John J. Cecero – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Wed, 25 Sep 2024 13:16:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png John J. Cecero – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Fordham Jesuit Tapped to Lead New York Province of Society of Jesus https://now.fordham.edu/living-the-mission/fordham-jesuit-tapped-to-lead-new-york-province-of-society-of-jesus/ Tue, 14 Jan 2014 19:08:43 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=1813 John J. Cecero, S.J. Photo by Ryan Brenizer
John J. Cecero, S.J.
Photo by Ryan Brenizer

John J. Cecero, S.J., associate professor of psychology at Fordham and former rector of the Spellman Hall Jesuit community, and member of the Fordham Board of Trustees, has been appointed by Father General Adolfo Nicolás, S.J., to be the provincial of the New York Province of the Society of Jesus.

Father Cecero, who will be leaving Fordham after 15 years, will begin his term on July 31, 2014. On July 31, 2015, when the New England Province and the New York Province are united, he will become the provincial of the new combined province.

Overseeing the merger will be both a big challenge and an opportunity as provincial, said Father Cecero. There are 320 Jesuits in the New York province and 240 in the New England province. They reside at colleges, high schools, parishes, and retreat centers stretching from Jersey City to Portland, Maine.

“The real challenge is going to be trying to find ways to move us toward that one unified province with a common vision and purpose, and really set in place structures and relationships that will foster that,” he said.

Although there are cultural differences spanning the region, there is also a great deal of overlap between the two areas, he said. Before he joined the Fordham faculty, he completed his theological studies at the Weston School of Theology in Cambridge, Ma., and interned as a psychologist in Boston.

A licensed clinical psychologist and director of Fordham’s Center for Spirituality and Mental Health, Father Cecero became a member of the Society of Jesus in 1976 and was ordained in 1989 in the Maryland Province.

He is presently enjoying a sabbatical year, where he is visiting Jesuit communities and spending quality time with his family and friends.

As rector, he oversaw the emotional, spiritual and physical well-being of the approximately 32 Jesuit residents there, and managed the operating budget for the facility. That role, which he took on in 2007 and completed in June 2013, has prepared him for this new assignment, in which he plans to focus on fostering more of a sense of community life.

“In the past, Jesuits had tended to think about community as kind of the place where you hang your hat, while the real action, the real living out of the Jesuit vocation, was outside of the community,” he said.

“But the last general congregation—wisely, I think—changed our thinking about that and said, ‘No, we really have to work on making our [living]communities places of prayer and companionship that support the work that we do. Out of that flows a sustained commitment to both ministries that we presently have and to envisioning new ministries we might undertake.”

Father Cecero introduced initiatives at Fordham that he wants to bring to the larger Jesuit community, including annual community retreats and a committee structure that will enable all members of the Society of Jesus to take responsibility for the life they live together.

After 16 years at Fordham, Father Cecero says he’ll miss his colleagues in the faculty, administration, and the Board of Trustees. But he noted that it’s an exciting time to be in a leadership position within the Society of Jesus, thanks to the elevation of fellow Jesuit, Pope Francis.

The “Francis Factor” comes when the Pope exhorts pastors in the church to “bear the smell of the sheep” and really get their hands dirty. His enthusiasm and his love of the poor has generated a great deal of enthusiasm and interest and hope within the church, he said.

“That’s really inspiring for people, and I can’t help but think that that’s going to continue to inspire vocations and support for what we do,” he said.

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Fordham Jesuit Tapped to Lead New York Province of Society of Jesus https://now.fordham.edu/living-the-mission/fordham-jesuit-tapped-to-lead-new-york-province-of-society-of-jesus-2/ Tue, 14 Jan 2014 19:34:08 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=29209 cecero-2John J. Cecero, S.J., associate professor of psychology at Fordham and former rector of the Spellman Hall Jesuit community, and member of the Fordham Board of Trustees, has been appointed by Father General Adolfo Nicolás, S.J., to be the provincial of the New York Province of the Society of Jesus.

Father Cecero, who will be leaving Fordham after 15 years, will begin his term on July 31, 2014.  On July 31, 2015, when the New England Province and the New York Province are united, he will become the provincial of the new combined province.

Overseeing the merger will be both a big challenge and an opportunity as provincial, said Father Cecero. There are 320 Jesuits in the New York province and 240 in the New England province. They reside at colleges, high schools, parishes, and retreat centers stretching from Jersey City to Portland, Maine.

“The real challenge is going to be trying to find ways to move us toward that one unified province with a common vision and purpose, and really set in place structures and relationships that will foster that,” he said.

Although there are cultural differences spanning the region, there is also a great deal of overlap between the two areas, he said. Before he joined the Fordham faculty, he completed his theological studies at the Weston School of Theology in Cambridge, Ma., and interned as a psychologist in Boston.

A licensed clinical psychologist and director of Fordham’s Center for Spirituality and Mental Health, Father Cecero became a member of the Society of Jesus in 1976 and was ordained in 1989 in the Maryland Province.

He is presently enjoying a sabbatical year, where he is visiting Jesuit communities and spending quality time with his family and friends.

As rector, he oversaw the emotional, spiritual and physical well-being of the approximately 32 Jesuit residents there, and managed the operating budget for the facility. That role, which he took on in 2007 and completed in June 2013, has prepared him for this new assignment, in which he plans to focus on fostering more of a sense of community life.

“In the past, Jesuits had tended to think about community as kind of the place where you hang your hat, while the real action, the real living out of the Jesuit vocation, was outside of the community,” he said.

“But the last general congregation—wisely, I think—changed our thinking about that and said, ‘No, we really have to work on making our [living]communities places of prayer and companionship that support the work that we do. Out of that flows a sustained commitment to both ministries that we presently have and to envisioning new ministries we might undertake.”

Father Cecero introduced initiatives at Fordham that he wants to bring to the larger Jesuit community, including annual community retreats and a committee structure that will enable all members of the Society of Jesus to take responsibility for the life they live together.

After 16 years at Fordham, Father Cecero says he’ll miss his colleagues in the faculty, administration, and the Board of Trustees. But he noted that it’s an exciting time to be in a leadership position within the Society of Jesus, thanks to the elevation of fellow Jesuit, Pope Francis.

The “Francis Factor” comes when the Pope exhorts pastors in the church to “bear the smell of the sheep” and really get their hands dirty. His enthusiasm and his love of the poor has generated a great deal of enthusiasm and interest and hope within the church, he said.

“That’s really inspiring for people, and I can’t help but think that that’s going to continue to inspire vocations and support for what we do,” he said.

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Jesuit Examines Link Between Spirituality and Mental Health https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/jesuit-examines-link-between-spirituality-and-mental-health/ Mon, 14 Nov 2011 20:14:58 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=8178 By Tracey Quinlan Dougherty

Ten years ago, a patient recovering from depression told John J. Cecero, S.J., associate professor of psychology, “I’m not depressed anymore, but I’m not happy.” At the time, this observation gave Father Cecero pause, and it resounds in his scholarship and clinical work even today.

John J. Cecero, S.J., is conducting research to determine the empirical validity of the Spiritual Exercises.  Photo by Ryan Brenizer
John J. Cecero, S.J., is conducting research to determine the empirical validity of the Spiritual Exercises.
Photo by Ryan Brenizer

“I found that very intriguing,” he said. “So much so that it led me to dig a little bit deeper and think, ‘What’s missing here?’”

Until then, Father Cecero had been treating the symptoms of substance abuse, anxiety, depression and relationship difficulties using schema therapy. This form of cognitive therapy confronts patients’ early fears and their resulting expectations in order to help them think differently about themselves and others.

After that conversation, however, he increasingly questioned whether symptom reduction was rightly the ultimate goal of psychotherapy.

“Psychologists were beginning to think, ‘Maybe we could—when a person comes in for treatment—not just get them feeling better, but actually on a road to optimal functioning, so that they will have learned through the experience of going through the illness and the recovery and come out on the other side happier and more productive than they were originally.’ This struck home for me,” he said.

Having embraced this tenet of the then-new field of positive psychology, Father Cecero began seeking a way not merely to decrease patients’ symptoms, but also to help them lead happier lives.

The answer, he discovered, was to integrate a spiritual focus with cognitive treatments. As outlined in his book, Praying Through Our Lifetraps: A Psycho-Spiritual Approach to Freedom (Catholic Book Publishing/Resurrection Press, 2002), Father Cecero found spiritual activities such as prayer, meditation, contemplation and the practice of virtuous behaviors to be an effective supplement to cognitive interventions.

Spirituality, he discovered, does not merely help buffer against psychological symptoms; it actually helps patients to flourish.

“Flourishing,” according to Father Cecero, is a term used in positive psychology to describe the very state he had been hoping to help his patients achieve: optimal functioning with resilience and an orientation toward growth.

To explain how spirituality can help bring about flourishing, Father Cecero cited the traditional Christian virtues of hope, love, forgiveness, gratitude and humility. Practicing these virtues, he said, increases positive emotion, which promotes flourishing. A spiritual focus, he added, also can give patients a greater motivation to flourish.

“If we really see ourselves in the image and likeness of God and that our vocation is to become like God, that is a motivation to practice the godly virtues,” he said.

Father Cecero’s latest work has extended the concept of flourishing well beyond the clinical context. His current research focuses on how people of sound mental health use spirituality to flourish. As an educator and Jesuit priest, he is particularly interested in flourishing’s relationship to academia and to Ignatian spirituality.

Father Cecero recently has worked with Giselle Esquivel, Psy.D., a professor of school psychology in the Graduate School of Education, to develop a measure of faculty spirituality at Fordham. He plans to integrate measures of flourishing with those findings to see how spirituality and flourishing correlate among the University’s faculty.

“We’re all about cura personalis, care for the whole person, so I think this will really be an important thing to study in an institution such as ours,” he said.

He is also looking at the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola as a tool for flourishing. The Spiritual Exercises are meditations, prayers and contemplative practices created by St. Ignatius for strengthening a person’s relationship with God that are often followed as a 30-day program. Father Cecero has been tracking participants on a flourishing scale as they move through the program to see which components of the exercises seem most related to flourishing.

“We make a lot of claims, and rightly so, that the Spiritual Exercises are a transformative tool for a person to achieve a new level of freedom in their lives and make good discernments. I would like to empirically validate that,” he said.

As the rector of Fordham’s Jesuit community, he uses the concept in the community’s retreats, as well as in workshops on “Flourishing as Clergy” that he delivers to broader audiences of Catholic priests. He has offered sessions on “Flourishing as Administrators” to Fordham deans and uses the concept in his part-time clinical practice to help patients overcome issues like relationship difficulties, vocational uncertainties, depression and anxiety.

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Jesuits Elect New Superior General https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/jesuits-elect-new-superior-general-2/ Thu, 24 Jan 2008 19:12:20 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=34474 Adolfo Nicolas, S.J., was elected superior general of the Society of Jesus on Saturday, Jan. 19 in Rome. As leader of the Jesuits, Father Nicolas will succeed Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, S.J., who is stepping down at the age of 79.

A European with extensive experience in East Asia and a mastery of five languages, Father Nicolas’ distinguished career has prepared him for his new position as an international religious leader.

“Father Nicolas believes that the West has a lot to learn from the East about spirituality and its effect on human living,” said John J. Cecero, S.J., Fordham psychology professor and rector of the Jesuit community at Spellman Hall. Father Cecero’s research focuses on the relationship of spirituality to mental health.

“I’m enthusiastic about his generalate because I believe he will continue to focus Jesuits and our colleagues on listening to the East, especially voices that emphasize Eastern spirituality, justice and a commitment to the faith across the entire spectrum of cultures.”

Father Nicolas was born in Palencia, Spain in 1936. He earned a degree in philosophy in his native country and made the decision to enter the novitiate to become a Jesuit. He went on to study theology in Japan, where he was ordained in 1967.

After completing a master’s degree at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Father Nicolas returned to Asia, where he held several positions. In the 1970s, he served as a professor at Sophia University in Tokyo; was the director of the East Asian Pastoral Institute in Manila from the late 1970s to the early 1980s; held leadership posts in the order in Japan in the 1990s; and was moderator of the Jesuit Conference for Eastern Asia and Oceania from 2004 to 2007.

“The universal enthusiasm for the election of Father Adolfo Nicolas certainly bodes well for the future of the Society of Jesus,” said Charles L. Currie, S.J., president of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities. “Father Nicolas combines all of the qualities needed at this time: charismatic leadership; long experience in linking education and intellectual life to concern for justice and the poor; a great sensitivity to different cultures; and a deep spirituality. To all of these he adds a great sense of humor.”

The process of electing a new superior general involves a period of discussion about possible candidates (known as “murmuratio”) followed by a vote by Jesuit delegates from all over the world. The current delegation includes Santa Clara University President Paul Locatelli, S.J., and Canisius College President Vincent Cooke, S.J.

“We are indeed fortunate to be able to build so enthusiastically on the strong legacies of Father Nicolas’ predecessors, Father Arrupe and Father Kolvenbach,” Currie said. “Our colleges and universities look forward to working with him.”

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