Biography of ST Ignatius
Biography of ST Ignatius
Biography of ST Ignatius
Ignatius of Loyola
St. Ignatius of Loyola, Spanish San Ignacio de Loyola, baptized Iñigo,
(born 1491, Loyola, Castile [Spain]—died July 31, 1556, Rome [Italy];
canonized March 12, 1622; feast day July 31), Spanish theologian, one of the
most influential figures in the Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation in the 16th
century, and founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in Paris in 1534.
Early Life
Ignatius was born in the ancestral castle of the Loyolas in the Basque
province of Guipúzcoa. The youngest son of a noble and wealthy family,
Ignatius became in 1506 a page in the service of a relative, Juan Velázquez
de Cuéllar, treasurer of the kingdom of Castile. In 1517 Ignatius became
a knight in the service of another relative, Antonio Manrique de Lara, duke of
Nájera and viceroy of Navarre, who employed him in military undertakings and
on a diplomatic mission.
While defending the citadel of Pamplona against the French, Ignatius was hit
by a cannonball on May 20, 1521, sustaining a bad fracture of his right leg
and damage to his left. This event closed the first period of his life, during
which he was, on his own admission, “a man given to the vanities of the world,
whose chief delight consisted in martial exercises, with a great and vain desire
to win renown” (Autobiography, 1). Although his morals were far from
stainless, Ignatius was in his early years a proud rather than sensual man. He
stood just under five feet two inches in height and had in his youth an
abundance of hair of a reddish tint. He delighted in music, especially
sacred hymns.
Spiritual Awakening
It is the second period of Ignatius’s life, in which he turned toward a saintly
life, that is the better known. After treatment at Pamplona, he was transported
to Loyola in June 1521. There his condition became so serious that for a time
it was thought he would die. When out of danger, he chose to undergo painful
surgery to correct blunders made when the bone was first set. The result was
a convalescence of many weeks, during which he read a life of Christ and
a bookon the lives of the saints, the only reading matter the castle afforded.
He also passed time in recalling tales of martial valour and in thinking of a
great lady whom he admired. In the early stages of this enforced reading, his
attention was centred on the saints. The version of the lives of the saints he
was reading contained prologues to the various lives by a Cistercian monk
who conceived the service of God as a holy chivalry. This view of life
profoundly moved and attracted Ignatius. After much reflection, he resolved to
imitate the holy austerities of the saints in order to do penance for his sins.
In February 1522 Ignatius bade farewell to his family and went to Montserrat,
a place of pilgrimage in northeastern Spain. He spent three days in confessing
the sins of his whole life, hung his sword and dagger near the statue of
the Virgin Mary as symbols of his abandoned ambitions, and, clothed in
sackcloth, spent the night of March 24 in prayer. The next day he went
to Manresa, a town 48 km (30 miles) from Barcelona, to pass the decisive
months of his career, from March 25, 1522, to mid-February 1523. He lived as
a beggar, ate and drank sparingly, scourged himself, and for a time neither
combed nor trimmed his hair and did not cut his nails. Daily he
attended mass and spent seven hours in prayer, often in a cave outside
Manresa. The sojourn at Manresa was marked by spiritual trials as well as by
joy and interior light. While sitting one day on the banks of the Cardoner River,
“the eyes of his understanding began to open and, without seeing any vision,
he understood and knew many things, as well spiritual things as things of the
faith” (Autobiography, 30). At Manresa he sketched the fundamentals of his
little book The Spiritual Exercises. Until the close of his studies at Paris
(1535), he continued to make some additions to it. Thereafter there were only
minor changes until Pope Paul III approved it in 1548. The Spiritual
Exercises is a manual of spiritual arms containing a vital and dynamic system
of spirituality. During his lifetime Ignatius used it to give spiritual retreats to
others, especially to his followers. The booklet is indeed an adaptation of
the Gospels for such retreats.
The remainder of the decisive period was devoted to
a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Ignatius left Barcelona in March 1523 and,
traveling by way of Rome, Venice, and Cyprus, reached Jerusalem on
September 4. He would have liked to have settled there permanently, but
the Franciscan custodians of the shrines of the Latin church would not listen
to this plan. After visiting Bethany, the Mount of Olives, Bethlehem, the Jordan
River, and Mount of Temptation, Ignatius left Palestine on October 3 and,
passing through Cyprus and Venice, reached Barcelona in March 1524.
After the pilgrim had learned that it was God’s will that he should not stay in
Jerusalem, he pondered in his heart what he should do and finally decided to
study for a time in order to be able to help souls” (Autobiography, 50). So
Ignatius, who in his Autobiography refers to himself as the “pilgrim,” describes
his decision to acquire as good an education as the circumstances permitted.
He probably could have reached the priesthood in a few years. He chose to
defer this goal for more than 12 years and to undergo the drudgery of the
classroom at an age when most men have long since finished their training.
Perhaps his military career had taught him the value of careful preparation. At
any rate, he was convinced that a well-trained man would accomplish in a
short time what one without training would never accomplish.
Ignatius studied at Barcelona for nearly two years. In 1526 he transferred to
Alcalá. By this time he had acquired followers, and the little group had
assumed a distinctive garb; but Ignatius soon fell under suspicion
of heresy and was imprisoned and tried. Although found innocent, he left
Alcalá for Salamanca. There not only was he imprisoned but his companions
were also apprehended. Again he won acquittal but was forbidden to teach
until he had finished his studies. This prohibition induced Ignatius to leave
his disciples and Spain.
He arrived in Paris on February 2, 1528, and remained there as a student until
1535. He lived on alms, and in 1528 and 1529 he went to Flanders to beg
from Spanish merchants. In 1530 he went to England for the same purpose.
In Paris Ignatius soon had another group of disciples whose manner of living
caused such a stir that he had to explain himself to the religious authorities.
This episode finally convinced him that he must abstain from public religious
endeavour until he reached the priesthood.
During his long stay in the French capital, Ignatius won the coveted M.A. at
the Collège de Sainte-Barbe. He also gathered the companions who were to
be cofounders with him of the Society of Jesus, among them St. Francis
Xavier, who became one of the order’s greatest missionaries. On August 15,
1534, he led the little band to nearby Montmartre, where they bound
themselves by vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, though as yet
without the express purpose of founding a religious order.
Ordination
Early in 1535, before the completion of his theological studies, Ignatius left Paris for
reasons of health. He spent more than six months in Spain and then went
to Bologna and Venice where he studied privately. On January 8, 1537, his Parisian
companions joined him in Venice. All were eager to make the pilgrimage to
Jerusalem, but war between Venice and the Turkish empire rendered this impossible.
Ignatius and most of his companions were ordained on June 24, 1537. There followed
18 months during which they acquired experience in the ministry while also devoting
much time to prayer. During these months, although he did not as yet say mass,
Ignatius had one of the decisive experiences of his life. He related to his companions
that on a certain day, while in prayer, he seemed to see Christ with the cross on his
shoulder and beside him the Eternal Father, who said, “I wish you to take this man for
your servant,” and Jesus took him and said, “My will is that you should serve us.” On
Christmas Day 1538 Ignatius said his first mass at the Church of St. Mary Major in
Rome. This ends the third period of his life, that of his studies, which were far from a
formality. Diego Laínez, a cofounder of the Society of Jesus and an intelligent
observer, judged that despite handicaps Ignatius had as great diligence as any of his
fellow students. He certainly became in the difficult field of ascetic and mystical
theology one of the surest of Catholic guides.
Founding Of The Jesuit Order
The final period of Loyola’s life was spent in Rome or its vicinity. In 1539 the
companions decided to form a permanent union, adding a vow of obedience to a
superior elected by themselves to the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience to the
Roman pontiff that they had already taken. In 1540 Pope Paul III approved the plan of
the new order. Loyola was the choice of his companions for the office of general.
The Society of Jesus developed rapidly under his hand. When he died, there
were about 1,000 Jesuits divided into 12 administrative units, called
provinces. Three of these were in Italy, a like number in Spain, two in
Germany, one in France, one in Portugal, and two overseas in India and
Brazil. Loyola was, in his last years, much occupied with Germany and India,
to which he sent his famous followers St. Peter Canisius and St. Francis
Xavier. He also dispatched missionaries to the Congo region and to Ethiopia.
In 1546 Loyola secretly received into the society St. Francis Borgia, duke of
Gandía and viceroy of Catalonia. When knowledge of this became public four
years later, it created a sensation. Borgia organized the Spanish provinces of
the order and became third general. Loyola left his mark on Rome. He founded
the Roman College, embryo of the Gregorian University, and the Germanicum, a
seminary for German candidates for the priesthood. He also established a home for
young women and one for converted Jews.
The Jesuit Constitutions
Although at first Loyola had been somewhat opposed to placing his companions in
colleges as educators of youth, he came in the course of time to recognize the value of
the educational apostolate and in his last years was busily engaged in laying the
foundations of the system of schools that was to stamp his order as largely a teaching
order.
Probably the most important work of his later years was the composition of
the Constitutions of the Society of Jesus. In them he decreed that his
followers were to abandon some of the traditional forms of the religious life,
such as chanting the divine office, physical punishments, and penitential garb,
in favour of greater adaptability and mobility; they also renounced chapter
government by the members of the order in favour of a
more authoritative regime, and their vows were generally of such a nature that
separation from the order was easier than had been usual in similar Catholic
groups. The Society of Jesus was to be above all an order of apostles “ready
to live in any part of the world where there was hope of God’s greater glory
and the good of souls.” Loyola insisted on long and thorough training of his
followers. Convinced that women are better ruled by women than by men,
after some hesitation he resolutely excluded a female branch of the order. The
special vow of obedience to the pope was called by Loyola “the cause and
principal foundation” of his society.
While general of the order, Loyola was frequently sick. In January 1551 he
became so ill that he begged his associates, though to no purpose, to accept
his resignation as superior. Despite his condition he continued to direct the
order until his death in July 1556. Since his days at Manresa, Loyola had
practiced a form of prayer that was later published in The Spiritual
Exercises and appears to have rivaled that of the greatest mystics.
Ignatius Loyola was beatified by Pope Paul V in 1609 and canonized by
Pope Gregory XV in 1622. In 1922 he was declared patron of all spiritual
retreats by Pope Pius XI. His achievements and those of his followers form a
chapter in the history of the Roman Catholic Church that cannot be neglected
by those who desire to understand that institution.