'Toole, editors (1944). Racism and Christianity; Race: Nation: Person. Social Aspects of the Race Problem, A Symposium. Barnes & Noble, Inc., New York. OCLC 150690057.
References
edit- ^ Southern Cross newspaper, 22 April 1944, p. 3
- ^ Day, Dorothy (1944). "Msgr. Barry O'Toole". Catholic Worker (June): 6–7. Retrieved July 12, 2008.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Priests, Pickets, Pickle Workers". Archived from the original on 2020-07-04. Retrieved July 12, 2008.
- ^ O'Toole, G. Barry (1939). "Against Conscription". Catholic Worker (November).
- ^ Numbers, Ronald L. (1992). The Creationists. University of California Press. p. 55. ISBN 0-520-08393-8
- ^ Gardner, Martin. (1957). Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science. Dover Publications. p. 133. ISBN 0-486-20394-8