Jon M. Sweeney

Jon M. Sweeney (born July 18, 1967) is an author of popular history, spirituality, and memoir. He has written 25 books but his special subject is St. Francis of Assisi, about whom he has written When Saint Francis Saved the Church, The Complete Francis of Assisi, and The Enthusiast, a biography that Richard Rohr calls "An immense and important contribution to our understanding of the great saint."[1] HBO has optioned the film rights to The Pope Who Quit, Sweeney’s historical retelling of the 13th century Pope Celestine V, who was the first pope to ever willingly resign the position. Sweeney has been interviewed on CBS News, WGN-TV, Fox News, and WTTW's Chicago Tonight. He appeared on CBS Sunday Morning to talk about St. Patrick on March 17, 2013. He is an independent scholar who lectures frequently and leads retreats.[2]

Life

Jonathan was born on July 18, 1967 in St. Charles, Illinois. He is the second and youngest child of Mark Owen Sweeney and Janet Lynn (née Turner) Sweeney. At the time of Sweeney’s birth, his father was the youth pastor at First Baptist Church in Wheaton, Illinois and Janet was a stay-at-home mother with his older brother, Douglas (born July 1965). Soon after he was born, Sweeney's family relocated to Oregon, where his parents had been married in 1964. The family returned to Wheaton in 1969 and Sweeney resided there until college. Sweeney is included in the book Legendary Locals of Wheaton, by Keith Call.[3]

He is married to Michal Woll, a rabbi, and has three children. He currently lives in Montpelier, Vermont.

Education

Sweeney attended Carl Sandburg Elementary School, Monroe Junior High (now Monroe Middle School), and Wheaton Christian High School (now Wheaton Academy). He graduated high school in 1985.

He attended Moody Bible Institute for one year and then transferred to Wheaton College where he majored in philosophy and Medieval studies, graduating in 1989. While at Wheaton, he was a teacher's assistant in the philosophy department and research assistant to the philosophy chair, Arthur F. Holmes, one of two professors to whom he dedicated his book, The Complete Francis of Assisi. In a later interview with The Irish Catholic, he reflects on his college interests: “Going back to my college days, I was a medieval history major, so I was very interested in the time period back then, and I think that was because I always saw it as a period in history that unified Christians of all backgrounds. It is the period of time before all the splits came into the Church so I always found that appealing. The more often one could go back to those figures or those stories and retell them or re-imagine them, I thought, the better.”[4]

While in junior high and high school, Jon's father was a prominent publisher of Evangelical Christian books who introduced him to prominent religious figures such as Dr. Charles Caldwell Ryrie, Dr. Josh McDowell, and Dr. George Sweeting, then president of Moody Bible Institute, the school in downtown Chicago that Sweeney attended for his first year of college, and which his parents both attended.

While at Moody, Sweeney arranged to serve as a summer missionary in Batangas City, The Philippines, an experience that he later wrote about in his memoir, Born Again and Again. Sweeney grew up intent on becoming an evangelical pastor, but practiced as an Episcopalian for 21 years of his adult life and converted to Catholicism in 2009. Today he keeps a Jewish home with his wife, a rabbi, although still identifies as a Catholic.[5]

After finishing at Wheaton College, Sweeney was an M.Div. and then an M.A. student at North Part Theological Seminary in Chicago. There he studied with Paul L. Holmer, among others, and focused on Kierkegaard and theology. Sweeney has written about his relationship with Holmer.[6] Eventually, Sweeney left seminary without earning a degree.

Literary career

Sweeney began his career as a bookseller, first in Chicago, and then managing a theological bookstore in Central Square, Cambridge, MA, Divinitas Books. He saw his first works published at this time, poems and book reviews, in small journals including The Merton Seasonal, which was then edited by Robert Daggy. From bookselling he became a trade sales representative for Augsburg Fortress Publishing, traveling a seven-state territory in the Southeastern U.S. When promoted to trade sales manager two years later he moved his family to Minneapolis. Leaving there in 1997, Sweeney moved to Vermont to join the "Ben & Jerry's of religious publishing," Jewish Lights Publishing. After seven years as vice-president of marketing and sales at Jewish Lights Publishing in Woodstock, Vermont, and co-founding SkyLight Paths Publishing, also in Woodstock, Vermont, as its associate publisher and editor-in-chief, Sweeney became editor-in-chief and publisher at Paraclete Press in 2004, based out of Orleans, Massachusetts. He left there in 2015. After working at Franciscan Media as editorial director for one year, he is now the executive editor for trade books at Ave Maria Press in Notre Dame, Indiana.[7]

Sweeney's many books about Francis of Assisi have focused on debunking myths that he believes persist from films and novels of the 1960s and 1970s, such as the image of the "hippie" Francis that endures from "Brother Sun, Sister Moon," Franco Zeffirelli's 1972 movie.[8]

Sweeney's current project is a popular history of the rift between Bernard of Clairvaux and Peter Abelard in the 12th century, titled The Saint vs. the Scholar.[9] He is also writing a biography of his late friend Phyllis Tickle. He spoke about Tickle's life at the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York City on November 2, 2016.[10] Sweeney often writes articles for online and print publications, including a quarterly review article about books for America magazine[11] and book reviews for The Tablet in London.

Critical Reception

Reception to Sweeney’s work has been largely positive. Graham Christian said of The Complete Francis of Assisi, in a Library Journal review, “It is immensely valuable to have in one volume the key writings by and about Francis and his first disciples; essential for libraries and individuals looking to expand their knowledge of this influential saint.”[12]

In a 2016 interview for The Irish Catholic magazine, Mags Gargan describes The Enthusiast: “Blending history and biography, Sweeney’s book reveals how Francis and Elias rebuilt churches, aided lepers and entertained as ‘God’s troubadours’ to the delight of the ordinary people who had grown tired of a remote and turbulent Church.” She goes on to ask Jon about the background of the book and his personal interest in St. Francis of Assisi.[13]

When Saint Francis Saved the Church won second place in the history category in the 2015 Catholic Press Association Awards for excellence. Sweeney was also among five reviewers who received a first place award for best review section in America magazine for its “Fall Books 1” entry.[14]

Phyllis Tickle: Essential Spiritual Writings was recently named a finalist for a 2016 award from the Religion Newswriters Association for Religion Reporting Excellence.[15]

Author and activist Dan Savage mentioned having The Pope Who Quit on his coffee table in a 2013 New York Times “By the Book” interview.[16]

Anne Rice was a proponent of his book Inventing Hell, posting a link about it on her official Facebook page.[17]

Bibliography

As editor

References

  1. Rohr, Richard. "Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation: Death and Heaven". Constantcontact.com. Center for Action and Contemplation. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  2. Amazon.com. Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Jon-M.-Sweeney/e/B001JRXOE2/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1. Retrieved May 29, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Call, Keith (May 21, 2012). Legendary Locals of Wheaton. Legendary Locals. p. 128. ISBN 9781467100113. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  4. Gargan, Mags. "The Untold Story of St. Francis". irishcatholic.ie. The Irish Times. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  5. Carrigan, Henry L. "Jon Sweeney: A Life in Books and On the Move". Publishers Weekly. Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  6. http://www.pietisten.org/xxviii/1/sweeney.html
  7. "Jon M. Sweeney to Join Ave Maria Press as Executive Editor, Trade". avemariapress.com. Ave Maria Press. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  8. https://www.ncronline.org/books/2016/11/so-little-known-st-francis-biography-fiction
  9. https://www.amazon.com/Saint-vs-Scholar-between-Reason/dp/1616369671/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1476379876&sr=1-1&keywords=saint+vs.+scholar
  10. http://www.thelaymensclub.org/events/AllSaints2016MemorialServiceandLecture.htm
  11. Sweeney, Jon. "In Search of the Catholic Novel". AmericaMagazine.org. America Media. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  12. Christian, Graham. "From Abraham to Pope Francis to Buddhisms, & More". reviews.libraryjournal.com. Library Journal. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  13. Gargan, Mags. "The Untold Story of St. Francis". irishcatholic.ie. The Irish Catholic. Retrieved 15 June 2016.
  14. https://www.avemariapress.com/news/2015/6/27/2015-catholic-press-association-awards/
  15. "Finalists named in 2016 RNA Awards for Religion Reporting Excellence". rna.org. Religion Newswriters Association. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  16. "Dan Savage: By the Book". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  17. Rice, Anne. facebook.com. Facebook https://www.facebook.com/annericefanpage/posts/10152502099210452. Retrieved May 21, 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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