Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Catholic News ServiceAugust 13, 2013

Christian Brother Jeffrey Gros, a leader in the ecumenical movement and former official with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, died Aug. 12 at age 75. For more than a year, he struggled with pancreatic cancer.

For decades, Brother Gros participated in an untold number of dialogues with religious groups, delivered keynote addresses around the world, edited numerous books and wrote hundreds of book reviews. He has been remembered by colleagues for his zealous work in broadening the scope of ecumenism.

An online posting described him as "a public thinker" in theology, ecumenism and catechesis.

The funeral Mass for Brother Gros was scheduled for Aug. 17 at Sancta Alberta Chapel on the campus of Lewis University in Romeoville, Ill., followed by interment at Resurrection Cemetery in Romeoville Aug. 19.

Paulist Father Ron Roberson, associate director for the Secretariat for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs for the USCCB, the post held for 14 years by Brother Gros, described the death of his colleague as "a huge loss to the ecumenical movement."

Brother Gros, a native of Memphis, Tenn., who also was an avid cyclist, had been a resident scholar in Catholic studies at Lewis University since 2011. The post was a return to the university for him, as he had chaired the school's theology department in 1967. Lewis is sponsored by his religious order, De La Salle Christian Brothers.

While he was resident scholar, he also was president of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, consultant to the Archdiocese of Chicago's Office of Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, and an adjunct professor at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.

Paulist Father Thomas F. Stransky, who assisted in drafting the Second Vatican Council documents on ecumenism, praised Brother Gros for his "immense curiosity" about ecumenism, noting that he did not just focus on a narrow specialty.

He said his colleague was "very zealous" and was known to read about three books a week and review them for various journals and publications including Catholic News Service. His most recent CNS review, published July 12, was on the book "'Til Faith Do Us Part: How Interfaith Marriage Is Transforming America" by Naomi Schaefer Riley.

Father Stransky and Father Roberson, both in Lake George, N.Y., for a working retreat, spoke to CNS by phone about Brother Gros.

Father Roberson said Brother Gros had "an encyclopedic knowledge of ecumenism" and wanted to be sure the work in this field was taught in Catholic schools. When he wasn't focusing on dialogue with Oriental Orthodox or Protestant groups, he was likely biking, not only locally but in Denmark or Chile.

Father Stransky said Brother Gros always approached ecumenical efforts by getting to know the people "and what makes them tick."

The priest, former president of the Paulist Fathers, has been a consultant on mission concerns to the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, a member of the joint working group of the Catholic Church and the World Council of Churches, and a member of the Catholic-Southern Baptist dialogue.

He praised Brother Gros for being ahead of his time in his efforts to speak with evangelicals about concerns of proselytizing in Latin America and for his strong desire to include Pentecostals, not just mainline churches, in ecumenical efforts.

The priest noted that Brother Gros also was very concerned that today's young people know the roots of the ecumenical movement and be active in keeping these efforts going.

Antonio Kireopoulos, associate general secretary of Faith and Order and Interfaith Relations for the National Council of Churches, said Brother Gros "was a model for the council's commitment to ecumenical cooperation and a mentor both to his contemporaries and to future generations of ecumenists, including me."

In an Aug. 12 statement, he said Brother Gros was "passionately devoted to his church and to the quest for church unity."

Father Stransky said the last work Brother Gros was working on was a book about Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin's ecumenical work, particularly with Jews in Chicago.

"I don't think he finished it. His health really declined; his mind was there but his body wasn't," Father Stransky said.

Brother Gros, a De La Salle Christian Brother for 58 years, was born John Jefferson Gros in Memphis, the son of Jeff and Faye (Dickinson) Gros.

He entered the novitiate of the Christian Brothers in 1955 and professed his final vows in 1963. He received a bachelor's degree from St. Mary's University of Minnesota, a master's degree in theology from Marquette University in Milwaukee, and a doctorate in theology from Fordham University in New York.

For 10 years, he was director of Faith and Order for the National Council of Churches. He was also the distinguished professor of ecumenical and historical theology at Memphis Theological Seminary.

In addition to other roles he had, he was dean of the Institute for Catholic Ecumenical Leadership, a program for diocesan ecumenical leaders.

He is survived by his sister, Dominican Sister Joye Gros of St. Louis.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Sotheby’s is facilitating the sale of what it says is an approximately 1,500-year-old tablet, which it describes as “the only complete tablet of the Ten Commandments still extant from this early era.”
OSV NewsDecember 17, 2024
Today in The New York Times, Pope Francis praised the value of joy, humor and laughter, and noted “jokes about and told by Jesuits are in a class of their own.” Here are 5 of my favorite.
James Martin, S.J.December 17, 2024
Oscar Hijuelos's 'Mr. Ives' Christmas' doesn't start out as a cheery story—but in the end, this parable of good will lost and good will regained is a perfect Christmas tale.
James T. KeaneDecember 17, 2024
Pope Francis releases a white dove during a memorial prayer for the victims of the war at Hosh al-Bieaa (church square) in Mosul, Iraq, in this March 7, 2021, file photo. Being against war demands courageous craftsmanship, the pope wrote in the forward to a new book. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
In a new autobiography, Pope Francis revealed that he escaped two assassination attempts during his visit to Iraq in March 2021, including one involving a young woman who was believed to be attempting a suicide bombing.
Gerard O’ConnellDecember 17, 2024