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The Autobiography of Ignatius Loyola

The Autobiography of Ignatius Loyola. Next Week. MONDAY: witches WEDNESDAY: LAST class, review for the final (try not to miss it) FRIDAY: NO CLASS. The Society of Jesus as a military order. Read pp.21-23 What did Ignatius do for a living? What was he reading when he was wounded?

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The Autobiography of Ignatius Loyola

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  1. The Autobiography of Ignatius Loyola

  2. Next Week • MONDAY: witches • WEDNESDAY: LAST class, review for the final (try not to miss it) • FRIDAY: NO CLASS

  3. The Society of Jesus as a military order • Read pp.21-23 • What did Ignatius do for a living? • What was he reading when he was wounded? • What kind of thoughts did he have?

  4. So… • Ignatius was a soldier, and he saw his calling as being another kind of fight • Also, keep in mind the kind of lust for ‘big accomplishment’ (‘St.Dominic did this…St.Francis did this’), that is a key component of the society • Mission is, to a certain extent, an expression of this

  5. Asceticism and activism • Read on p.33 • What does Ignatius do? • Read at pp.36-37 • What about now?

  6. So…. • So the Society of Jesus is not about extremities: you need your strengths in order to do your work, so no need for starving yourself. Jeronimo Nadal, one of Ignatius’s early companion, used to say: ‘the world is our convent’ • Also, spiritual and mystical aspects need to be regulated: Ignatius always checks with his confessor to make sure that what he does is ok

  7. The ‘Spiritual exercises’ or the Jesuit way to mysticism

  8. Jesuit mysticism • Ignatius is not against visions and mysticism in principle, however • He wants all these to be regulated. How? • Always get yourself checked by your confessor • Follow his ‘mystical manual’, the ‘Spiritual Exercises’, that tells you what to think and how to tell whether your visions or mystical experience are good or not

  9. Ignatius and Plan A • Read on p.67 • Why does Ignatius get in trouble then?

  10. So… • The Jesuits are born out of the fervor and air of change that also brought about the Plan-A: they ‘preach about vices and virtues’ • Erasmus is mentioned in passing, for two reasons: • 1) notice the Erasmian flavor of what Ignatius was doing, but • 2) Erasmus was a ‘suspicious’ character when the Autobiography was written, so it was better to downplay the whole thing • Loyola gets in trouble for that: ‘You are not educated men, said the friar…no one can speak about these [virtues and vices] except in one of two ways: either through education, or through the Holy Spirit’

  11. Ignatius and Plan B • What happens on pp.70-1? • How does Ignatius react to the sentence? • What does that suggest you?

  12. So… • Ignatius could fit and did fit Plan B too, and that is why the Society of Jesus was so successful! Two main reasons why: • 1) Obedience to the superior and to the Pope: the Jesuits to what they are told to do • 2) The Jesuits ARE the establishment, and become very powerful very quickly • Also, education is important for the Jesuits: ‘Ignatius went to Paris to study’

  13. Ignatius among the people • Read on pp.82-3: What does Ignatius do? • What does that suggest you?

  14. Preachin’ and fixin’: the Jesuits and Counter-Reformation ‘high’ and ‘low’ Church • Ignatius preached ‘to the children’: emphasis on teaching the proper Catholic doctrine • Ignatius ‘made an attempt to eliminate some abuses’: social and moral control is a crucial part of Counter-Reformation Catholicism

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