![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |

53°
Partly Cloudy | 10MPH
NEWSROOM * CIRCULATION * ADVERTISING
Wednesday
March 2010
17

Ray McInerny, Sr., and his wife Jean, have lived in New Berlin for 32 years. A retired graphic artist, he now paints for his own enjoyment. This blog will attempt to present items of general interest to his New Berlin neighbors.
Ralph M. McInerny - February 22,1929 - January 29, 2010
Monday, February 1, 2010 we buried my brother in Cedar Grove Cemetery, Notre Dame, Indiana, a school in which he had taught for 55 years. He is buried with his first born, Michael and wife, Connie in the same plot. He was the best friend of all his siblings. Ralph was our seriocomical man. A person we could all turn to for discussions of consequence and matters on the light side, as Ralph was a lover of puns and good jokes. A great husband, father of seven and a warm, loving he-man.
Below, is a letter, reprinted with permission of Kevin Staley-Joyce, Junior Fellow, First Things.com. It first appeared in First Things.com on Sunday, January 31, 2010 and we're grateful to share it with you.
1. Dr. Christopher Kaczor at Loyola Marymount, sent along this note:
Ralph McInerny retired from the University of Notre Dame as the Michael P. Grace Professor of Medieval Studies, after serving in the philosophy department since 1955. He wrote more than 40 books in philosophy and other disciplines (including poetry), authored thousands of scholarly and general audience articles, edited three national magazines, authored more than 80 mystery novels (including the Father Dowling Mysteries), and I'm confident directed more dissertations than anyone in the history of Notre Dame.
One might think such a person would neglect his students, au contraire (a McInerny habit was to end sentences in lectures in Latin or French). He was my dissertation advisor and at the time he had around 7 other students as well. He was available for us virtually every afternoon in his 7th floor office of Hesburgh Library. If we gave him a dissertation chapter, he'd have it back to us like a serve in tennis. He gave us laptops. He arranged for extra funding (many of us had two or three kids, and none of us made more than $10,000 a year). He took us out to lunch (The Great Wall of China and the University Club were favorites). He'd give us copies of his scholarly books and novels. He helped get us jobs.
After graduation, he'd gather us back together for Summer Thomistic Institutes at Notre Dame featuring an international cast of senior scholars. He called forth the best from us by seeing it in us before we did. Most of all perhaps he provided a living model of a philosopher, a mentor, and a man who embodied virtues and commitments that inspired us all.
He was so extraordinarily kind to me that I told my wife he must be the uncle of my Minneapolis born birth mother whom I had not yet met. He invited me to work with him on various projects, to edit his work, and to see up close the life of a professor. When I think about how I hope to live the rest of my life, he is the model: Scholar, teacher, writer, family man, person of faith. No doubt he is enjoying his reward, meeting his Maker and, as an incidental benefit, his own model of the intellectual life, Thomas Aquinas.
Ray. Sorry for your loss.
Sorry to hear of his passing, you have our sympathy
Ray, my condolences on the loss of your dear brother
Ray,
I am sincerely sorry about your families loss. You have my condolences.
Ray, My condolences to you and your family.
Lou
Ray, I am sorry for your loss. It sounds like your brother was an extraordinary individual.
Today's Journal Sentinel has a death notice/tribute regarding Ralph McInerny. It is on page 2E (under the heading Deaths Elsewhere in Arts and Entertainment).
|
|||||||||||
Permalink | Email This Blog