Ford, John C. (John Cuthbert), 1902-1989

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John Cuthbert Ford was born in Boston, Massachusetts on December 20, 1902 to Michael Joseph and Johanna (Cuthbert) Ford. His siblings included Margaret (Ford) Kieran and Anne Ford. He attended Boston College High School.

Ford entered the Society of Jesus at St. Andrew-on-Hudson in Poughkeepsie, New York on August 14, 1920. After moving back to New England for his juniorate at Shadowbrook and philosophy and theology studies at Weston College (A.B., 1928, S.T.L., 1933), he was ordained in 1932. He received a doctorate from Gregorian University, Rome, in 1937 and a degree in civil law from Boston College Law School in 1941.

Ford was Professor of Moral Theology at Weston College 1937-1948, with an intervening year at Gregorian University from 1945-1946. He was Professor of Ethics and Theology at Boston College 1948-1951, following which he returned to Weston College for 1951-1958, Catholic University of America 1958-1966, Weston College 1966-1968, and was made professor emeritus in 1970.

Ford was one of the founders of the journal Theological Studies (1940) and creator of its regular feature "Notes on Moral Theology," to which he regularly contributed for the first six years of the journal. He published multiple books, including The Validity of Virginal Marriage (Worcester, Mass.: Harrigan, 1938). Depth Psychology, Morality, and Alcoholism (Weston, Mass.: Weston, 1951), and with Gerald Kelly, SJ, a two-volume set Contemporary Moral Theology (1958 and 1963).

In September of 1944 Ford published the article "The Morality of Obliteration Bombing" in Theological Studies, condemning the United States and United Kingdom's use of this strategy in World War II, and his work was endorsed by The Second Vatican Council. Ford also served on the Pontifical Commission for the Study of Population, Family, and Births, and was a leading defender of the Church's policy on birth control as described in Pope Paul VI's encyclical Humanae Vitae. Despite the contention raised by this issue, he defended it through the end of his career, co-publishing an article in his retirement commemorating the tenth anniversary of Humanae Vitae. A recovered alcoholic, Ford also focused much of his scholarship and pastoral work around sobriety.

Ford received the Catholic Theological Society of America Cardinal Spellman Award in 1956 and the Cardinal O’Boyle Award for Defense of the Faith from the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars in 1988.

Ford also composed popular songs and liturgical music.

John C. Ford, SJ died in 1989.

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Archives of the Society of Jesus of New England. corporateBody
associatedWith Boston College corporateBody
associatedWith Catholic Church corporateBody
associatedWith Follett, Martin Dewey. person
sibling of Ford, Anne Adelaide, 1901-1993 person
associatedWith Jesuits corporateBody
associatedWith Plants, Thomas A. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Boston MA US
Subject
Alcoholism
Birth control
Church music
Contraception
Theologians
World War, 1939-1945
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1902-12-20

Death 1989

English

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