Joseph S. O'Leary


Joseph Stephen O’Leary is an Irish Roman Catholic theologian. Born in Cork, 1949, he studied literature and theology at Maynooth College. He also studied at the Gregorian University, Rome and in Paris. Ordained for the Diocese of Cork and Ross in 1973, he was a chaplain at University College Cork. He taught theology at the University of Notre Dame and Duquesne University before moving to Japan in August, 1983. He worked as a researcher at the Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture, Nanzan University, Nagoya, where he later held the Roche Chair for Interreligious Research. He taught in the Faculty of Letters at Sophia University, Tokyo, from 1988 to 2015.
Other assignments include teaching philosophy and theology in the Philippines in 1986–87, the Lady Donnellan Lecturership at Trinity College Dublin, in the spring of 1991, the Chaire Étienne Gilson at the Institut Catholique de Paris, March, 2011, and visiting fellowships at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in 1997 and the Humboldt Universität, Berlin in 2012.
Joseph O’Leary is editorial assistant to The Japan Mission Journal, which often publishes articles of interreligious interest, and is a regular participant in the Tokyo Buddhist Discussion Group. He frequently attends academic conferences, including the quadrennial Origenianum and Gregory of Nyssa conferences, the Oxford Patristic Conference, the biennial Enrico Castelli conference in philosophy of religion, the International James Joyce Symposium, the International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures, the International Association for Buddhist Studies, and many conferences held at Cerisy-la-Salle in Normandy.
With Richard Kearney and William Desmond, O'Leary was named one of "three Irish Philosophers plying their trade abroad" in Irish Times.

Study of Literature

Studying English and French literature under Professors Peter Connolly and Brendan Devlin at Maynooth, O’Leary was particularly influenced by the Geneva School critics such as Georges Poulet and Jean Starobinski.
Returning to academic involvement with literature in 1988 he focused in his teaching on Henry James, T. S. Eliot, Yeats. Joyce, and Beckett. Derrida, Lacan, and Blanchot became key theoretical references. In addition to English Literature he taught courses on European culture and on the Bible as literature. He remains concerned with the theological significance of modernist literature and is currently working on a book on Joyce from this perspective.

Study of Theology

In his graduate studies in theology at Maynooth, O’Leary specialized in patristics, working on Augustine's De Trinitate for his doctoral thesis. In Paris he attended courses on patristics by Pierre Nautin and Charles Kannengiesser. Discussing Heidegger and theology with Jean Beaufret, François Fédier, François Vezin, Emmanuel Martineau, Jean-François Courtine, Jean-Luc Marion, Stanislas Breton, Jean Greisch, and Maria Villela-Petit, he developed a critical approach to patristic tradition drawing on the Heideggerian project of overcoming metaphysics. With Richard Kearney he organized a seminar at the Irish College, Paris, on 24 June 1979, in which Beaufret, Ricoeur, and Emmanuel Levinas participated, and which led to the publication of Heidegger te la question de Dieu.
The Heideggerian approach was spelled out programmatically in his first book, Questioning Back: The Overcoming of Metaphysics in Christian Tradition, which also showed the influence of Derrida and of his first encounters with Buddhist philosophy. This book sketches a strategy for rereading Christian texts in a counter-metaphysical key. Though convinced of the truth and validity of classical Christian metaphysical theology, O’Leary is also convinced of the need to ‘step back’ behind it to the ‘matter itself,’ that is, to the phenomenality of the biblical events in the horizons of contemporary understanding. Drawing on Heidegger to renew the old questions of Luther and Harnack about the patristic synthesis of the Bible and Greek thought, he advocates a deconstructive method of reading patristic texts that brings out the tensions and flaws in the Athens-Jerusalem syntheses as they show up in the texture of the writing of Origen, Gregory of Nyssa, and Augustine. He has since published a number of essays on these patristic authors, in particular a book-length study, Christianisme et philosophie chez Origène.
The theme of religious pluralism comes to the fore in his second book, La vérité chrétienne à l'âge du pluralisme religieux and its rewritten English version, Religious Pluralism and Christian Truth. He attempts to tackle this theme with philosophical finesse in a critical dialogue with Derrida.
Conceiving theology as a play of reflective judgment in a mobile and pluralistic context, O’Leary explored the possibilities of a Buddhist-inspired theological conventionalism in L’art du jugement en théologie and again in Conventional and Ultimate Truth: A Key for Fundamental Theology. The latter book expounds a basic method under the rubrics of reflective judgment and conventional truth. Then it visits seven loci that challenge theological thinking today: modernist literature, metaphysics and its overcoming, Scripture, religious experience, negative theology, religious pluralism, and dogma. In each case classical paradigms are unsettled and a more modest and flexible path of reflection and articulation is limned.
These volumes on fundamental theology advance a view of doctrinal language that is increasingly influenced by the Buddhist dyad of conventional and ultimate truth. The basic thesis is that religious traditions can function as vehicles of ultimacy, but that to do so authentically and effectively they need to fully recognize their conventional status as linguistic constructions embedded in history. Warding off nominalism and relativism, O’Leary argues against Derrida and Western interpreters of Nagarjuna on the notion of truth, in order to uphold the objective reference of doctrinal statements despite their conventional fabric.
Further fruits of O’Leary's engagement with Buddhist philosophy are his Étienne Gilson lectures at the Institut Catholique de Paris, 2011 and his forthcoming commentary on the Vimalakirti Sutra for the collection ‘Christian Commentaries on Non-Christian Sacred Texts’.

Books (author)