Tuesday, July 31, 2007

One for the Jesuits!

Today is the feast day of St Ignatius of Loyola, one of the founders of the Jesuit order.

The Jesuit boys in my Theology of the Human Person class brought cake to tonight's class, so we all shared in the celebration of the Feast day with a bit of a feast ourselves.

And just so we know who and what we are celebrating, the following information, for our mutual edification, comes from here.

Ignatius of Loyola

[Saint Ignatius statue]

Also known as Inigo Lopez de Loyola

Memorial 31 July


Profile
Spanish nobility. Youngest of twelve children. Page in the Spanish court of Ferdinand and Isabella. Military education. Soldier, entering the army in 1517, and serving in several campaigns. Wounded in the leg by a cannonball at the siege of Pampeluna on 20 May 1521, an injury that left him partially crippled for life. During his recuperation the only books he had access to were The Golden Legend, a collection of lives of the saints, and the Life of Christ by Ludolph the Carthusian. These books, and the time spent in contemplation, changed him.

On his recovery he took a vow of chastity, hung his sword before the altar of the Virgin of Montserrat, and donned a pilgrim's robes. Lived in a cave from 1522 to 1523, contemplating the way to live a Christian life. Pilgrim to Rome and the Holy Land in 1523, where he worked to convert Muslims. In 1528 he began studying theology in Barcelona, Alcala, and Paris, receiving his degree on 14 March 1534. His meditations, prayers, visions and insights led to forming the Constitutions of the Society of Jesus on 15 August 1534; it received papal approval in 1541. Friend of James Lainez, Alonso Salmerón, Nicholas Bobadilla, Simón Rodriguez, Blessed Peter Faber, and Saint Francis Xavier, the group that formed the core of the new Society. He never used the term Jesuit, which was coined as an insult by his opponents; the Society today uses the term with pride. He travelled Europe and the Holy Lands, then settled in Rome to direct the Jesuits. His health suffered in later years, and he was nearly blind at death.

The Jesuits today have over 500 universities and colleges, 30,000 members, and teach over 200,000 students each year.

Born 1491 at Loyola, Guipuzcoa, Spain as Inigo Lopez de Loyola

Died of fever on 31 July 1556 at Rome, Italy


Beatified 27 July 1609 by Pope Paul V


Canonized 12 March 1622 by Pope Gregory XV

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Okay, I could be completely wrong here, but wasn't one of the reasons for the formation of the Jesuits the need to reclaim England from Protestants? Or was that just anti-Catholic propaganda that lodged in my infant protestant brain and hasn't yet been dislodged?

Caro said...

Hmm.. .well the Wikipedia entry about Jesuits at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesuits says that one of the order's missions was to stop the spread of Protestantism... but the article doesn't mention England specifically.

So you may be right (and I may be crazy)... but the cake from Brunetti's last night to celebrate St Ignatius' feast day was still very yum.