William J. Byron

William J. Byron

Columnist and former president, Catholic University

The Reverend William J. Byron, S.J., a former president of Catholic University, is on leave this year from his position as research professor at the Sellinger School of Business and Management, Loyola College in Maryland to serve as president of St. Joseph's Preparatory School in Philadelphia. The “On Faith” panelist served as interim president of Loyola University , New Orleans in 2003-04 and for three years prior to that, was pastor of Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Washington , D.C. From 1992 to 2000, he taught "Social Responsibilities of Business" at Georgetown University , where he was Distinguished Professor of the Practice of Ethics and served as rector of the Georgetown Jesuit Community. He was president of Catholic University for a decade (1982-92). Byron writes a syndicated bi-weekly column, Looking Around , for Catholic News Service, and is the author of a dozen books, including A Book of Quiet Prayer (2006); The Power of Principles: Ethics in the New Corporate Culture (2006) and Answers from Within: Spiritual Guidelines for Managing Setbacks in Work and Life (1998) . A founding director and past chairman of Bread for the World , Byron was also named the 1999 recipient of the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities' Theodore M. Hesburgh Award for his contributions to the advancement of Catholic higher education. In that same year, he received the Council of Independent Colleges' Academic Leadership Award. Byron, who holds a doctorate in economics as well as theology degrees, served in the U.S. Army's 508 th Parachute Infantry Regiment before entering the Jesuit order in 1950. He was ordained a priest in 1961. Close.

William J. Byron

Columnist and former president, Catholic University

The Reverend William J. Byron, S.J., a former president of Catholic University, is on leave this year from his position as research professor at the Sellinger School of Business and Management, Loyola College in Maryland to serve as president of St. Joseph's Preparatory School in Philadelphia. more »

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Living Generously in the Service of Others

This is a particularly personal question for me since I'll turn 80 on May 25th.

Am I satisfied? Yes, but not completely. I doubt that I'll ever be (or should be) completely satisfied.

Am I grateful? Most assuredly so. I'm grateful for the gift of life, faith, family, friends, health, the opportunities I had to develop intellectually and spiritually. I'm grateful for so many opportunities to serve, especially service to others in need. I'm grateful for the gift of priesthood in the Jesuit order.

I believe that the good life--the really good life--is a live lived generously in the service of others. I fall short of that goal, but keep trying to move toward it (a goal without a goal line) and that motion forward is, in a sense, a measure of satisfaction.

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