Religion:George Tyrrell

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Short description: Irish Jesuit priest (1861–1909)

George Tyrrell

SJ
Orders
Ordination1891
Personal details
Born(1861-02-06)6 February 1861
Dublin, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Died15 July 1909(1909-07-15) (aged 48)
Storrington, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
DenominationRoman Catholic, Latin Church
Occupation
  • Priest
  • theologian
  • scholar

George Tyrrell SJ (6 February 1861 – 15 July 1909) was an Anglo-Irish Catholic priest and a controversial theologian and scholar. A convert from Anglicanism, Tyrrell joined the Jesuit order in 1880 and was ordained as a priest in 1891. He was a prolific writer whose efforts to adapt and reinterpret Catholic teachings in light of modern science and culture made him a central figure in the controversy over modernism in the Catholic Church that flared up towards the end of the 19th century. Tyrrell rejected the neo-scholastic thinking then dominant among the Jesuits and in the Vatican, insisting that the Church's response to the problems faced by modern believers could not be merely to reiterate the theological doctrines systematized in the 13th century by Thomas Aquinas.

Tyrrell enjoyed a high reputation as a liberal Catholic author in the late 1890s, but he then came into conflict with his Jesuit superiors and with the Vatican authorities. The anti-modernist campaign launched by Pope Pius X led to Tyrrell's expulsion from the Jesuits in 1906. After Pius condemned modernism in the encyclical Pascendi Dominici gregis (1908), Tyrrell wrote two letters to the London Times rejecting its reasoning and conclusions. Their publication caused him to be excommunicated by the Bishop of Southwark, Peter Amigo. Tyrrell never recanted his modernist opinions, but he received the Catholic last rites just before his death in 1909.

Early life

George Tyrrell was born on 6 February 1861 in the city of Dublin. His father William Tyrrell, a journalist and sub-editor of the Dublin Evening Mail, had died shortly before George's birth. The Tyrrells belonged to the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland and were intellectually distinguished. George was a first cousin of the classicist Robert Yelverton Tyrrell, who became Regius Professor of Greek at Trinity College, in the University of Dublin.

The family had to move repeatedly due to the financial straits in which it fell after the father's death. George's elder brother "Willie", although crippled in infancy by a fracture of the spine and afflicted by persistent ill health, was a brilliant student at Rathmines School and went on to an outstanding career as a classicist at Trinity College, before his early death in 1876. George himself became deaf in the right ear following a childhood accident.[1]: 33 

The headmaster of Rathmines, Dr Benson, agreed to remit George's fees in light of the success of his brother Willie, and George entered the school in 1869. His performance was poor, however, and his mother sent him as a boarder to Midleton College, where he was subjected to a tougher discipline. Due to her difficulties affording the fees, George soon returned to Rathmines, where in 1876 he completed the sixth form at the bottom of his class. He then studied privately in the hopes of earning a scholarship to study Hebrew at Trinity College, but he failed the required examination twice. He gained admission to Trinity in 1878 but, without a scholarship, his mother could not afford to send him there.

More interested in religion than in academic work, the young Tyrrell began worshipping at All Saints Church, Grangegorman, where he was exposed to a moderate high church Anglicanism.[2] Around 1877 he met Robert Dolling, an Anglo-Catholic priest and a Christian socialist who would go one to exert a strong influence on Tyrell.[2] With Dolling's encouragement, Tyrrell began to go to confession at the Catholic St Mary's Church and to attend mass at the Gardiner Street Church, run by the Jesuits, while continuing to take Anglican communion at Grangegorman.

In August 1878, Tyrrell took a teaching post at Wexford High School, but he was unhappy with the school's uncompromising Protestantism and did not return after the Christmas break.[1]: 135  The rector of Grangegorman, Dr Maturin, confronted Tyrrell about his attendance at Catholic masses, and Tyrrell then decided to accept an invitation from Dolling to join him in London, where Dolling was active in Saint Martin's League, an Anglican devotional society that worked with local postmen.

Jesuit

In London, Tyrrell planned to earn his living by collaborating with the work of the St Martin's League, under the supervision of Dolling and of Father Alexander Mackonochie, the vicar of St Alban's Church, Holborn. Tyrrell, however, was unimpressed by what he saw as the insincere ritualism practiced at St Alban's. On Palm Sunday, he wandered into St Etheldreda's, a Catholic church on Ely Place, and was powerfully struck by the Catholic Mass. Of this experience he later wrote in his autobiography: "Here was the old business, being carried on by the old firm, in the old ways; here was continuity, that took one back to the catacombs."[1]: 153 

Tyrrell soon converted and was received into the Catholic Church in 1879. Feeling called to the priesthood and inspired by a recent historical novel by popular French writer Paul Féval that presented the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) in a heroic light, Tyrrell applied to join the Society, but the provincial superior advised him to wait a year. He spent the interim teaching at Jesuit schools in Cyprus and Malta.[3] He joined the Jesuits in 1880 and was sent to the novitiate at Manresa House, in Roehampton. As early as 1882, his novice master suggested that Tyrrell withdraw from the Jesuits due to "mental indocility" and dissatisfaction with a number of Jesuit customs, approaches, and practices. Tyrrell was, however, allowed to remain. He later stated that he believed he was more inclined to the Benedictine spirituality.

After taking his first vows, Tyrrell was sent to Stonyhurst College to study philosophy as the first stage in his Jesuit formation. He then returned to the Jesuit school in Malta, where he spent three years teaching, before being sent to St Beuno's College, in Wales, to take up his theological studies. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1891. After a brief period of pastoral work in Lancashire, Tyrrell returned to Roehampton for his Tertianship. In 1893, he lived briefly at the Jesuit mission house in Oxford, before taking up pastoral work at St Helens, Merseyside, where he was reportedly happiest during his time as a Jesuit. A little over a year later, he was sent to teach philosophy at Stonyhurst. Tyrrell then began to have conflicts with his superiors over the traditional Jesuit approach to teaching philosophy.[3]

Pope Leo XIII's 1879 encyclical Aeterni Patris had promoted the teaching of a Scholastic philosophy, based on the works of Saint Thomas Aquinas, in Catholic schools and seminaries. Tyrrell admired Aquinas, but he rejected the Scholastic approach as inadequate. He became convinced that the Jesuits were not teaching the philosophy of Aquinas himself, but rather the narrow interpretation of it introduced centuries later by Jesuit theologian Francisco Suárez (see Neo-scholasticism).

In 1896, Tyrrell was transferred to the Jesuit house on Farm Street, in London.[4] There Tyrrell discovered the work of Maurice Blondel. He was also influenced by Alfred Loisy's biblical scholarship. Tyrrell first met Friedrich von Hügel in October 1897 and they became close friends. Part of Tyrrell's work while at Farm Street was writing articles for the Jesuit periodical The Month. He had the occasion to review some works by Wilfrid Ward, and for a time, came to share Ward's views of a moderate Catholic liberalism. Tyrrell's gifts of literary expression were showcased in two collections of religious meditations, Nova et vetera (1897) and Hard Sayings (1898). That work earned him a wide readership and a reputation as a liberal Catholic thinker in the mould of John Henry Newman.[2]

In 1899, Ward invited Tyrrell to join the "Synthetic Society", which counted among its members several of the leading religious and philosophical thinkers in Britain, including Friedrich von Hügel, Arthur Balfour, Charles Gore, Edward Talbot, Richard Haldane, and Henry Sidgwick. The Society met every month at the Carlton Club. His participation in it reinforced Tyrrell's confidence that Catholics should participate in the debates of the broader intellectual community.

Modernist controversy

Between 1891 and 1906, Tyrrell published more than twenty articles in Catholic periodicals, many of them in the United States.[5] In "The relation of theology to devotion", which appeared in The Month in 1899, Tyrrell argued for the primacy of devotion over the intellectual abstractions of philosophy and theology.[2] He insisted that philosophy and theology may clarify the misunderstandings that arise from a naïve devotion, but that

God has revealed himself [...] not to the theologian or the philosopher, but to babes, to fishermen, to peasants [...] and therefore He has spoken their language, leaving it to the others to translate it (at their own risk) into forms more aceptable to their taste.[2]

In External Religion (1899), Tyrrell argued that all of the structures and sacraments of the Church exist only to help reproduce the life of Jesus in the lives of his followers.[2] Tyrrell was critical both of Catholic neo-Scholasticism and of the liberal Protestant scholarship of the day. In an often quoted attack on Adolf von Harnack's approach to Biblical criticism, Tyrrell wrote that "the Christ that Harnack sees, looking back through nineteen centuries of 'Catholic darkness', is only the reflection of a Liberal Protestant face, seen at the bottom of a deep well."[6] On the other hand, Tyrrell advocated "the right of each age to adjust the historico-philosophical expression of Christianity to contemporary certainties, and thus to put an end to this utterly needless conflict between faith and science which is a mere theological bogey."[7]: 185  In Tyrrell's view, the pope should not act as an autocrat but a "spokesman for the mind of the Holy Spirit in the Church".[8] Tyrrell befriended other Catholic intellectuals who shared his concerns about reconciling Church doctrine with modern thought, including the English nun Maude Petre and the French Jesuit priest Henri Brémond.[2]

Tyrrell's open conflict with the Catholic authorities was triggered by his article "A Perverted Devotion", published in the Weekly Register in 1899, in which he criticized the literalistic preachings on hell by two Redemptorist authors.[2] Given "the essential incapacity of finite mind to seize the absolute end which governs and moves everything towards itself",[7]: 118  Tyrrell recognized that some subjects were matters of "faith and mystery". He "preferred to admit that the Christian doctrine of hell as simply a very great mystery, one difficult to reconcile with any just appreciation of the concept of an all-loving God".[9] The English Jesuit Herbert Thurston had reviewed and authorized the article for publication, but it aroused controversy in Rome and was later found to be "offensive to pious ears" by Father General Luis Martín. Tyrrell was then assigned to a small Jesuit residence in Richmond, North Yorkshire, which he jokingly called domus impossibilium nostrorum ("the house of our impossibles"). There Tyrrell enjoyed the peace and quiet afforded by his lack of responsibilities, the distance from London, and the policy of the Jesuit in charge of the residence, Fr. Farmer, of not interfering with Tyrrell's personal activities.

Between 1900 and 1904, Tyrrell published several pseudonymous works that emphasized the primacy of the human will over the intellect in matters of religion. Tyrrell saw the capacity of the will to be united with God as the center of the religious life, and expressed concern that the rationalistic approach to religious questions favored by the neo-Scholastics did not meet the pastoral needs of modern Catholics. In those works, Tyrrell also described the Catholic Church as fallible, but also as a vehicle to the immanent Spirit.[2]

Expulsion and excommunication

Tyrrel's Jesuit superiors ordered him in 1906 to repudiate his modernist theses. Tyrrell refused to do so and was consequently dismissed from the Jesuits by Father General Franz X. Wernz. He was the only Jesuit expelled from the society in the 20th century until a subsequent Father General, Pedro Arrupe, expelled the Dutch priest Huub Oosterhuis in 1969.

With the explicit condemnation of modernism by Pope Pius X, first in the decree Lamentabili sane exitu of July 1907 and then in the encyclical Pascendi Dominici gregis of September 1907, Tyrrell's fate was sealed. Tyrrell wrote two letters to The Times in which he strongly criticized that encyclical.[4] According to Tyrrell,

The whole of this vast controversial structure is poised by a most ingenious, logical tour de force on the apex of a science-theory and psychology that are as strange as astrology to the modern mind, and are practically unknown outside Seminary walls, save to the historian of philosophy. Touch this science-theory, and the whole argument is in ruins.[10]

According to Tyrrell, Pascendi equated Catholic doctrine with Scholasticism, thus reflecting a wholly naïve view of the historical development of the Church. Thus, while Pascendi intended to show that the "modernist" is not a Catholic, it succeeded only in showing that he is not a Scholastic.[3] For this public rejection of Pascendi, Tyrrell was deprived of the sacraments in what Peter Amigo, the Bishop of Southwark, characterized as "a minor excommunication".[11] Unlike his contemporary the French modernist theologian Alfred Loisy, Tyrrell was never tried by the Congregation of Index or by the Holy Office. His case was always in the hands of the Cardinal Secretary of State, Rafael Merry del Val, who worked closely with Bishop Amigo.[12]

Death and legacy

The stone erected at the grave of George Tyrrell

Tyrrell's last two years were spent mainly in Storrington. He suffered from chronic nephritis (known by physicians at the time as "Bright's disease") and became increasingly ill. He was given extreme unction on his deathbed in 1909, but as he refused to abjure his modernist views he was denied burial in a Catholic cemetery.[13] A priest, his friend Henri Brémond, was present at the burial and made a sign of the cross over Tyrrell's grave, which resulted in Bishop Amigo temporarily suspending Fr. Brémond a divinis.[14]

In a letter to Arthur Boutwood, Tyrrell had said shortly before his death that "my own work —which I regard as done— has been to raise a question which I have failed to answer", namely the meaning of Christianity in the modern world.[2] Tyrrell was convinced that Christianity had to face up to the challenges of biblical criticism and natural science, but he was personally ill-equipped to deal with them at a deep intellectual level. His biographer Nicholas Sagovsky considers that Tyrrell's talents lay primarily in the "literary communication of religious ideas".[2] According to Sagovsky, many of the reforms that Tyrrell advocated were eventually adopted by the Catholic Church in the years following the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965), but "it is doubtful whether the institutional Roman Catholic church in any age could have contained a spiritual writer so gifted, so reckless, and so provocative".[2]

Selected writings

Articles

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Tyrrell, George (1912). Autobiography and Life of George Tyrrell. I. London: Edward Arnold. https://archive.org/details/a611438901tyrruoft/. Retrieved July 17, 2025. 
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 "Tyrrell, George (1861–1909)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36606.  (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Rafferty, Oliver, S.J. "George Tyrrell and Catholic Modernism", Thinking Faith 6 July 2009
  4. 4.0 4.1 Hurley, Michael, S.J. "George Tyrrell and John Sullivan: Sinner and Saint?", Thinking Faith, 14 July 2009
  5. Portier, William L. "George Tyrrell in America." U.S. Catholic Historian, vol. 20, no. 3, 2002, pp. 69–95. JSTOR
  6. George Tyrrell, Christianity at the Crossroads (1913 ed.), pg. 44
  7. 7.0 7.1 Tyrrell, George (1912). Autobiography and Life of George Tyrrell. II. London: Edward Arnold. https://archive.org/details/a611438902tyrruoft/. Retrieved July 17, 2025. 
  8. Saunders, F.S. (2011). The Woman Who Shot Mussolini: A Biography. Henry Holt and Company. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4299-3508-1. https://books.google.com/books?id=2ZwGwBXd86UC&pg=PA47. Retrieved 16 April 2018. 
  9. Barmann, Lawrence F., Baron Friedrich Von Hügel and the Modernist Crisis in England, CUP Archive, 1972, p. 144 ISBN 9780521081788
  10. Briggs, Charles A. (1908). "The Encyclical against Modernism". North American Review 187 (627): 199–212. 
  11. "The Pope and Modernism", Father Tyrrell's Articles, at The West Australian (Perth, WA), 2 November 1907, p. 2. Also available at Eastern Daily Mail and Straits Morning Advertiser, 5 November 1907, page 1.
  12. Arnold, Claus (2018). "Pius X, Merry del Val and the cases of Alfred Loisy and George Tyrrell". Le pontificat romain dans l'époque contemporaine | the Papacy in the Contemporary Age. Studi di storia. 5. doi:10.30687/978-88-6969-239-0/002. ISBN 978-88-6969-256-7. http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-239-0/002. 
  13. Fergus Kerr, Twentieth-Century Catholic Theologians (Blackwell, 2007, p. 5)
  14. SOFN.org
  15. "Review of Through Scylla and Charybdis: or, the Old Theology and the New by George Tyrrell". The Athenaeum (4171): 395–396. 5 October 1907. https://books.google.com/books?id=__I_PcOFSw8C&pg=PA395. 
  16. "Review of Autobiography and Life of George Tyrrell". The Athenaeum (4436): 509–510. 2 November 1912. https://books.google.com/books?id=px9Y0BOY-QMC&pg=PA509. 

Further reading

  • Chappell, Jonathan W. (2018). "Beyond 'The Warfare of Science with Theology': George Tyrrell's Plea for Epistemic Humility," Science and Christian Belief, Vol 30, No 1., pp. 3–37.
  • Davies, Michael (1983). "The Sad Story of George Tyrrell", Ch. 13 of Partisans of Error: St. Pius X Against the Modernists. Long Prairie, Minnesota: The Neumann Press.
  • Inge, William Ralph (1919). "Roman Catholic Modernism." In: Outspoken Essays. London: Longmans, Green & Co., pp. 137–171.
  • Leonard, Ellen (1982) George Tyrrell and the Catholic Tradition New York: Paulist Press. ISBN 0809124246
  • Maher, Anthony M. (2018). 'The Forgotten Jesuit of Catholic Modernism: George Tyrrell's Prophetic Theology.' Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press.
  • May, J. Lewis (1932). Father Tyrrell and the Modernist Movement. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode.
  • Moore, J.F. (1920). "The Meaning of Modernism," The University Magazine, Vol. XIX, No. 2, pp. 172–178.
  • Petre, Maude (1912). Autobiography and Life of George Tyrrell. London: E. Arnold.
  • Rafferty, Oliver P. (ed.) (2010). George Tyrrell and Catholic Modernism. Dublin: Four Courts Press, ISBN 978-1-846-82236-0.
  • Ratté, John (1967). Three Modernists: Alfred Loisy, George Tyrrell, William L. Sullivan. New York: Sheed & Ward.
  • Rigg, James McMullen (1912). "Tyrrell, George". Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co. 
  • Root, John D. (1977). "English Catholic Modernism and Science: The Case of George Tyrrell," The Heythrop Journal, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, pp. 271–288.
  • Sagovsky, Nicholas (1990). On God's Side: A Life of George Tyrrell. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Sagovsky, Nicholas. "Tyrrell, George (1861–1909)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36606.  (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Savage, Allan (2012). The "Avant-Garde" Theology of George Tyrrell: Its Philosophical Roots Changed My Theological Thinking. (CreateSpace.com)
  • Schultenover, David G. (1981). George Tyrrell: In Search of Catholicism. Shepherdstown, West Virginia: Patmos Press.
  • Wells, David F. (1972). "The Pope as Antichrist: The Substance of George Tyrrell's Polemic," Harvard Theological Review, Vol. LXV, No. 2, pp. 271–283.
  • Wells, David F. (1979). The Prophetic Theology of George Tyrrell. Chico, CA: Scholars Press.
  • Utz, Richard (2010). "Pi(o)us Medievalism vs. Catholic Modernism: The Case Of George Tyrell." In: The Year's Work in Medievalism, Vol. XXV. Eugene, Or.: Wipf & Stock Publishers, pp. 6–11.

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