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ST.
IGNATIUS LOYOLA
St.
Ignatius was born in the Basque area of Spain in 1491. In his
early life he pursued a worldly career as a courtier and soldier.
At the age of 30 in a battle against the French at Pamplona he
was struck down by a cannon ball. Both legs were wounded. During
a long period of recuperation he had no books to read except a
life of Christ and a collection of the lives of the saints.
God
inspired him to follow their example. He traveled to Montserrat,
a Benedictine monastery west of Barcelona, and there commit himself
to follow a new kind of life. His conversion was deepened through
a ten-month stay at Manresa, a town about ten miles from Montserrat,
where God spoke to him powerfully.
Ignatius
greatly desired to share this experience of God with others. But
in those days it was dangerous for an unschooled layman to speak
about religious matters. He had to go back to school at the age
of 30 and become a priest. He went to the University of Paris.
There he found companions, among them Francis Xavier.
Later
these companions, now a group of nine, decided to offer themselves
to the Pope for whatever ministry he wanted them to undertake.
They came to realize that God was calling them to form a new type
of religious order to be sent, on a moment's notice, to any part
of the world where the need was greatest. Ignatius was elected
the head of this new religious order which was called the Society
of Jesus or the Jesuits. Ignatius oversaw the drafting of the
Constitutions for the Society which expanded to 1,000 men by the
time of his death in 1556. Ignatius and his experiences and the
Ignatian spirituality deriving from them are the foundation on
which the Jesuits and this retreat house and our work are based.
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