Father Boyle, Transformative Jesuit Priest, Speaks at Scranton (Photo Gallery)

Gregory Boyle, S.J., was the featured speaker at this year’s Ignatian Values in Action Lecture.
A speaker presents at the University of Scranton, with a purple backdrop featuring symbols and flags, addressing an audience.
Gregory Boyle, S.J., founder of Homeboy Industries, was the featured speaker this year at The University of Scranton’s Ignatian Values in Action Lecture. More than 1,000 students and University community members attended Father Boyle’s lecture, “Cherished Belonging: The Healing Power of Love in Divided Times” at the Byron Recreation Complex.

The University of Scranton had a rare and incredible honor earlier this semester, when Gregory Boyle, S.J., spoke to students and University community members at the annual Ignatian Values in Action Lecture.

Father Boyle, a Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient who founded the largest gang rehabilitation program in the world, spoke to a crowd of 1,000-plus attendees on Sept. 29 inside the Byron Recreation Complex.

In his address, titled, “Cherished Belonging: The Healing Power of Love in Divided Times,” Father Boyle spoke about his experiences working with former gang members in Los Angeles. He helped them turn their lives around through his organization, Homeboy Industries, which assists those in a vicious cycle of violence escape that pattern.

Four individuals stand together smiling for a group photo.
From left: Gerardo Ochoa, Homeboy Industries member; Rev. Joseph G. Marina, S.J., University of Scranton president; Rev. Gregory Boyle, S.J., Homeboy Industries founder; and Jorge Baltazar, Homeboy Industries member.

 

Two members of the Homeboy community, Gerardo Ochoa and Jorge Baltazar, also addressed the crowd. Ochoa and Baltazar spoke about their life before Homeboy Industries and how the program has turned their lives around from a world of crime and despair to acceptance, hope and love.

Father Boyle’s decades of hard work in his native Los Angeles are a model of the values that Scranton strives to embody and instill in its students. Many professors incorporate the annual Ignatian Values lecture into their curricula.

Father Boyle and Homeboy Industries are no stranger to Scranton. He has previously appeared at the University and students have participated in service trips at the organization's headquarters in Los Angeles. Earlier this year during spring break, a group of students traveled to Homeboy Industries and one of the volunteers reflected on her experience in a Royal News article.

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