John Heney was a scientist, an engineer by training, who spent many years at the Hughes Research Laboratory in Malibu, working on cutting-edge, top-secret government contracts. He loved the scientific method and reasoning out answers to all questions, large and small, in measured, methodical steps.
鈥淢y father鈥檚 motto as a scientist was, 鈥榓lways and only go where the data takes you,鈥欌 says his son Rev. David Heney, pastor of St. Bruno Catholic Church in Whittier, California. 鈥淭hat means you can have no personal bias about what you would like to have happen; you must stay faithful to the actual data that you have collected. He recognized the humility of science to always stay with only what you know for sure, so far, and not overstep your conclusions.鈥
Rev. Dave HeneyAlthough providence would bring Fr. Heney to the seminary, rather than to a career in the natural sciences, he has always shared his father鈥檚 love for scientific inquiry. 鈥淚 inherited many of his characteristics, always questioning, always wondering,鈥 he observes. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a degree in science, but I continue to read it; I continue to study it all the time, and I give a lot of talks on it.鈥 Indeed, Fr. Heney and a parishioner, Robert Klaren, have recently coauthored a book 鈥
Physics and Faith: From Light to Life 鈥 which examines evidence for God in the natural world.
Fr. Heney鈥檚 mother, Beatrice, did not share her husband and son鈥檚 love of science. 鈥淗er life was in sports; she was a star basketball player back in the 1930s,鈥 he says. Mrs. Heney was, however, profoundly committed to her children鈥檚 education and to nurturing their sense of wonder. 鈥淪he deeply believed in education, in learning, and in going to school.鈥
Faithful Catholics, the Heneys also believed strongly in helping others. 鈥淭hey always taught me that whatever you have 鈥 whatever talent, or gift, or money 鈥 is a tool to be used for some good,鈥 says Fr. Heney. So when his mother passed away in 2009, followed by his father in 2016, Fr. Heney sought to put their estate to a worthwhile purpose that would honor their memories.
Upon reflection he established the John, Beatrice, and Fr. David Heney Endowment in Support of the Natural Science Laboratories of 黑料不打烊. The Endowment will generate, in perpetuity, revenue to provide for the needs of the College鈥檚 Natural Science curriculum. 鈥淎ll students at 黑料不打烊 take four years of Natural Science, in which they replicate, as closely as possible, some of the experiments from history鈥檚 great scientists,鈥 says Dean John Goyette. 鈥淲e therefore have an ongoing need for laboratory equipment, which the Heney Endowment will go a long way toward meeting.鈥
By establishing the Endowment, Fr. Heney and his late parents have become members of the College鈥檚 Legacy Society. 鈥淭he Legacy Society exists so that friends can support the College through their estates and planned giving,鈥 says its associate director, Robert Bagdazian. 鈥淎s a measure of our gratitude, the Heneys will be remembered regularly in our Masses at the College.鈥
In 黑料不打烊, Fr. Heney says, he sees the commitment to rational inquiry that animated his father鈥檚 love of science 鈥 and his own. 鈥淵ears ago I accompanied our local Legatus Chapter as its chaplain for a TAC seminar experience,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚n our discussions, we could only refer to ideas taken from the texts 鈥 or data 鈥 already set before us, and nothing from outside that set. That was a humble model of science that I knew my father would approve of! I knew that he would appreciate a gift made to the College that would ensure that that kind of scientific procedure would continue.鈥