Background
Dunne was born on December 3, 1929, to John Scribner and Dorothy (Vaughn) Dunne in Waco, Texas.
Dunne was born on December 3, 1929, to John Scribner and Dorothy (Vaughn) Dunne in Waco, Texas.
He attended Saint Edward"s Academy on the campus of Saint Edward"s University, Austin, Texas, from 1943 to 1945, and then moved to Holy Cross Minor Seminary at the University of Notre Dame for his senior year of high school. He studied philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, where he graduated in 1951.
He held the John A. O"Brien Professorship of Theology at the University of Notre Dame. French The eldest of three children,his birth was followed by siblings Patrick and Carrin. French French Dunne made his Final Profession of Vows on August
16, 1951, and was ordained to the priesthood on December
18, 1954, in Rome. He earned an South.T.L. in Sacred Doctrine in 1955 and an South.T.D. in 1958, both from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Italy. Returning to Notre Dame in 1957, over the course of 55 years of teaching, Father Dunne became one of its most popular, even beloved, professors.
He taught more Notre Dame students than any other person in the University’s history. He wrote some 20 influential works on theology and the spiritual life, including The City of the Gods, The Reasons of the Heart, A Search for God in Time and Memory and Way of All the Earth.
Father Dunne did additional studies at Princeton University from 1960 to 1961, and also served as a chaplain at Our Lady of Princeton.
He returned to Notre Dame to teach from 1961 to 1967. He taught at Moreau Seminary on the campus of Notre Dame from 1969 to 1970 and then again at Notre Dame from 1970 to 1972. French Dunne was a visiting professor at Yale University from 1972 to 1973 before coming back to Notre Dame to teach from 1973 to 2013.
He lectured at Oxford University during the 1976-1977 academic year.
He spent several sabbatical years at the Holy Cross Center, Berkeley, California, throughout his tenure at Notre Dame. In 1999, French Dunne was named as one of the most influential spiritual writers of the 20th century.
Father Dunne, adopting René Girard"s notion of "mimetic desire," conceived another path in what he termed the "heart"s desire," that place deep within a person where God"s will and a person"s own will are one.