Francis Gigot


Francis Ernest Charles Gigot was a French Catholic priest and Sulpician who published many religious books.

Biography

Born in Indre, France in 1859, Gigot was educated at the seminary in Limoges before attending the Institut Catholique de Paris, where he was a student of the liberal Alfred Loisy. After ordination in 1884, Gigot emigrated to America and taught Scripture at St. John's Seminary, Brighton, Massachusetts, where he was mentor to the Paulist James Martin Gillis, then St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, then St. Joseph's Seminary, Dunwoodie.
Gigot held revisionist views of Scripture and the Sulpician leadership in Paris wanted Father James Francis Driscoll to rein Gigot in. Driscoll and Gigot "chafed against the scholasticism which they refused to see as exhaustive of orthodoxy". Gigot and the others left the Sulpicians to join the Archdiocese of New York.
He was a member of the American Oriental Society and the New York Oriental Club.
Gigot died at St. Vincent's Seminary, Pennsylvania in 1920.

Works