The Homepage of Fr. Cornelius O'Brien

Reception

  • May 8, 2005

Homepages

  • St. James Home
  • St. James News & Info
  • St. James Noticias en Español

St. Thomas Aquinas Links

  • Summa Theologica
  • Companion to the Summa Theologica
  • Catechetical Instruction of St. Thomas
  • Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew (PDF)
  • Commentary on the Gospel of Mark (PDF)
  • On the Eternity of the World (PDF)
  • On Being and Essence (PDF)
  • Commentary on the Psalms
  • The Opera Omnia of St. Thomas in Latin

Authoritative Links

  • Vatican
  • US Conference of Catholic Bishops
  • The Diocese of Arlington
  • Zenit News

Recent Posts

  • This Site is Moving!
  • Message from Fr. O'Brien
  • Fr. O'Brien to Return to Ireland in Retirement
  • The Retirement of Fr. Cornelius O'Brien
  • Easter 2006
  • Advent 2005
  • Priesthood
  • Local Priests Mark Jubilee Anniversaries
  • Guest Book
  • Liberty And Freedom

Archives

  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • April 2006
  • December 2005
  • May 2005
Subscribe to this blog's feed

Categories

  • 1 - The Writings of Fr. O'Brien
  • 2 - Well Wishes and Prayers
  • 4 - News

This Site is Moving!

NOTICE:  The Homepage of Fr. Cornelius O'Brien Will Be Moving!

Fr. O'Brien's writings and recordings will be available on The Catholic Primer at http://www.catholicprimer.org/obrien. Fr. O'Brien has agreed to continue to contribute more writings and recordings to that site from his home in Ireland. Two new recordings will be posted there in the coming days.

July 01, 2006 in 4 - News | Permalink | Comments (2)

Message from Fr. O'Brien

Dear Friends,

We must remember that parting need only be a spacial reality. Deep matters of the soul transcend space, and we gather together in the moment of our coming from God. The good things experienced by us in the past live on within us into the future. It is so in friendship. It is very much so in Christ.

My life as a priest for fifty-one years has been filled with joy. You have given me the opportunity to pursue my love of truth, and the honor of working with some of the finest people in the world. You have been most generous in expressing your gratitude and praise for my poor efforts among you. You will be in my mind as I attempt to put on paper the splendor of the human person.

Now I wish to thank the priests, who have been my companions, the Sisters who have been so faithful, but especially you, the people, who are the reason for our existence, and who have cooperated so well in our efforts to bring you closer to Christ, the Truth.

Finally -- again, remember that we, who have together loved and served Our Lord, can part only if we depart from Him. With His help we will not leave Him.

So, farewell until we meet again. Until then and forever, may God keep us in His safe hands.

Fr. O'Brien

July 01, 2006 in 4 - News | Permalink | Comments (37)

Fr. O'Brien to Return to Ireland in Retirement

By ANGELA E. POMETTO
HERALD Staff Writer
(From the Issue of June 29, 2006)Photograph from The Arlington Catholic Herald, (c) 2006 The Arlington Catholic Herald

On the floor of his office, there are dozens of books that made the cut for a trip “across the pond” to Ireland at the end of June. Father Cornelius O’Brien, retiring pastor of St. James Church in Falls Church, points at his books with affection and explains with his soft Irish brogue that these are his research material for the book he hopes to write.

With a touch of sadness in his voice, he explains that he is leaving the majority of his “library” at the parish to remain open for all the priests of the diocese. There is only one condition to borrow those books.

“They have to read what they take,” he said.

Father O’Brien was born Jan. 16, 1932, in Ireland. He attended St. Patrick Seminary in Carlow, Ireland, and was ordained by Bishop Thomas Keogh on June 5, 1955. He moved to America and started serving in the Diocese of Alexandria, La., before he moved to the Arlington Diocese in 1976.

After 51 years as a priest, Father O’Brien is now retiring and returning to the land of his birth. The way he sees it, he is switching from the active ministry of pastor to the active ministry of writing.

For more than 50 years, including doctoral work at the Catholic University of America, Father O’Brien has studied the Summa Theologica by St. Thomas Aquinas. During his retirement, he hopes to write a book about the philosophy of the human person, based on St. Thomas.

Father O’Brien is a teacher and a preacher.

“Our Lord said … the truth will set you free,” said Father O’Brien. “That is why I teach. I teach Christ who is the truth.”

He has taught metaphysics and history of philosophy at universities, given retreats for priests and nuns, taught for the diaconate program, and also lectured within the diocese. He was involved with the birth of Christendom College in Front Royal, where he served as chaplain for 25 years.

Father O’Brien is known for the seminar programs he has offered on many topics — the Summa, the cardinal virtues, the human person, the Shroud of Turin and, his favorite, the philosophy of St. Thomas.
“Anything that is the truth deserves to be taught,” he said. This is true of his homilies as well. If the people in the pews can understand the truth of the faith, they will live fuller lives, he said.

From the pulpit he has discussed issues such as the sanctity of life from conception until natural death and the beauty of temperance, especially in regards to sexuality. He is not afraid of pulling out the fire and brimstone homily when necessary. Father O’Brien preaches this way because he does not want to explain his failures to Christ when he meets Him face to face.

Before being incardinated into this diocese, he served in Louisiana. In 1976, former Arlington Bishop Thomas J. Welsh asked Father O’Brien to become part of the newly formed Arlington Diocese, and he agreed.

He was assigned as parochial vicar at the Cathedral of St. Thomas More from 1975-79, and at St Agnes Parish from 1980-83, both in Arlington. He served as assistant at St. Lawrence Parish in Alexandria, 1980-83, and was pastor at St. Timothy Parish in Chantilly, 1983-99. He became pastor of St. James in 1999.

According to Servant of the Immaculate Heart Sister Teresa Ballisty, principal of St. James School, Father O’Brien is an “advocate of Catholic education.”

He always welcomed the classes at daily Mass and added extra Masses for holy days and special school events. He has worked to keep the tuition affordable to families and offered his advice to the administration when needed.

“I hope he’s able to enjoy that little piece of heaven in Ireland,” Sister Teresa said, adding that she hopes that he is able pull his years of research together for his book.

“He’s a very deep thinker,” she said. “He has much to share with people.”

Father O’Brien is also famous for his priestly fishing trips. A day off with Father O’Brien meant a day near a river or lake with fishing rod in hand. Over the years, many priests in the diocese have spent time fishing with Father O’Brien.

“He taught me how to fly fish and to appreciate Thomas Aquinas,” said Father Christopher Mould, pastor at St. Lawrence Church in Alexandria, who served with Father O’Brien at St. Timothy Parish while he was still a seminarian in 1987. He has remained in contact with Father O’Brien since then.
“He has been a great friend and mentor to me, and I wish him well in writing his book,” Father Mould said, adding that he will buy a copy when it comes out.

“The diocese will have a loss when he leaves,” said Father John De Celles, parochial vicar at St. James, who also served a summer as a seminarian with Father O’Brien at St. Timothy Church. “There are not many like him.”

Like something from a poem by W.B. Yeats, he will return to his home in West Cork, Ireland, to a little valley far away from cities and villages. A river flows through it where wily sea trout and salmon await encounter with man and where Father O’Brien can reflect on the mystery of permanence and change.
He will live with his sister and be near the rest of his family. It is the place of his parents and grandparents, and now of the eighth generation of O’Briens.

“It is home in so many ways,” he said. He will find peace there.

Father O’Brien asks that people continue to pray for him. He hopes to return to the diocese occasionally to visit his many friends.

Being separated by an ocean does not make a difference to Christians, he said. “We’re all one in Christ.”

Angela E. Pometto can be reached at apometto@catholicherald.com.

Copyright ©2006 Arlington Catholic Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.

July 01, 2006 in 4 - News | Permalink | Comments (2)

The Retirement of Fr. Cornelius O'Brien

It is with bittersweet pleasure that I relay the following announcement made at today's Masses at St. James Catholic Church:

Fr. Cornelius O'Brien will retire on June 28, 2006, and will be returning to Cork County, Ireland, at the beginning of July 2006.   Replacing Fr. O'Brien as pastor at St. James will be Fr. Patrick Posey, current pastor of St. Frances de Sales Church in Purcellville, VA.   

On a personal note, Fr. O'Brien is a wonderful theologian and priest and one of the most well-studied Thomistic scholars that I have had the pleasure to know personally.  Fr. O'Brien has told me that he will devote his time in retirement toward the completion of his book on the Human Person, which will be supported by years of research that he has done in the works of St. Thomas Aquinas and later Thomistic theologians.

Please keep Fr. O'Brien and the task that lies ahead of him in your prayers.  And likewise, please keep Fr. Posey in your prayers as he assumes his new responsibilities at St. James.

June 11, 2006 in 4 - News | Permalink | Comments (4)

Local Priests Mark Jubilee Anniversaries

Herald Staff Report
(From the issue of 5/12/05)

The following diocesan and religious order priests are celebrating special jubilees this year. Bishop Paul S. Loverde will celebrate a special anniversary Mass on May 17 at St. James Church in Falls Church.

Fifty Years

Fr. Cornelius A. O’Brien

Father Cornelius O'Brien was born Jan. 16, 1932, in Ireland. He attended St. Patrick Seminary in Carlow, Ireland, and was ordained by Bishop Thomas Keogh on June 5, 1955.

He arrived in the Diocese of Arlington in 1976 and was excardinated from the Diocese of Alexandria in Louisiana and incardinated in the Arlington Diocese in 1979.

He was assigned as parochial vicar at the Cathedral of St. Thomas More, 1975-79, and St. Agnes Parish, 1979-80, both in Arlington. He was pastor of St. Lawrence Parish in Alexandria, 1980-83, and St. Timothy Parish in Chantilly, 1983-99. Father O’Brien has been pastor of St. James Parish in Falls Church since 1999.

He completed coursework for a doctorate in philosophy at Catholic University in Washington. From 1976-79, he was director of the Notre Dame Institute, now the Notre Dame Graduate School of Christendom College, in Alexandria. He was also a chaplain at Christendom College in Front Royal.

Father O’Brien was a co-founder of the Adoremus Society, which promotes renewal of the liturgy.

... [others]

May 11, 2005 in 4 - News | Permalink