Skip to main content
Please contact the Booth Family Center for Special Collections for assistance with accessing these materials.

Causus moralis/St. Paul., 01/09/1931-09/17/1934

 File — Box: 7, Folder: 569
Identifier: 63537

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The collection consists of correspondence, manuscripts, and a wide variety of supplemental items that document Murray's career as author, editor, lecturer, professor, and theologian. Murray is perhaps best known for his books We Hold These Truths (1960) and The Problem of God (1964) as well as for his longstanding editorship of Theological Studies. Among Murray's correspondents are Rev. John Tracy Ellis, Henry and Clare Boothe Luce, and Samuel Cardinal Stritch, together with fellow Jesuits Walter Burghardt, Bernard Lonergan, Vincent McCormick, and Leo Ward.

Portions of this collection have been digitized and are available to view online in DigitalGeorgetown.

Dates

  • 01/09/1931-09/17/1934

Conditions Governing Access

The John Courtney Murray, SJ Papers are on deposit at Georgetown University and are the property of the USA East Province of the Society of Jesus. As stewards of the Archives, the Georgetown University Library’s Booth Family Center for Special Collections is responsible for managing access to the material based on policies set forth by the USA East Province. Researchers may view these materials in the Reading Room of the Booth Family Center for Special Collections. General policies for using Special Collections can be found here.

Access to the Archives is governed by the USA East Province and is subject to all Library and Special Collections policies and procedures in addition to the specific guidelines below. These guidelines are a summary of access policies; the Archives may include materials that fall outside the scope of these general guidelines. For information on access to specific materials, please contact the Special Collections staff.

Guidelines:

1. All Archives materials dated or bearing solely on events occurring before January 1, 1940, shall be open for review unless otherwise restricted, subject to Library policies and procedures.

2. All unpublished Archives materials dated or bearing solely on events occurring on or after January 1, 1940, shall be open for review upon request subject to a decision by the Provincial or someone designated by the Provincial.

3. Researchers may quote from the materials.

4. Researchers may take their own photographs of the material for scholarly and research purposes. Allowing photographs is not an authorization to publish or to deposit the material in another library or archive.

5. Written permission from the USA East Province is required for the publication of substantive portions of any material or publication-quality reproductions of any material.

6. Material not yet processed is not available to researchers; permission will not be granted to access any unprocessed material.

7. Audiovisual, microfilm and other material in the Archives, the original of which is held in another archive, may be consulted and transcribed only. Written permission from the archive holding the original material is required for any duplication, reproduction, or publication of that material.

8. Use the Permission Request Form to request permission (i) to access any restricted processed material or (ii) to publish reproductions or quote substantive portions of the material. Send the completed form by email to the Booth Family Center for Special Collections (speccoll@georgetown.edu).

Extent

From the Collection: 42 Linear Feet (33 boxes)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Physical Location

07/05/6

Physical Description

Typed causus moralis, 1934, typed ms. "The Concept of the Church in St. Paul", written in 1931.

Subjects and Associated Physical Materials

CAUSUS MORALIS: Manuscript

PAUL, ST. -AND THE CHURCH: Manuscript

SCHOLASTICATE: Manuscript

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the Woodstock Theological Center Library Archives Repository

Contact:
Adrian Vaagenes
Lauinger Library
37th and O Streets, N.W.
Washington DC 20057