Best-selling author, activist and Chicago priest Father Andrew Greeley died in his sleep Wednesday night. He was 85 years old.
He died at his apartment at the Hancock Center, said Greeley's long-time spokeswoman June Rosner.
Father Greeley wrote more than 50 best-selling novels and had a column in the Chicago Sun-Times.
His family released a statement," Our lives have been tremendously
enriched by having the presence of Fr. Andrew Greeley in our family.
First and foremost as a loving uncle who was always there for us with
unfailing support or with a gentle nudge, who shared with us both the
little things and the big moments of family life. But we were specially
graced that this man was also an amazing priest who recently celebrated
the 59th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood. He served the
Church all those years with a prophetic voice and with unfailing
dedication, and the Church he and our parents taught us to love is a
better place because of him. Our hearts are heavy with grief, but we
find hope in the promise of Heaven that our uncle spent his life
proclaiming to us, his friends, his parishioners and his many fans. He
resides now with the Lord of the Dance, and that dance will go on."
Greeley was a well-respected sociologist at the National Opinion Research Center in Chicago.
A family-written biography said he had been recovering and
resting at his Chicago home since a serious accident on Nov. 7, 2008.
At
NORC, Greeley was a research associate for the Center for Study of
Politics and Society, which investigates societal change in comparative
perspective. Greeley's work on the sociology of religion included
research on Catholicism, peoples' images of God, trends in belief in
life after death and many other aspects of religion.
"Greeley
busted myths about American Catholics. In scholarly and popular
writings, he brought to light Catholics' upward mobility and interpreted
what that meant for American society and the Catholic Church,"
according to Mike Hout, his longtime collaborator and the Natalie Cohen
Professor of Sociology & Demography at the University of California,
Berkeley.
He was born Feb. 5, 1928 in Oak Park. And grew up in
the Austin neighborhood on Chicago's West Side, decided he would be a
priest when he was a second-grade student at St. Angela's School. He
received a S.T.L. degree from St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in 1954, and
was ordained a priest the same year.
He was assigned as an
assistant pastor to Christ the King parish in the Beverly neighborhood.
He started writing for a religious newsletter, and when a Catholic
publishing house asked for something longer, he wrote his first book,
The Church and the Suburbs (1963).
While continuing his work as
an assistant pastor, he received permission to study at the University
of Chicago. He received his Ph.D in 1962, and that year became senior
study director at the National Opinion Research Center. Although he
continued being a priest, he was not assigned to a parish and allowed to
continue his work as a scholar.
At NORC, he forged a
research career rich in seeking the details of religious experience,
particularly the Catholic experience in the United States. His early
research came at a time when the Second Vatican Council, which opened in
1962, was changing Catholicism worldwide.
Greeley
was the author of more than 100 non-fiction books and 50 novels. In
1983, his donation to the University of Chicago established a faculty
chair in honor of his parents.
"For the last
quarter-century, my life as a priest has been devoted principally to
trying to establish a bridge between the church and scholarship, to
being a priest in the world of scholars and a scholar in the church," he
said at the time of the donation.
Twenty years after
making that donation, which he hoped would encourage dialogue between
Catholics and academics, he examined the controversies that had fallen
upon priests in the wake of sex scandals. The University of Chicago
Press published "Priests, A Calling in Crisis" in 2004.
His
findings revealed that priests report higher levels of personal and
professional satisfaction than doctors, lawyers or faculty members; that
they would overwhelmingly choose to become priests again; and that
younger priests are far more conservative than their older brethren.
In
2004 he and Hout wrote "The Truth about Christian Conservatives." It
was based on surveys from NORC's General Social Survey on practices,
beliefs and attitudes among conservative Christians and found a wider
range of opinion than people previously thought.
He
also taught sociology at the University of Chicago and the University of
Arizona. His course "God in the Movies" drew hundreds of undergraduates
a year at Arizona; the course "Sociology of Religion in Film" was also
popular at Chicago.
One of his novels, "The Cardinal Sins" (1981)
sold more than 3 million copies in English and was translated into a
dozen other languages. The dozen Nuala Anne McGrail novels reflect on
the many changes in Ireland from the 1970s to the current decade, while
the O'Malley family series is a microcosm of Catholic Chicago that
follows a family of Irish Americans from their immigration in 1900 to
prosperity in 1999.
For 40 years, he wrote a syndicated column
that appeared in dozens of newspapers, including the Chicago Sun Times
and the Tucson Citizen. He was a frequent contributor to the New York
Times and Catholic periodicals including the National Catholic Reporter,
Commonweal and America.