Saturday, July 24, 2010

Fr. Lawrence Boadt CSP (1942-2010)

Catholic Old Testament scholar Fr. Larry Boadt passed away today at the age of 67. Below is a brief description of his life, from the Paulist website:

Eternal rest grant unto him O Lord,
And let perpetual Light shine upon him.
May his soul
And the souls of all the faithful departed
Through the mercy of God
Rest in peace.
Amen.


Father Lawrence E. Boadt, CSP
A funeral Mass of Resurrection will be offered for Father Lawrence Edward Boadt, CSP, at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 at the Church of St. Paul the Apostle, 60th Street and Columbus Avenue in New York City. Visitation and wake will take place at the church from 2-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. on Tuesday July 27. Immediately following the funeral, interment will take place in the Paulist Fathers section of St. Thomas the Apostle Church Cemetery in Oak Ridge, N.J. Father Boadt, a member of the Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle (Paulist Fathers) for 47 years, died July 24 after a long illness. He was 67.

Born the son of attorneys Loren A. and Eleanor (Power) Boadt in 1942, Father Boadt grew up in the St. Paul the Apostle parish located in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. Paulist archivist Father John Lynch was newly ordained when he first met Father Boadt, then a fifth-grader in the parish school. Father Lynch recalls seeing the makings of a priest in the young altar server and Cub Scout.

“He was dependable and enjoyed serving the church,” Father Lynch said. He noted that Father Boadt kept his close association with St. Paul’s as a student at Loyola High School in Los Angeles; he graduated from Loyola in 1960.  Father Lynch was not surprised to hear the young man entered the Paulist novitiate on Sept. 6, 1962. He was ordained a Paulist priest on February 22, 1969.

Father Boadt earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from St. Paul’s College Washington, D.C., master’s and licentiate in sacred theology degrees from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and licentiate in sacred Scripture and doctoral degree in biblical studies and Near Eastern languages from the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome.

“That was extraordinary,” observed Father Lynch. “Not many people can accomplish that, as the mastery of ancient languages is incredibly difficult. He was the type of priest who could do anything.”

Father Boadt’s first priestly assignment was as associate pastor at St. Andrew’s parish in Clemson, S.C., from February to October of 1969. Father Boadt then headed to Rome for advanced Scripture studies where he served on the parish staff at Santa Susanna, the Paulist parish in the city.

Father Boadt returned to the United States to teach at Fordham University in New York City from 1974-76 while becoming an editor at the Paulist Press in 1975. He taught at St. John’s University in Queens from 1975-76 while still working at Paulist Press.

He returned to Washington, D.C., as associate professor of Sacred Scripture at the Washington Theological Union, where he taught from 1976-1997.

“There was a program for working students where they took a 3-hour class once a week, and he could still keep the students engaged through that long class after they had worked all day,” said Father Lynch, who taught at The Catholic University in Washington, D.C. for many years. “He was a superb teacher.”

Father Boadt continued as editor at the Paulist Press, becoming vice president in 1997. He had served as publisher and president of Paulist Press from 1998 until his illness in 2010.

According to Father Lynch, Father Boadt continued the Paulist work of evangelization through the printed word while expanding the Press’ extraordinary contribution to ecumenism and interreligious dialogue, especially Christian-Jewish relations.

“Building on the work of his predecessor Father Kevin Lynch, there is no publisher in North America who has done more to advance Catholic-Jewish relations than Larry Boadt,” said Father Michael B. McGarry, president of the Paulist Fathers.

Father Boadt authored several books, including Reading the Old Testament: An Introduction, Jeremiah 26-52, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Nahum, and Jeremiah 1-25. He also edited many titles, such as Why I Am A Priest: 30 Success Stories and The Life of St. Paul.

“His legacy will be his writings,” said Father Lynch, noting “Reading the Old Testament” is one of the most widely used texts in Scripture courses. “This is a big loss for the Paulists.”

6 comments:

rolf said...

I'm am very sorry to hear about Father Boadt's passing. I just attended his seminar last March at the Religious Ed. Congress in Los Angeles. He didn't look good then, he sat down during his hour long talk and explained that he was recovering from a recent operation. I've had Father Boadt as an instructor several times before that and always enjoyed hearing him speak. May God rest his soul and bring his servant home!

Qohelet said...

I used intro textbook on the OT and it very informative and balanced. May he rest in peace.

Timothy said...

Yes, I heard him give a series if lectures on Deutoronomy two years ago which were quite good. His book, Reading the Old Testament, is a pretty standard OT intro in many Catholic schools. Also, it is interesting that one if his last published works was the Lectio Divina Bible by Paulist Press.

patrick said...

I have to tell you, without exaggeration, Larry Boadt was the nicest person I have ever met. He had a soul of unparalleled clarity that just radiated warmth and sincerity. We were not close friends, barely associates, but there was never a time I was with him that I did not feel in the Divine Presence due to his profound and universal charity. he was humble, totally without pretense, and welcomed each person he encoutnered with undivided attention. He was a model of priestly and Christian life.

Timothy said...

Patrick,

Thank you for sharing your experience with Fr Larry. I did not know him at all, except for hearing him at a conference give a few talks, but he did seem to be a genuinely nice person.

JimBooth said...

I have just learned of Fr Lawrence's death. He was one of the three outstanding exemplars of personal and priestly life, Maestus sum, Fr.Jim Boothman