Jacques Loew OP (31 August 1908 – 14 February 1999) was a French Dominican friar and priest, who founded both the Mission ouvrière Saints-Pierre-et-Paul and – with René Voillaume – the School of the Faith in Fribourg, Switzerland. He is best known for starting the worker-priest movement.
Jacques Loew | |
---|---|
Personal | |
Born | |
Died | 14 February 1999[a] Échourgnac, France | (aged 90)
Religion | Catholic Church |
Known for | Worker-priest movement |
Organization | |
Order | Order of Preachers |
Senior posting | |
Ordination | 1939 |
Biography
editJacques Loew was born in 1908 in Clermont-Ferrand, the only child of August Pierre Loew, a medical doctor, and Jeanne Maximilienne (née Gerber).[2] The family comprised middle-class socialists and Dreyfusards with anti-clerical sentiments.[3] Loew grew up in Nice and, although he was baptized Catholic, he attended Protestant Sunday school.[2] He later studied law and political science in Paris, before finishing his schooling at the Sanatorium Universitaire in Leysin, Switzerland, due to a case of tuberculosis.[2] When his schooling was complete, he registered with the bar in Nice, but his nascent law career was disrupted by another bout of tuberculosis.[2][6] Returning to the sanatorium in Leysin for medical treatment, he converted to Catholicism at 24 after reading the Gospel.[6] Prior to his official reception into the Catholic Church, he traveled to La Valsainte, a Carthusian monastery in Gruyère, Switzerland, where he was particularly impressed by the dom, Jean-Baptiste Porion , who further solidified his conversion and encouraged him to meet Stanislas Fumet and his wife, Ainouta, who encouraged him further.[2] He was fully received into the Catholic Church in October 1932, with the Fumets serving as his sponsors.[2]
In 1934, Loew joined the Dominican Order, becoming a friar in 1935 before being ordained a priest in 1939.[2][6][1] Soon after, he began working alongside Louis-Joseph Lebret with the Economie et Humanisme group in Lyons,[6] as one of its founders.[2] Lebret instructed him to learn about the working class and study its condition in order to better be able to minister to it, particularly to the French secularized working class.[1][3][2][6] In 1941, he began to work in Marseilles as a longshoreman, which gave him a lasting impression about the distance between working people and the priesthood.[1][6][3][5] Between 1942 and 1944, Loew and about ten priests established the Popular Family Movement (Mouvement populaire des familles; MPF) and four of them requested the Bishop of Marseilles, Jean Delay , authorize them to begin evangelizing "in the framework of a missionary parish".[2] In November 1945, Delay entrusted the parish of Saint-Louis , a working-class neighborhood north of Marseilles, to two diocesans – Jean Gentile and Georges Hallauer – and two Dominican religious – Loew and André Piet.[2] The presence of factories and communists as well as its proximity to the docks and the absence of any strong religious communities made it appeal to the worker-priest missionaries.[2]
In 1947, Loew was entrusted with the parish at La Cabucelle and later the one at Port-de-Bouc,[4] which contained several secular priests who were sympathetic to Loew's views on labor.[6] Loew eventually advocated that some priests should work in labor, such as car factories, in order to better understand the everyday lives of their flocks.[1] In 1947, Karol Wojtyła – who later became Pope John Paul II – visited Loew in Marseilles and was impressed by the work, writing afterward: "Father Loew came to the conclusion that the [Dominican] white habit by itself does not say anything any more today [...] Living among workers he decided to become one of them."[1]
Wojtyła considered the work to be "apostolic" and the only correct way for the Church in France to reach non-believers.[1] As the worker-priest movement took on a greater role in left-wing politics – Loew had at one point briefly joined the General Confederation of Labour[2] – the Vatican became concerned that the role of priest was being subordinated to the role of worker.[1] In 1951, Loew sent a long defense of the movement to Giovanni Montini, then-assistant secretary of state for the Vatican who would later become Pope Paul VI.[1] Despite Loew's defense, the worker-priests in Marseilles were ordered to stop work in the summer of 1953[2] and Pope Pius XII formally condemned the movement in 1954.[1][3][6] Loew resigned his labor work and continued his priestly duties, though he continued to defend the idea of priests in labor, writing that "[o]f course a priest can belong to a trade union. This does not mean selling out your priesthood."[1]
Later, Loew continued his ministry, establishing the Mission ouvrière Saints-Pierre-et-Paul in Aix-en-Provence in 1955, serving as superior general until 1973.[4] After the mission's foundation, he went to Africa, later moving to São Paulo in 1963.[2][3] The intensity of the mission's work – which was managing operations in France, the Sahara, Canada, Italy, Switzerland, and Japan[2] – caused Loew to leave the Dominican Order in order to devote himself wholly to the mission's cause.[3][2] In 1965, Paul VI recognized the mission as an apostolic institute,[2] commenting that he wished "this new foundation, which flows from the love of Christ the worker, grows and makes the love of the Father shine".[3]
In 1969, he moved to Fribourg, Switzerland, where he and René Voillaume established the School of the Faith,[5] which served as an educational institution for educators.[1] Loew remained the director until his retirement in 1981.[4] In 1971, Paul VI invited Loew to preach the Lenten retreat at the Vatican.[1]
In his old age, Loew retired to monastic life, living in religious houses at the Cîteaux and Tamié abbeys beginning in 1981 and 1986, respectively,[2][5] followed by two and a half years living as a chaplain to the nuns at the hermitage at L'Albère in the Pyrenees.[2] In 1991, he settled in a community of Trappist nuns at the Notre-Dame de Bonne-Espérance Abbey in Échourgnac where he eventually died in 1999.[2][1][5]
In 2006, the School of the Faith was dissolved and converted into the Jacques Loew International Foundation which is a French-language biblical scholarship group operating in Curitiba, Brazil; Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire; Wrocław, Poland; and Fribourg.[4]
Works
edit- Les dockers de Marseilles ('The Longshoremen of Marseilles', 1944)[7]
- En mission proletarienne ('On Proletarian Mission', 1946)[8][1]
- Si vous saviez le don de Dieu ('If You Knew the Gift of God', 1958)
- Journal d'une mission ouvrière ('Journal of One Worker's Mission', 1959)[6][9]
- Dynamisme de la foi et incroyance ('Dynamism of Faith and Unbelief', co-authored with Georges Cottier, 1963)[10]
- Comme s'il voyait l'invisible: Un portrait de l'apôtre d'aujourd'hui ('As If He Saw the Invisible: A Portrait of the Modern-Day Apostle', 1964)[3][11][b]
- Dans la nuit, j'ai cherché ('In the Night, I Sought', 1969)[12]
- La Flamme qui dévore le berger: pour une spiritualité de l'évangélisation ('The Flame That Devours the Shepherd: For a Spirituality of Evangelizing', 1969)[13]
- À temps et à contretemps: Retrouver dans l'Église le visage de Jésus-Christ ('On Time and Off Beat: Rediscovering the Face of Jesus Christ in the Church', co-authored with Yves Congar and René Voillaume, 1969)[14][c]
- Ce Jésus qu'on appelle Christ: Retraite au Vatican en 1970 ('This Jesus We Call Christ: Retreat to the Vatican in 1970', 1970)[15]
- Les Cieux ouverts: chronique de la mission Saints Pierre et Paul ('The Open Skies: A Chronicle of the Sts. Peter and Paul Mission', 1971)[16]
- La prière à l'école des grands priants ('Prayer at the School of Great Praying', 1975)[17]
- Face to Face with God: the Bible's Way to Prayer (in English, 1977)[18]
- Vous serez mes disciples: Annonciateurs de l'Évangile, réflexions et réflexes ('You Will Be My Disciples: Announcers of the Gospel, Reflections and Reflexes', 1978)[19]
- Paraboles et Fariboles ('Parables and Nonsense', co-authored with Jacques Faizant, 1978)[20]
- Histoire de l'Église par elle-même ('History of the Church Herself', co-authored with Michel Meslin, 1978)[21]
- Parole de Dieu: Langage humain et communautés chrétiennes ('Word of God: Human Language and Christian Communities', co-authored with Pierre Grelot, 1980)[22]
- Mon Dieu dont je suis sûr ('My God of Which I Am Certain', 1983)[23][d]
- La vie à l'écoute des grands priants ('The Life of Listening to Great Prayers', 1986)[24]
- Le bonheur d'être homme ('The Joy of Being Human', co-authored with Dominique Xardel, 1988)[25]
- Jésus, où te chercher? ('Jesus, Where to Find Thee?', 1992)[26]
- Vivre l'Évangile avec Madeleine Delbrêl ('Living the Gospel with Madeleine Delbrêl', 1994)[27]
References
editNotes
edit- ^ The Independent erroneously reports the date of death as 13 February;[1] other sources uniformly report 14 February.[2][3][4][5]
- ^ Two subtitles exist for this book: Un portrait de l'apôtre d'aujourd'hui ('A Portrait of the Modern-Day Apostle') and Être apôtre à l'école de saint Paul ('Being an Apostle in the School of St. Paul')
- ^ Each author wrote one part of the book; Congar wrote the first part (Autorité et liberté dans l'Église, 'Authority and Liberty in the Church'), Voillaume the second (Les conditions d'une saine rénovation, 'The Conditions of a Healthy Renewal'), and Loew the third (Être hantés par Jésus-Christ, 'Being Haunted by Jesus Christ').
- ^ Published in two parts: Part I and Part II
Citations
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Corley, Felix (27 February 1999). "Obituary: Fr Jacques Loew". The Independent. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "LOEW Jacques, Pierre". Maitron (in French). 8 September 2012. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Chatel, Florence (3 March 2021). "Jacques Loew, " le docker de Dieu "". La Croix (in French). Retrieved 13 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Gachet, André. "Qui est Jacques Loew?" [Who is Jacques Loew?]. Fondation Internationale Jacques Loew (in French). Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e "Méditer avec Jacques Loew" [Pondering with Jacques Loew] (PDF). Mission ouvrière Saints-Pierre-et-Paul. 2019. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "PERSONAE: 5. Jacques Loew, O.P." Blackfriars. 41 (482). Wiley: 228–230. 1960. ISSN 1754-2014. JSTOR 43816005. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1945). Les dockers de Marseille: analyse type d'un complexe. Documents économie et humanisme (in French). Économie et humanisme. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1961). En mission prolétarienne (in French). ISBN 978-2-02-000483-1.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1963). Journal d'une Mission ouvrière (in French). ISBN 978-2-02-000512-8.
- ^ "Père Jacques Loew 1908 – 1999: Bibliographie" [Father Jacques Loew 1908 – 1999: Bibliography] (PDF). Retrieved 16 March 2024.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (2008). Comme s'il voyait l'invisible (PDF) (in French). Paris: Cerf. ISBN 978-2-204-08660-8.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1991). Dans la nuit j'ai cherché (PDF) (in French). Paris: Cerf. ISBN 978-2-204-04323-6.
- ^ Xardel, Paul; Loew, Jacques (1993). La flamme qui dévore le berger (in French). ISBN 978-2-204-04881-1.
- ^ Loew, Jacques; Congar, Yves; Voillaume, René (1969). À temps et à contretemps: Retrouver dans l'Église le visage de Jésus-Christ [On Time and Off Beat: Rediscovering the Face of Jesus Christ in the Church]. CERF.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1996-01-01). Ce Jésus qu'on appelle Christ: Retraite au Vatican 1970 [This Jesus We Call Christ: Retreat to the Vatican in 1970] (PDF) (in French). Paris: Cerf. ISBN 2-204-05373-2.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1971). Les Cieux ouverts: chronique de la mission ouvrière Saints-Pierre-et-Paul, 1955-1970 (in French). Cerf. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1985). La prière à l'école des grands priants (in French). ISBN 978-2-213-01640-5.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1977). Face to Face with God. New York: Paulist Press. ISBN 978-0-8091-0227-3.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1978). Vous serez mes disciples: Annonciateurs de l'Évangile, réflexions et réflexes [You Will Be My Disciples: Announcers of the Gospel, Reflections and Reflexes] (PDF) (in French). Paris: Fayard Mame. ISBN 2-7289-0033-7.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1978). Paraboles et fariboles (PDF) (in French). Paris: Fayard. ISBN 2-213-00602-4.
- ^ Loew, Jacques; Meslin, Michel (1978). Histoire de l'Église par elle-même [History of the Church Herself] (in French). Paris: Fayard. ISBN 2-213-00706-3.
- ^ Loew, Jacques; Grelot, Pierre (1980). Parole de Dieu: Langage humain et communautés chrétiennes [Word of God: Human Language and Christian Communities] (in French).
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1983). Mon Dieu dont je suis sûr [My God of Which I Am Certain] (in French). ISBN 978-2-7289-0165-4.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1986). La vie à l'écoute des grands priants [The Life of Listening to Great Prayers] (PDF) (in French). Paris: Fayard : Mame. ISBN 2-213-01758-1.
- ^ Loew, Jacques; Xardel, Dominique (1988). Le bonheur d'être homme [The Joy of Being Human] (in French). Paris: Centurion. ISBN 978-2-227-32040-6.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1992). Jésus, où te chercher? [Jesus, Where to Find Thee?] (in French). ISBN 978-2-907429-23-8.
- ^ Loew, Jacques (1994). Vivre l'Évangile avec Madeleine Delbrêl [Living the Gospel with Madeleine Delbrêl] (in French). Paris: Centurion. ISBN 2-227-43612-3.
Further reading
edit- Préat, Marie-Paule (1974). Jacques Loew ou Le défi évangélique [Jacques Loew or the Evangelist Challenge] (in French). Paris: Fayard Mame. ISBN 2-250-00599-0.
- Bérard, Marie-Gabrielle (2000). Jacques Loew, serviteur de la parole [Jacques Loew, Server of the Word] (in French). Saint-Maurice: Editions Saint-Augustin. ISBN 2-88011-176-5.
- Masson, Robert (2000). Jacques Loew: Ce qui s'appelle la Foi [Jacques Loew: What Is Called Faith] (in French). ISBN 978-2-84573-029-8.
- Cougoul, Bernard (2006). Prier 15 jours avec Jacques Loew [Praying for 15 Days With Jacques Loew] (in French). ISBN 978-2-85313-494-1.
- Convert, Georges (2008). La quête de Dieu: De l'athéisme à la nuit de la foi [The Quest for God: From Atheism to the Night of Faith] (in French). Paris: Desclée de Brouwer. ISBN 978-2-220-05978-5.