Ignatian Spirituality
Ignatian Spirituality
Ignatian Spirituality
We join the Society of Jesus and all who follow the ways of Ignatian
spirituality in celebrating the Ignatian Year. May 20, 2021, the starting date
for the year, is the 500th anniversary of St. Ignatius Loyola’s injury during
the Battle of Pamplona, which ultimately led to his conversion from soldier to
saint. During the year, we’ll mark the 400th anniversary of the canonization
of St. Ignatius and St. Francis Xavier on March 12, 2022. The year concludes
on the Feast of St. Ignatius, July 31, 2022.
#Ignatius500
4. “The heart has its reasons of which the mind knows nothing.”
Ignatius Loyola’s conversion occurred as he became able to interpret the
spiritual meaning of his emotional life. The spirituality he developed places
great emphasis on the affective life: the use of imagination in prayer,
discernment and interpretation of feelings, cultivation of great desires, and
generous service. Ignatian spiritual renewal focuses more on the heart than
the intellect. It holds that our choices and decisions are often beyond the
merely rational or reasonable. Its goal is an eager, generous, wholehearted
offer of oneself to God and to his work.
5. Free at last.
Ignatian spirituality emphasizes interior freedom. To choose rightly, we
should strive to be free of personal preferences, superfluous attachments,
and preformed opinions. Ignatius counseled radical detachment: “We should
not fix our desires on health or sickness, wealth or poverty, success or
failure, a long life or a short one.” Our one goal is the freedom to make a
wholehearted choice to follow God.
7. A practical spirituality.
Ignatian spirituality is adaptable. It is an outlook, not a program; a set of
attitudes and insights, not rules or a scheme. Ignatius’s first advice to
spiritual directors was to adapt the Spiritual Exercises to the needs of the
person entering the retreat. At the heart of Ignatian spirituality is a profound
humanism. It respects people’s lived experience and honors the vast
diversity of God’s work in the world. The Latin phrase cura personalis is
often heard in Ignatian circles. It means “care of the person”—attention to
people’s individual needs and respect for their unique circumstances and
concerns.
8. Don’t do it alone.
Ignatian spirituality places great value on collaboration and teamwork.
Ignatian spirituality sees the link between God and man as a relationship—a
bond of friendship that develops over time as a human relationship
does. Collaboration is built into the very structure of the Spiritual Exercises;
they are almost always guided by a spiritual director who helps the
retreatant interpret the spiritual content of the retreat experience. Similarly,
mission and service in the Ignatian mode is seen not as an individualistic
enterprise, but as work done in collaboration with Christ and others.
9. “Contemplatives in action.”
Ignatius prefaced his Spiritual Exercises with twenty notes that explain the
purpose of his exercises and offer advice and counsel to the director who is
guiding the retreat. The very first of these “preliminary helps” explains what
he means by spiritual exercises. Physical exercise tunes up the body and
promotes good health. Spiritual exercise, he writes, is good for
“strengthening and supporting us in the effort to respond ever more
faithfully to the love of God.”
Note what Ignatius did not say. He did not say that the Spiritual Exercises
are designed primarily to deepen our understanding or to strengthen our
will. He did not promise to explain spiritual mysteries to us or enlighten our
minds. We may emerge from the Exercises with enhanced intellectual
understanding, but this is not the goal. The goal is a response—a certain
kind of response. Ignatius is after a response of the heart.
“Heart” does not mean the emotions (though it includes our emotions). It
refers to our inner orientation, the core of our being. This kind of “heart” is
what Jesus was referring to when he told us to store up treasures in heaven
instead of on earth, “for where your treasure is, there also will your heart
be.” (Matthew 6:21) This is the “heart” Jesus was worried about when he
said “from the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, unchastity, theft,
false witness, blasphemy.” (Matthew 15:19) Jesus observed that our heart
can get untethered from our actions: “This people honors me with their lips,
but their hearts are far from me.” (Matthew 15:8) Heart in this sense—the
totality of our response—is the concern of the Spiritual Exercises.
God taught Ignatius about the heart though several mystical visions he
received early in his spiritual formation. One such vision came upon him at a
time when he was questioning whether he should say three or four prayers
to our Trinitarian God—a prayer directed to each Person, Father, Son, and
Spirit, and then a fourth prayer to the One God. He was praying outside on
the steps of a monastery when he suddenly “heard” God the Trinity as the
musical sound of three organ keys playing simultaneously. Another time he
received a vision of God the creator as “something white out of which rays
were coming.” Out of this whiteness God created light. “He did not know
how to explain these things,” he writes of himself in the third person. But
Ignatius responded with his heart: “This was accompanied with so much
tears and so much sobbing that he could not restrain himself.”
This heart response is a cornerstone of the Spiritual Exercises. Creation is a
flow of God’s gifts, with a human response being the link that allows the flow
to return to God. The human response is a free choice to allow God’s
creation to speak. Creation helps us to know and love God and to want to
live with God forever.
Early in the Exercises, Ignatius asks the retreatant to pray before Jesus
Christ on the cross. He identifies Christ as creator, the God of the Principle
and Foundation. “Talk to him about how he creates because he loves,”
Ignatius seems to say. This is no abstract God of reason, but a loving God
seen in the face of Jesus Christ. It is the Pauline Christ of Colossians and
Ephesians. It is the Christ of the Prologue to John’s Gospel: the Word “in
whom all things were created.” This is the Son of God, the Alpha and
Omega of John’s Apocalypse.
Our spiritual journey is an attempt to answer the question, “What is life all
about?” Here is Ignatius’s answer: a vision of God for our hearts, not our
minds. It is a depiction of the Creator as a superabundant giver. He gives
gifts that call forth a response on our part, a free choice to return ourselves
to him in grateful thanks and love. It is a vision that only a heart can
respond to.
Ignatius wrote that the Exercises: “have as their purpose the conquest of
self and the regulation of one’s life in such a way that no decision is made
under the influence of any inordinate attachment.” He wanted individuals to
undertake these exercises with the assistance of an experienced spiritual
director who would help them shape the retreat and understand what they
were experiencing. The book of Spiritual Exercisesis a handbook to be used
by the director, not by the person making the retreat.
First week. The first week of the Exercises is a time of reflection on our
lives in light of God’s boundless love for us. We see that our response to
God’s love has been hindered by patterns of sin. We face these sins knowing
that God wants to free us of everything that gets in the way of our loving
response to him. The first week ends with a meditation on Christ’s call to
follow him.
Second week. The meditations and prayers of the second week teach us
how to follow Christ as his disciples. We reflect on Scripture passages:
Christ’s birth and baptism, his sermon on the mount, his ministry of healing
and teaching, his raising Lazarus from the dead. We are brought to decisions
to change our lives to do Christ’s work in the world and to love him more
intimately.
Discernment of Spirits
Discernment of spirits is the interpretation of what St. Ignatius Loyola called
the “motions of the soul.” These interior movements consist of thoughts,
imaginings, emotions, inclinations, desires, feelings, repulsions, and
attractions. Spiritual discernment of spirits involves becoming sensitive to
these movements, reflecting on them, and understanding where they come
from and where they lead us.
Spiritual Direction
Spiritual direction is “help given by one Christian to another which enables
that person to pay attention to God’s personal communication to him or her,
to respond to this personally communicating God, to grow in intimacy with
this God, and to live out the consequences of the relationship.” (William A.
Barry and William J. Connolly, The Practice of Spiritual Direction)
Flexible. The Ignatian spiritual director does not impose a program on the
directee. The manner of the direction is adjusted to fit the person’s
personality, life history, and spiritual experience. The director “cannot know
beforehand what he or she will suggest.”
Ignatius understood early on that God was calling him to a life of service,
but it took him many years to figure out how he was supposed to do this.
His first notion was to set off by himself. Solitary individual accomplishment
was the knightly ideal of the time, and Ignatius applied this to his new life as
a Christian. He conceived of himself as a Christian knight in service of his
Lord. This did not work out very well. As a solitary pilgrim, he went to the
Holy Land, but was forced to return home. He began to teach others about
the spiritual life, but ran afoul of mistrustful inquisitors, who were deeply
suspicious of lone itinerant preachers sharing their spiritual insights with
others.
The real change in Ignatius’s style of ministry came when he went to the
University of Paris to get the education he needed to teach about the faith.
He notes what happened in a brief comment in his autobiography. He
studied philosophy and theology, he writes, “and gathered about him a
number of companions.” These companions were the men who became the
first members of the Society of Jesus. From this point on Ignatius always
worked in concert with others. The Jesuit order has included many
outstanding individuals with exceptional skills and talents, but Jesuit
ministry, and the ministry of others formed in Ignatian spirituality, has
always been formulated in a spirit of collaboration.
Collaboration is built into the very structure of the Spiritual Exercises.
Ignatius intended that the Exercises be undertaken not alone but with the
help of a spiritual director. The term director is actually something of a
misnomer. “The director’s role is that of being a helper to us in retreat,”
Ignatius writes at the beginning of the Exercises. This person does not
“direct” but rather guides and helps. The relationship between God and the
retreatant is always the focus of the Exercises, but we do not examine this
relationship alone. We are to do it collaboratively, with the assistance of a
wise and trusted guide who can help us be sensitive to the Spirit’s
movements and arrive at a discerning interpretation of these movements for
our spiritual growth.
God placed the parts, each one of them, in the body as he intended. If they
were all one part, where would the body be? But as it is, there are many
parts, yet one body. The eye cannot say to the hand, “I do not need you,”
nor again the head to the feet, “I do not need you.” . . . God has so
constructed the body . . . that there may be no division in the body, but that
the parts may have the same concern for one another. If (one) part suffers,
all the parts suffer with it; if one part is honored, all the parts share its joy.
(1 Corinthians 12:18-21, 24, 25-26)
Ignatian spirituality asks the question: What more does God want of
me? Ignatius had a profound insight into God and his creation, and he
developed many prayer methods, rules for discernment, spiritual disciplines,
and approaches to apostolic service. But all these elements of Ignatian
spirituality are ways to help us answer a single burning question, “What
more does God want now?”
Our response to God occurs now. We are not to be inhibited by our own
weakness and failure. We are not to ponder our unworthiness. God is
working in our lives now and we are to respond now.
This is certainly Jesus’ attitude when he called the first disciples. One day on
the Sea of Galilee Jesus directed Peter to cast his nets into a place on the
lake where Peter had had no luck fishing. Peter objects, but makes an
enormous catch, a clear sign of his call as one of Jesus’ followers. He
immediately raises the “unworthy” objection. “Depart from me, Lord, for I
am a sinful man,” he says. This is certainly true, but Jesus ignores him. “Do
not be afraid; from now on you will be catching men,” he says. (Luke
5:8,10)
Jesus surrounded himself with sinners. Ignatius draws our attention to the
call of Matthew. He was a tax collector, an agent of the hated Romans, who
made his living by extracting money from destitute peasants. Jesus
encountered Matthew sitting at his customs post and said simply “Follow
me.” The sinner’s response: “He got up and followed him.” Matthew threw a
party to celebrate his new life; he invited his old friends to come and meet
his new ones: “many tax collectors and sinners came and sat with Jesus and
his disciples.” When the Pharisees objected to this spectacle Jesus replied, “I
did not come to call the righteous but sinners.” (Mark 2:14,15,17)
The Gospels show us Jesus entering into people’s lives and inviting them to
follow him—right from where they are, from boats and fishnets and from tax
booths. He does not demand first that they run to the synagogue. Neither
should we delay our response to God until we deal with our neuroses and
character defects and our own sinful behaviors.
Our response to God grows and matures and deepens over time. It is a
process, not an event. Paul writes to the Corinthians that “I fed you milk,
not solid food, because you were unable to take it.” (1 Corinthians 3:2) God
will give us what we need. If we are beginners, or if we are troubled and
weak, God will give us milk. Later on we will have solid food. All along the
path we will be answering God’s call to “follow me.”
This is the question that the rich young man asked Jesus in the Gospels.
“What must I do to inherit eternal life,” he asked Jesus. Jesus reminded him
of his duties as a good Jew: to love God, keep the commandments, and love
his neighbor. “All of these I have observed from my youth,” he replied. He
wants to do more. At this, “Jesus, looking at him, loved him.” He tells the
young man to get rid of his possessions, and to “follow me.” (Mark 10:17-
21)
Jesus challenges the young man—and us—to be free of what we claim as our
own. This may be our material or worldly possessions. It may be our ideas
and our desires. God calls us to be free of these things, claiming them as our
own. Will we offer them to God and to God’s shaping and forming and using
them? He looks on us with love. What more can we do to respond to this
love?
Introduction to Discernment of
Spirits
St. Ignatius of Loyola began to learn about the discernment of spirits while
convalescing from serious battle injuries. He noticed different interior
movements as he imagined his future. In his autobiography, Ignatius writes
(in the third person):
He did not consider nor did he stop to examine this difference until one day
his eyes were partially opened and he began to wonder at this difference and
to reflect upon it. From experience he knew that some thoughts left him sad
while others made him happy, and little by little he came to perceive the
different spirits that were moving him; one coming from the devil, the other
coming from God (Autobiography, no. 8).
Talk of good and evil spirits may seem foreign to us. Psychology gives us
other names for what Ignatius called good and evil spirits. Yet Ignatius’s
language is useful because it recognizes the reality of evil. Evil is both
greater than we are and part of who we are. Our hearts are divided between
good and evil impulses. To call these “spirits” simply recognizes the spiritual
dimension of this inner struggle.
Consolation and Desolation
The feelings stirred up by good and evil spirits are called “consolation” and
“desolation” in the language of Ignatian spirituality.
The key question in interpreting consolation and desolation is: where is the
movement coming from and where is it leading me? Spiritual consolation
does not always mean happiness. Spiritual desolation does not always mean
sadness. Sometimes an experience of sadness is a moment of conversion
and intimacy with God. Times of human suffering can be moments of great
grace. Similarly, peace or happiness can be illusory if these feelings are
helping us avoid changes we need to make.
For people who have closed themselves off from God’s grace, the good spirit
disturbs and shakes up. It stirs feelings of remorse and discontent. The
purpose is to make the person unhappy with a sinful way of life. On the
other hand, the evil spirit wants such people to continue in their confusion
and darkness. So the evil spirit tries to make them complacent, content, and
satisfied with their distractions and pleasures.
For people who are trying to live a life pleasing to God, the good spirit
strengthens, encourages, consoles, removes obstacles, and gives peace. The
evil spirit tries to derail them by stirring up anxiety, false sadness, needless
confusion, frustration, and other obstacles.
First Rule. The first: It is proper to God and to His Angels in their movements to
give true spiritual gladness and joy, taking away all sadness and disturbance
which the enemy brings on. Of this latter it is proper to fight against the spiritual
gladness and consolation, bringing apparent reasons, subtleties and continual
fallacies.
Second Rule. The second: It belongs to God our Lord to give consolation to the soul
without preceding cause, for it is the property of the Creator to enter, go out and cause
movements in the soul, bringing it all into love of His Divine Majesty. I say without cause:
without any previous sense or knowledge of any object through which such consolation
would come, through one's acts of understanding and will.
Third Rule. The third: With cause, as well the good Angel as the bad can console the soul,
for contrary ends: the good Angel for the profit of the soul, that it may grow and rise from
good to better, and the evil Angel, for the contrary, and later on to draw it to his damnable
intention and wickedness.
Fourth Rule. The fourth: It is proper to the evil Angel, who forms himself under the
appearance of an angel of light, to enter with the devout soul and go out with himself: that
is to say, to bring good and holy thoughts, conformable to such just soul, and then little by
little he aims at coming out drawing the soul to his covert deceits and perverse intentions.
Fifth Rule. The fifth: We ought to note well the course of the thoughts, and if the beginning,
middle and end is all good, inclined to all good, it is a sign of the good Angel; but if in the
course of the thoughts which he brings it ends in something bad, of a distracting tendency,
or less good than what the soul had previously proposed to do, or if it weakens it or
disquiets or disturbs the soul, taking away its peace, tranquillity and quiet, which it had
before, it is a clear sign that it proceeds from the evil spirit, enemy of our profit and eternal
salvation.
Sixth Rule. The sixth: When the enemy of human nature has been perceived and known by
his serpent's tail and the bad end to which he leads on, it helps the person who was
tempted by him, to look immediately at the course of the good thoughts which he brought
him at their beginning, and how little by little he aimed at making him descend from the
spiritual sweetness and joy in which he was, so far as to bring him to his depraved
intention; in order that with this experience, known and noted, the person may be able to
guard for the future against his usual deceits.
Seventh Rule. The seventh: In those who go on from good to better, the good Angel
touches such soul sweetly, lightly and gently, like a drop of water which enters into a
sponge; and the evil touches it sharply and with noise and disquiet, as when the drop of
water falls on the stone.
And the above-said spirits touch in a contrary way those who go on from bad to worse.
The reason of this is that the disposition of the soul is contrary or like to the said Angels.
Because, when it is contrary, they enter perceptibly with clatter and noise; and when it is
like, they enter with silence as into their own home, through the open door.
Eighth Rule. The eighth: When the consolation is without cause, although there be no
deceit in it, as being of God our Lord alone, as was said; still the spiritual person to whom
God gives such consolation, ought, with much vigilance and attention, to look at and
distinguish the time itself of such actual consolation from the following, in which the soul
remains warm and favored with the favor and remnants of the consolation past; for often in
this second time, through one's own course of habits and the consequences of the concepts
and judgments, or through the good spirit or through the bad, he forms various resolutions
and opinions which are not given immediately by God our Lord, and therefore they have
need to be very well examined before entire credit is given them, or they are put into effect.
This kind of education goes directly counter to the prevailing educational trend practically
everywhere in the world. We Jesuits have always been heavily committed to the
educational apostolate. We still are. What, then, shall we do? Go with the current or
against it? I can think of no subject more appropriate than this for the General of the
Jesuits to take up with the former students of Jesuits schools.
First, let me ask this question: Have we Jesuits educated you for justice? You and I know
what many of your Jesuit teachers will answer to that question. They will answer, in all
sincerity and humility: No, we have not. If the terms "justice" and "education for justice"
carry all the depth of meaning which the Church gives them today, we have not educated
you for justice.
What is more, I think you will agree with this self-evaluation, and with the same sincerity
and humility acknowledge that you have not been trained for the kind of action for justice
and witness to justice which the Church now demands of us. What does this mean? It
means that we have work ahead of us. We must help each other to repair this lack in us,
and above all make sure that in future the education imparted in Jesuit schools will be
equal to the demands of justice in the world.
It can be done
It will be difficult, but we can do it. We can do it because, despite our historical limitations
and failures, there is something which lies at the very center of the Ignatian spirit, and
which enables us to renew ourselves ceaselessly and thus to adapt ourselves to new
situations as they arise.
What is this something? It is the spirit of constantly seeking the will of God. It is that
sensitiveness to the Spirit which enables us to recognize where, in what direction, Christ is
calling us at different periods of history, and to respond to that call.
This is not to lay any prideful claim to superior insight or intelligence. It is simply our
heritage from the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius. For these Exercises are essentially a
method enabling us to make very concrete decisions in accordance with God's will. It is a
method that does not limit us to any particular option, but spreads out before us the whole
range of practicable options in any given situation; opens up for us a sweeping vision
embracing many possibilities, to the end that God himself, in all his tremendous originality,
may trace out our path for us.
It is this "indifference," in the sense of lack of differentiation, this not being tied down to
anything except God's will, that gives to the Society and to the men and women it has been
privileged to educate what we may call their multi-faceted potential, their readiness for
anything, any service that may be demanded of them by the signs of the times.
Jesuit education in the past had its limitations. It was conditioned by time and place. As a
human enterprise it will always be. But it could not have been a complete failure if we
were able to pass on to you this spirit of openness to new challenges, this readiness for
change, this willingness - putting it in Scriptural terms - to undergo conversion. This is our
hope: that we have educated you to listen to the living God; to read the Gospel so as always
to find new light in it; to think with the Church, within which the Word of God always
ancient, ever new, resounds with that precise note and timbre needed by each historical
epoch. For this is what counts; on this is founded our confidence for the future.
There are two lines of reflection before us. One is to deepen our understanding of the idea
of justice as it becomes more and more clear in the light of the Gospel and the signs of the
times. The other is to determine the character and quality of the type of people we want to
form, the type of man or woman into which we must be changed, and towards which the
generations succeeding us must be encouraged to develop, if we and they are to serve this
evangelical ideal of justice.
The first line of reflection begins with the Synod of Bishops of 1971, and its opening
statement on "Justice in the World:"
Gathered from the whole world, in communion with all who believe in Christ and with the
entire human family, and opening our hearts to the Spirit who is making the whole of
creation new, we have questioned ourselves about the mission of the People of God to
further justice in the world.
Scrutinizing the “signs of the times” and seeking to detect the meaning of emerging
history… we have listened to the Word of God that we might be converted to the fulfilling of
the divine plan for the salvation of the world…
We have… been able to perceive the serious injustices which are building around the world
of men and women a network of domination, oppression and abuses which stifle freedom
and which keep the greater part of humanity from sharing in the building up and
enjoyment of a more just and more fraternal world.
At the same time we have noted the inmost stirring moving the world in its depths. There
are facts constituting a contribution to the furthering of justice. In associations of men and
women and among peoples there is arising a new awareness which spurs them on to
liberate themselves and to be responsible for their own destiny.
Please note that these words are not a mere repetition of what the Church has traditionally
taught. They are not a refinement of doctrine at the level of abstract theory. They are the
resonance of an imperious call of the living God asking his Church and all men of good will
to adopt certain attitudes and undertake certain types of action which will enable them
effectively to come to the aid of mankind oppressed and in agony.
This interpretation of the signs of the times did not originate with the Synod. It began with
the Second Vatican Council; its application to the problem of justice was made with
considerable vigor in Populorum Progressio; and spreading outward from this center to the
ends of the earth, it was taken up in 1968 by the Latin American Bishops at Medellin, in
1969 by the African Bishops at Kampala, in 1970 by the Asian Bishops in Manila. In 1971,
Pope Paul VI gathered all these voices together in the great call to action of Octogesima
Adveniens.
The Bishops of the Synod took it one step further, and in words of the utmost clarity
said: “Action on behalf of justice and participation in the transformation of the world fully
appear to us as a constitutive dimension of the preaching of the Gospel, or, in other words,
of the Church’s mission for the redemption of the human race and its liberation from every
oppressive situation.” We cannot, then, separate action for justice and liberation from
oppression from the proclamation of the Word of God.
Differences on what to do
This is plain speech indeed. However, it did not prevent doubts, questionings, even
tensions from arising within the Church itself. It would be naïve not to recognize this
fact. Contradictions, or at least dichotomies, have emerged regarding the actual
implementation of this call to action, and our task now is to try to harmonize these
dichotomies if we can. This would be in the spirit of the Holy Year that is coming, which is
the spirit of reconciliation.
To begin with, let us note that these dichotomies are differences of stress rather than
contradictions of ideas. In view of the present call to justice and liberation, where should
we put our stress – in our attitudes, our activities, our life style:
1. Quite clearly, the mission of the Church is not coextensive with the furthering of justice
on this planet. Still, the furthering of justice is a constitutive element of that mission, as the
Synod teaches. Recall the Old Testament: that First Alliance, the pact of Yahweh with his
chosen people, was basically concerned with the carrying out of justice, to such a degree
that the violation of justice as it concerns people implies a rupture of the Alliance with
God. Turn, now, to the New Testament, and see how Jesus has received from his Father the
mission to bring the Good News to the poor, liberation to the oppressed, and to make
justice triumph. “Blessed are the poor” - why? Because the Kingdom has already come;
the Liberator is at hand.
Love of neighbor
2. We are commanded to love God and to love our neighbor. But note what Jesus says: the
second commandment is like unto the first; they fuse together into one compendium of the
Law. And in his vision of the Last Judgment, what does the Judge say? “As long as you did
this for one of the least of my brothers, you did it for me.”3
Inclusion in or expulsion from the Kingdom proclaimed by Jesus depends on our attitude
toward the poor and oppressed; toward those who are identified in Isaiah 58,1-2 as the
victims of human injustice and in whose regard God wills to realize his justice. What is
strikingly new here is that Jesus makes these despised and marginalized folk
his brothers. He identifies himself with the poor and the powerless, with all who are
hungry and miserable. Every person in this condition is Christ’s brother or sister; that is
why what is done for them is done for Christ himself. Whoever comes effectively to the aid
of these brothers and sisters of Jesus belongs to his Kingdom; whoever abandons them to
their misery excludes himself or herself from that Kingdom.4
Love and justice meet
3. Just as love of God, in the Christian view, fuses with love of neighbor, to the point that
they cannot possibly be separated, so, too, charity and justice meet together and in practice
are identical. How can you love someone and treat him or her unjustly? Take justice away
from love and you destroy love. You do not have love if the beloved is not seen as a person
whose dignity must be respected, with all that that implies. And even if you take the
Roman notion of justice as giving to each his due, what is owing to him, Christians must say
that we owe love to all people, enemies not excepted.
Just as we are never sure that we love God unless we love others, so we are never sure that
we have love at all unless our love issues in works of justice. And I do not mean works of
justice in a merely individualistic sense. I mean three things:
Works of justice
First, a basic attitude of respect for all people which forbids us ever to use them as
instruments for our own profit.
Second, a firm resolve never to profit from, or allow ourselves to be suborned by, positions
of power deriving from privilege, for to do so, even passively, is equivalent to active
oppression. To be drugged by the comforts of privilege is to become contributors to
injustice as silent beneficiaries of the fruits of injustice.
Third, an attitude not simply of refusal but of counterattack against injustice; a decision to
work with others toward the dismantling of unjust social structures so that the weak, the
oppressed, the marginalized of this world may be set free.
We thus have a congenital inclination toward evil. In theological language this is called
"concupiscence," which is, concretely, a combination in us of the sin of Adam and all the
sins in history - including our own.
When we are converted, when God effects in us the marvel of justification, we turns to God
and our brothers and sisters in our innermost selves, and as a consequence sin in the strict
sense is washed away from us. However, the effects of sin continue their powerful
domination over our "periphery," and this, quite often, in a way that we are not even aware
of.
Now, Christ did not come merely to free us from sin and flood the center of our person with
his grace. He came to win our entire self for God - including what I have called our
"periphery." Christ came to do away not only with sin, but with its effects, even in this life;
not only to give us his grace, but to show forth the power of his grace.
Let us see the meaning of this as it pertains to the relationship between personal
conversion and structural reform. If "personal conversion" is understood in the narrow
sense of justification operative only at the very core of our person, it does not adequately
represent the truth of the matter, for such justification is only the root, the beginning of a
renewal, a reform of the structures at the "periphery" of our being, not only personal but
social.
If we agree on this, conclusions fairly tumble forth. For the structures of this world - our
customs; our social, economic, and political systems; our commercial relations; in general,
the institutions we have created for ourselves - insofar as they have injustice built into
them, are the concrete forms in which sin is objectified. They are the consequences of our
sins throughout history, as well as the continuing stimulus and spur for further sin.
There is a biblical concept for this reality. It is what Saint John calls, in a negative sense, the
"world." The "world" is in the social realm what "concupiscence" is in the personal, for, to
use the classical definition of concupiscence, it "comes from sin and inclines us to it."
Hence, like concupiscence, the "world" as understood in this sense must also be the object
of our efforts at purification. Our new vision of justice must give rise to a new kind of
spirituality, of asceticism; or rather, an expansion of traditional spirituality and asceticism
to include not only the personal but the social. In short, interior conversion is not
enough. God's grace calls us not only to win back our whole selves for God, but to win back
our whole world for God. We cannot separate personal conversion from structural social
reform.
5. It follows that this purification, this social asceticism, this earthly liberation is so central
in our Christian attitude toward life that whoever holds himself aloof from the battle for
justice implicitly refuses love for his fellows and consequently for God. The struggle for
justice will never end. Our efforts will never be fully successful in this life. This does not
mean that such efforts are worthless.
God wants such partial successes. They are the first-fruits of the salvation wrought by
Jesus. They are the signs of the coming of his Kingdom, the visible indications of its
mysterious spreading among us. Of course, partial successes imply partial failures; painful
failures; the defeat of many people, many of us, who will be overcome and destroyed in the
fight against this “world.” For this “world” will not take it lying down, as the vivid American
expression has it. It will persecute, it will try to exterminate those who do not belong to it
and stand in opposition to it.
But this defeat is only apparent. It is precisely those who suffer persecution for the sake of
justice who are blessed. It is precisely the crucified who pass through the world “doing
good and healing all.”5
Technologies necessary
6. To point out in very general fashion that there are injustices in the world – something
which everybody knows without being told – that is not enough: agreed. Having stated
principles, we must go to a map of the world and point out the critical points –
geographical, sociological, cultural – where sin and injustice find their logment: also
agreed. To do this, technologies are needed as instruments of analysis and action, and
ideologies are needed to program analysis and action so that they will actually dislodge and
dismantle injustice: by all means agreed.
What role is left, then, for the inculcation of Christian values, for the Christian
ethos? This: we cannot forget that technologies and ideologies, necessary though they are,
derive their origin, historically, from a mixture of good and evil. Injustice of one kind or
another finds in them too a local habitation and a name.
Put it this way: they are tools, imperfect tools. And it is the Christian ethos, the Christian
vision of values, that must use these tools while submitting them to judgment and
relativizing their tendency to make absolutes of themselves. Relativizing them, putting
them in their place, as it were, with full realization that the Christian ethos cannot possibly
construct a new world without their assistance.
With this background, let us now enter upon our second line of reflection, which bears on
the formation of men and women who will reconcile these antitheses and thus advance the
cause of justice in the modern world; their continuing formation, in the case of us “old
timers,” their basic formation, in the case of the youth who will hopefully take up the
struggle when we can do no more.
With regard to continuing education, let me say this: our alumni associations are called
upon, in my opinion, to be a channel par excellence for its realization. Look upon it
as your job, and, with the assistance of our Jesuits in the educational apostolate, work out
concrete plans and programs for it.
And let us not have too limited an understanding of what continuing education is. It should
not be simply the updating of technical or professional knowledge, or even the re-
education necessary to meet the challenges of a rapidly changing world. It should rather be
what is most specific in Christian education: a call to conversion. And that means, today, a
conversion that will prepare us for witnessing to justice as God gives us to see it from the
signs of our times.
THE MEN AND WOMEN THE CHURCH NEEDS
TODAY
Man or woman for others
What kind of man or woman is needed today by the Church, by the world? One who is a
“man-or woman-for-others.” That is my shorthand description. A man-or-woman-for-
others. But does this not contradict the very nature of the human person? Are we not each
a “being-for-ourselves?” Gifted with intelligence that endows us with power, do we not
tend to control the world, making ourselves its center? Is this not our vocation, our
history?
Yes; gifted with conscience, intelligence and power each of us is indeed a center. But a
center called to go out of ourselves, to give ourself to others in love -- love, which is our
definitive and all-embracing dimension, that which gives meaning to all our other
dimensions. Only the one who loves fully realizes himself or herself as a person. To the
extent that any of us shuts ourselves off from others we do not become more a person; we
becomes less.
Anyone who lives only for his or her own interests not only provides nothing for others. He
or she does worse. They tend to accumulate in exclusive fashion more and more
knowledge, more and more power, more and more wealth; thus denying, inevitably to
those weaker then themselves their proper share of the God-given means for human
development.
What is it to humanize the world if not to put it at the service of mankind? But the egoist
not only does not humanize the material creation, he or she dehumanizes others
themselves. They change others into things by dominating them, exploiting them, and
taking to themselves the fruit of their labor.
The tragedy of it all is that by doing this, the egoists dehumanize themselves. They
surrender themselves with the possessions they covet; they become slaves – no longer
persons who are self-possessed but un-persons, things driven by their blind desires and
their objects.
But when we dehumanize, de-personalize ourselves in this way, something stirs within
us. We feel frustrated. In our heart of hearts we know that what we have is nothing
compared with what we are, what we can be, what we would like to be. We would like to
be ourselves. But we dare not break the vicious circle. We think we can overcome our
frustrations by striving to have more, to have more than others, to have ever more and
more. We thus turn our lives into a competitive rat-race without meaning.
Dehumanization
The downward spiral of ambition, competition, and self-destruction twists and expands
unceasingly, with the result that we are chained ever more securely to a progressive, and
progressively frustrating, dehumanization.
Vicious circle
How escape from this vicious circle? Clearly, the whole process has its root in egoism – in
the denial of love. But to try to live in love and justice in a world whose prevailing climate
is egoism and injustice, where egoism and injustice are built into the very structures of
society – is this not a suicidal, or at least a fruitless undertaking?
And yet, it lies at the very core of the Christian message; it is the sum and substance of the
call of Christ. Saint Paul put it in a single sentence: “Do not allow yourself to be overcome
by evil, but rather, overcome evil with good.”6 This teaching, which is identical with the
teaching of Christ about love for the enemy, is the touchstone of Christianity. All of us
would like to be good to others, and most of us would be relatively good in a good
world. What is difficult is to be good in an evil world, where the egoism of others and the
egoism built into the institutions of society attack us and threaten to annihilate us.
Under such conditions, the only possible reaction would seem to be to oppose evil with evil,
egoism with egoism, hate with hate; in short, to annihilate the aggressor with his own
weapons. But is it not precisely thus that evil conquers us most thoroughly? For then, not
only does it damage us exteriorly, it perverts our very heart. We allow ourselves, in the
words of Saint Paul, to be overcome by evil.
No; evil is overcome only by good, hate by love, egoism by generosity. It is thus that we
must sow justice in our world. To be just, it is not enough to refrain from injustice. One
must go further and refuse to play its game, substituting love for self-interest as the driving
force of society.
All this sounds very nice, you will say, but isn’t it just a little bit up in the air? Very well, let
us get down to cases. How do we get this principle of justice through love down to the level
of reality, the reality of our daily lives? By cultivating in ourselves three attitudes:
First, a firm determination to live much more simply – as individuals, as families, as social
groups – and in this way to stop short, or at least to slow down, the expanding spiral of
luxurious living and social competition. Let us have men and women who will resolutely
set themselves against the tide of our consumer society. Men and women who, instead of
feeling compelled to acquire everything that their friends have will do away with many of
the luxuries which in their social set have become necessities, but which the majority of
mankind must do without. And if this produces surplus income, well and good; let it be
given to those for whom the necessities of life are still luxuries beyond their reach.
No unjust profit
Second, a firm determination to draw no profit whatever from clearly unjust sources. Not
only that, but going further, to diminish progressively our share in the benefits of an
economic and social system in which the regards of production accrue to those already
rich, while the cost of production lies heavily on the poor. Let there be men and women
who will bend their energies not to strengthen positions of privilege, but, to the extent
possible, reduce privilege in favor of the underprivileged. Please do not conclude too
hastily that this does not pertain to you – that you do not belong to the privileged few in
your society. It touches everyone of a certain social position, even though only in certain
respects, and even if we ourselves may be the victims of unjust discrimination by those
who are even better off than ourselves. In this matter, our basic point of reference must be
the truly poor, the truly marginalized, in our own countries and in the Third World.
Third, and most difficult: a firm resolve to be agents of change in society; not merely
resisting unjust structures and arrangements, but actively undertaking to reform
them. For, if we set out to reduce income in so far as it is derived from participation in
unjust structures, we will find out soon enough that we are faced with an impossible task
unless those very structures are changed.
Posts of power
Thus, stepping down from our own posts of power would be too simple a course of
action. In certain circumstances it may be the proper thing to do; but ordinarily it merely
serves to hand over the entire social structure to the exploitation of the egotistical. Here
precisely is where we begin to feel how difficult is the struggle for justice; how necessary it
is to have recourse to technical ideological tools. Here is where cooperation among alumni
and alumni associations becomes not only useful but necessary.
Let us not forget, especially, to bring into our counsels our alumni who belong to the
working class. For in the last analysis, it is the oppressed who must be the principal agents
of change. The role of the privileged is to assist them; to reinforce with pressure from
above the pressure exerted from below on the structures that need to be changed.
Footnotes:
2. Ibid. n. 10.
3. Mt 25.40
5. Acts 10.38
6. Rom 12.21
The Steps of the Examen
Today let’s explore the Examen through the lens of brief reflections
pertaining to each step. The steps in this version of the Examen match what
is presented in A Simple, Life-Changing Prayer by Jim Manney.
The poet is alluding to the Exodus story in which Moses, encountering God in
a burning bush, removes his sandals and hears the call to lead his people
out of slavery and into the Promised Land.…Like Moses, we are first of all
called to recognize that we live and work and stand in a holy place, “a world
charged with the grandeur of God.” We are called, therefore, to the holiness
that Rabbi Kushner earlier defined as “being aware that [we] are in the
presence of God.”
We are called, further, to freedom from whatever shackles us. For Moses’s
people, it was freedom from oppression at the hands of an Egyptian
pharaoh; for us, it may be getting over ourselves by breaking free from
attachment to money, power, greed, fear, alcohol, sex, pride, prejudice, or
any other demons that prevent our becoming our best selves.
Give thanks.
Our gifts and talents differ, and as a result the harvest produced will differ.
But such differences do not make some people better in the eyes of God.
Whatever talents or gifts we have are just that—gifts. And gratitude is the
only proper response to the reception of gifts.
Gratitude for what we are given runs counter to the competitive nature of
our culture. From infancy, we are taught to compare ourselves with others in
terms of talent or looks. IQ tests, SAT scores, class rankings—all compel us
to compare ourselves with others. In such a culture, the inability to do what
others can do and are applauded for can lead to a sense of inferiority.
Hence, the man from whom the legion of demons was cast out would, in our
culture, tend to think of himself as less valued by Jesus than the apostles
who get to follow him. Under such circumstances, the Christian attitude of
gratitude and acceptance of the gifts one has does not come easily. We need
to pray regularly and often for gratitude to God for who we are.
Perhaps even more important is to pray to know in our bones that we are
the apple of God’s eye just as we are. Once, a retreatant felt that Jesus was
telling him, “I love no one more than I love you, but I don’t love you more
than anyone else.” This was a consoling experience for him and left him
feeling very grateful. Moreover, he had no basis for making comparative
judgments about his worth in the eyes of Jesus. What a great relief and
freedom it would be if we could believe that Jesus makes no comparisons
but loves each of us as we are, and wants the best for each of us.
A man came along with his small daughter and their dog. The man bought a
newspaper for himself and a little container of soap bubbles for his daughter
to play with. They sat down beside me. The man was engrossed in his
newspaper. The little girl was delightedly blowing bubbles, clearly entranced
by the magical colored globe that each bubble formed as it caught the
sunlight. The dog jumped up after every bubble and tried to catch it, but as
soon as he seized the bubble with his snout, the bubble burst.
We come to the humbling awareness that we are sinners, that we have often
been ungrateful and unfaithful. We have failed to respond to God’s offer of
love by failing to love God and love our neighbor. Sin is the failure to bother
to love. Sin is not simply the things we do but also the things we fail to do.
Ignatius traces all this to a lack of gratitude—failure to recognize everything
as a gift to be cherished, fostered, and shared. For Ignatius, ingratitude is
the greatest sin and the root of all sin. It is, in the end, the failure to love as
God has loved us.
This realization leads us to sorrow. Ignatius invites us to pray for sorrow and
shame, for a deep interior knowledge of our sinfulness, of the disorder in our
lives, and of our ingratitude and lack of response to God’s offer of life. This
sorrow leads us to contrition and repentance—a turning toward God, whom
we have offended. We realize that we have distanced ourselves from the one
we most desire.
We are sinners, but we are forgiven. The two are connected. Only when we
claim our sinfulness and stand in sorrow before God can we truly experience
God’s mercy. We are loved sinners. God loves us even when we are sinners.
Only when we know the depth of our sin do we know the depth of God’s
mercy. We are not as good as we thought, but we are much more loved than
we ever imagined.
Today isn’t going to be what you expect. Your boss will give you a new
project; people who have promised to get back to you won’t do it; someone
you haven’t heard from in months will call or drop in; you’ll open an e-mail
and discover that you have to stop what you’re doing and tend to a problem
immediately; your spouse will be delayed at work, disrupting dinner and the
evening plans; your sister will call, asking for a big favor. You can’t control
this pandemonium, but you do have influence over it. There are some steps
you can take to get more closely aligned to Christ, who is in it all.
Most of us can relate to Paula’s story; her desire to give her daughter the
perfect wedding led to weeks of frenzy and overwork. One time, when my
sister and brother-in-law were visiting, we’d had a full day of sightseeing
and had returned home to cook a nice dinner. At about 8 p.m., I started
pulling out ingredients to make an apple pie, and my sister stopped me:
“Are you on speed?” she asked, laughing at my insistence on providing a
homemade dessert. I decided that it was more important to relax and watch
a movie with my family than slave over a pie we were too tired to eat
anyway.
Parents must practice temperance when it’s time to let go of children, even
though we know we could help them organize their lives or choose their
friends. Our good desire to help those we love must be tempered by
wisdom.
One of the best gifts of temperance is that it frees us to enjoy our loves.
When I write, I can throw myself into it completely. And when temperance
tells me it’s time to stop writing and do something else, I can put down my
work and enter the next thing wholeheartedly.
SOURCE: http://www.ignatianspirituality.com/what-is-ignatian-
spirituality/#getting-started