Fr. Rick Malloy, S.J., was born at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia, and earned a doctorate at in Cultural Anthropology from Temple (He hasn’t gone very far in life!) His dissertation was an ethnographic study of Puerto Rican leaders in Camden, NJ.

After graduating from of St. Joseph’s Prep in Philadelphia, he attended Lafayette College in Easton, PA, and then entered the Jesuit Novitiate in Wernersville, PA. While in Jesuit formation, he spent two years teaching High School in Osorno, Chile and one year in Pastoral work in Santiago.

Fr. Malloy earned a B.A. in Philosophy summa cum laude from Saint Louis University, and M.Div and S.T.L. degrees from Weston School of Theology. His S.T.L. thesis was entitled, Lonergan and Sobrino: Theologians for the Americas and Beyond.

For 15 years (1988-2003), Fr. Malloy lived and worked at Holy Name Church in Camden, NJ, as a member of the Jesuit Urban Service Team. In 1995, while commuting from Camden, he began teaching at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia. For two years (2003-2005) he served as Interim Director of Campus Ministry at Saint Joseph’s.

In September 2008 he accepted a position as Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Chestnut Hill College in Philadelphia. He serves as a Chaplain and lives in a student dorm. He is moderator of “Hooked on the Hill,” the Chestnut Hill College Fishing club.

His book, A Faith That Frees: Catholic Matters for the 21st Century, (Orbis Books 2007) examines the relationships between the practices of faith and the cultural currents and changes so rapidly occurring in our ever more technologized and globalized world.

Fishing is his passion in life, and he prays for the day when he will catch a ten lb. trout or a 47 inch Muskie. He is convinced that such a catch, or the Phillies wining the World Series, are sure signs that the culmination of time is near.

Blog Entries by Fr. Rick Malloy, S.J.

Book Review -- A Persistent Peace: One Man's Struggle for a Non-Violent World

Posted September 19, 2008 | 03:56 PM (EST)


Jesuit priest John Dear is an extraordinary apostle of peace, but even more impressively a man of deep and transformative prayer. "A man of prayer will get more done in a year than another in all his life" (Louis Lallement, S.J.). John Dear's prayer life ushers forth in the work...

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1.7 million = America's Body Count If We Were Iraq

Posted February 7, 2008 | 05:07 PM (EST)


Are you smarter than a fifth grader?

Let's do ratios: 151,000 is to 27,499,638 as "X" is to 303,211,807. Answer: 1,664,930. That means the 151,000 Iraqi people dead out of the population of Iraq (27 million) would be equal to 1.7 million Americans dead out the population of the...

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Bring'em Home, But at Least, Pay'em: Wear Green!

Posted January 16, 2008 | 05:16 PM (EST)


"If you love this land of the free, bring'em home, bring'em home," sings Bruce Springsteen. If you won't bring'em home, at least pay them. $140-$190 a day. That's what a sergeant in the U.S. Army in Iraq makes. $1,222 is what a security specialist for Blackwater grabs daily. Do...

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Harry Potter: Good for Everyone (Even Christians)

Posted July 19, 2007 | 03:00 PM (EST)


God, save us from stupid Christians. Groups of "imagination challenged" believers have, over the years, decried the Harry Potter books as dangerous to believers. Too many people of faith (who I suspect have never read the books) libel J.K. Rowling's imagination as a work of the devil. Not true.

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Harris' and Hitchens' World: No Justice, No Peace

Posted May 29, 2007 | 06:51 PM (EST)


A few years ago Sam Harris burst onto the bestseller lists with his sophomoric screed, The End of Faith (2004). Because some people commit atrocities in the name of their supposed "god," Harris rants against religion and argues that we must abandon faith itself as a method of orienting our...

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