There is a well-established tradition that on the occasion of a Jesuit General Congregation, the Holy Father meets with the delegates. Since most of the time this happens as an audience in the rooms of the Vatican, there is not a precedent for the pope himself choosing to meet the Jesuits as they are gathered in the General Congregation in the curia of the Society. So at 9:00am this morning, Pope Francis went discreetly to the curia of the Company of Jesus and was greeted by Father General Arturo Sosa and the superior of the curia community, Father Joaquín Barrero.
These two accompanied him into the aula, and the Pope participated in morning prayer with the delegates. The theme of the prayer, the good shepherd, had been chosen for the occasion. The Ignatian tradition of reflection made a reference to Father Franz van de Lugt, who made himself pastor of his own in Homs, Syria, until he was killed by the insanity of war. The members of the Congregation prayed for Pope Francis, as he often requests of all those he meets.
After the completion of Morning Prayer, there was a brief greeting offered by the Superior General, Father Arturo Sosa Abascal, and then the Pope delivered the following speech.
Dear brothers and friends of the Lord,
While I was praying and thinking about what I would say, I remembered with particular emotion the final words that were spoken by Blessed Paul VI at the conclusion of the XXXII General Congregation: In this way, in this way brothers and sons. Go forward in the Name of God. Let us walk together, free, obedient, united in the love of Christ, for the greater glory of God (Speech to the participants taking part in the 32nd General Council of the Company of Jesus, 3 December 1974).
Also, Saint John Paul II and Benedict XVI have encouraged us to “lead a life worthy of the
vocation to which we have been called (Eph 4:1 - Homily during the inaugural celebration of the 33rd General Congregation of the Company of Jesus, 2 September 1983) and following the path of mission in full fidelity to your original charism in the ecclesial and social context that characterizes this beginning of the millennium. As my predecessors have often said, the Church needs you,
counts on you and continues to turn to you with confidence, particularly to reach the
geographical and spiritual places where others do not reach, or find it difficult to reach (Speech to participants taking part in the 35th General Congregation of the Company of Jesus, 21 February 2008).
Walking together – free and obedient – going to the peripheries where others do not reach,
under Jesus’ gaze and looking to the horizon which is the ever greater glory of God, who
ceaselessly surprises us (Homily on the Feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus, Church of Jesus, 3 January 2014). The Jesuit is called as Ignatius says our vocation is to travel through
the world and to live in any part of it where there is hope of greater service to God and of help
of souls (Con, 304). That is, as Nadal used to say for the Society the whole world is our
home (MNadal V 364-365).
Ignatius wrote to Borgia regarding a criticism of the Jesuits who were called angels (Oviedo and Onfroy). Some critics used to say that the Society was not well instituted, that it had to be instituted more in spirit. The Spirit which is guiding these critics – Ignatius used to say – does not know the state of things of the Society which are in the making, other than what is necessary (and substantial) (Letter 51, to Francisco de Borja, July 1549, 17 N. 9. Cf M.A. Fiorito and A Swinnen, La Fórmula del Instituto de la Compañía de Jesús (introducción y versión castellana), Stromata, July-December 1977 – nº 3/4, 259-260). I very much appreciate Ignatius’s way of seeing things which are
coming into being, removing oneself from the constraints of the concrete. It takes the Society
from all that paralyses it, freeing it from frivolities.
What is necessary and substantial is the Formula of the Institute, which we should keep
before our eyes every day, keeping our eyes on God our Lord. The nature of this Institute
which is its pathway to God. This is how it was for the first companions and they foresaw that
this is how it would be for those who would follow us in this pathway. So both poverty and
obedience or the fact of not being obliged to sing the office in choir, are neither demands nor
privileges, but aids to mobility and thus being available in the Society: “to run in the path of Christ our Lord (Con 582). In virtue of the vow of obedience to the Pope we have a surer
direction from the Holy Spirit (Formula of the Institute, 3. In the Formula, we have this
Ignatian intuition. Its centrality is what makes the Constitutions stress that we always keep in
mind places, times and persons so that all rules are aids – tantum quantum – for concrete
things.
For Ignatius, being on the road is not only coming and going, but it translates into something
qualitative: It is drawing profit, and progress, is going forward, to do something for others. This
is how the two Formulas of the Institute, approved by Paul III (1540) and Julius III (1550)
express it, when they focus the work of the Society on the faith - and its defence and
propagation – and on the life and teaching of persons. So Ignatius and the first companions
used the expression to draw greater fruit (aprovechamiento) (Ad profectum animarum in vita et doctrina Christiana in Monumenta Ignatiana, Constitutiones T. I (MHSI), Rome, 1934 , 26 y 376; cf Constitutions of the Company of Jesus, quoted in CG 34 e Norme complementari, Rome, ADP, 1995, 32-33) (cf Phil. 1:12 and 25) which is the practical criterion of discernment proper to our spirituality.
Drawing profit is not individualistic, but it is for the common good: The end of this Society is
to devote itself with Gods grace not only to the salvation and perfection of the members own
souls, but also with that same grace to labour strenuously in giving aid toward the salvation
and perfection of the souls of their neighbours (General Examen, I, 2). If at all the balance of
Ignatius’ heart was inclined towards something, that was towards helping our neighbours, so
much so that he used to get angry if somebody was to tell him that the reason that someone
remained in the Society was in order to save his own soul. Ignatius did not want men, who
although being good, were not zealous for the service of their neighbour (Aicardo I punto 10
p. 41).
We are to draw profit from everything. The Formula of Ignatius expresses a tension: not
only… but also… and this conceptual framework combining tensions – the salvation and
perfection of one’s own soul, and the salvation and perfection of one’s neighbour’s – from the
higher realm of Grace – is proper to the Society of Jesus. The harmonization of this and of all
the other tensions (contemplation and action, faith and justice, charism and institution,
community and mission…) is not expressed in abstract formulations but is achieved in the
course of time through what Faber called our way of proceeding (Cf MF. 50, 69, 111, 114 etc.). Journeying and progressing in the following of the Lord, the Society moves towards harmonizing the tensions brought about by the diversity of the men whom it brings together and of the missions it
receives.
Drawing profit is not elitist. In the Formula, Ignatius proceeds to describe the means for
seeking the greater and more universal good which are truly sacerdotal. However, we observe
that the works of mercy are taken for granted. The Formula says without these being an
obstacle to mercy!!! Works of mercy – caring for the sick in hospitals, begging for alms,
sharing, teaching catechism to children, the patient suffering of insults … are the daily bread of
Ignatius and his first companions. They took care that none of these became obstacles!
Drawing profit in the final analysis is that which they sought the most. This is the magis, this
more, which moves Ignatius to start accompanying people and helping them reflect on the
various experiences of their lives with regard to faith, justice, mercy and charity. The magis is
the fire, the fervour in action, awakening those who have become dormant. Our saints have
always incarnated this fervour. It used to be said of Saint Alberto Hurtado that he was a thorn in
the flesh of the dormant Church. This militates against that temptation which Paul VI called
spiritus vertiginis and de Lubac called spiritual worldliness. This temptation is not primarily
moral, but spiritual, and distracts us from the essential: that we be fruitful persons, to let our footsteps leave marks in history, especially in the lives of the very least in our society.
The Society is zealous (Cf MNad V, 310) as Nadal used to say. To revive the zeal for mission for the greater good of persons in their life and doctrine, I would like to make more concrete these reflections in three points: given that the Society’s way of proceeding for the greater good is accomplished through joy, the cross and through the Church our Mother. We need to look at how we move forward by overcoming the impediments which the enemy of our human nature tries to put in
our way when we are in the service of God and seeking the greater good.
1.- To ask insistently for consolation
We can always take a step forward asking insistently for consolation. In the two Apostolic
Exhortations and in Laudato Si', I consistently underlined the importance of joy. In the Spiritual
Exercises, Ignatius invites us to contemplate the office of consolation, which is the work of
the Risen Christ Himself (Spiritual Exercises, 224). This is the true work of the Society: to console the faithful people of God and to help them through discernment so that the enemy of human
nature does not rob us of our joy: the joy of evangelizing, the joy of the family, the joy of the
Church, the joy of creation …. Let the enemy of our human nature not rob us of our joy, neither
by despair before the magnitude of the evils of the world, and the misunderstandings between
those who want to do good, nor let him replace it with foolish joys that are always at hand in
all human enterprises.
This service of joy and spiritual consolation roots us in prayer. This consists in animating
ourselves and animating others to ask insistently for God’s consolation. Ignatius formulated
this in a negative way in the sixth rule of the first week when he said It is very profitable to
make rigorous changes in ourselves against desolation by insisting more on prayer (Spiritual Exercises, 319). It is beneficial because one is worth little in time of desolation (Spiritual Exercises, 324). To practice and teach this prayer of petition and supplication for consolation is the principal service we render to joy. If somebody does not consider himself worthy (something which is very
common in practice), he should at least remain persistent in prayer for consolation for love of
the message, because joy is constitutive of the Gospel message; he should therefore also ask
for it for love of others, for his family and for the world. One cannot give a good piece of news
with a sad face. Joy is not only decorative, it is also a clear indicator of grace, it shows that love
is active, working and present. For this reason, in an age of instant gratification and unabated
consumption, the search for joy should not be confused with the search for a spiritual effect,
when our existential identity is more concerned with long lasting effects: Ignatius opens the
eyes and wakes us up to the discernment of Spirits to discover the difference between long-lasting
joys and transient joys (Autobiography, 8). Time is the key to recognizing the action of
the Spirit.
In the Exercises, progress in the spiritual life is brought about in consolation. It is to go from
good to better, it is also every increase in hope, faith and charity and every interior joy.
(Spiritual Exercises, 316) This service to joy was what led the first companions to decide not to disperse, but to institute the Society and celebrate spontaneously their companionship, which was
characterized by joy and which made them pray together, go on missions together and then to
reunite again, in imitation of the life of the Lord and his apostles. This joy of the explicit
announcing of the Gospel - through preaching, faith and the practice of justice and mercy – is
that which leads the Society to go to the peripheries. The Jesuit is a servant of the joy of the
Gospel, both when he is working as an artisan, conversing and giving the spiritual exercises to
a single person, helping him or her to encounter this interior forum whence comes the power
of the Spirit, which guide, free and renew him (Pierre Favre, Memorial, Paris, Desclée, 1959; cf Introduction de M. DeCertau, pg. 74) and when he is working with structures, organizing works of formation, of mercy, or of reflection which are institutional expansions of those turning points where the individual will is broken down and the Spirit enters to act. As M. deCerteau rightly said: The Spiritual Exercises are the apostolic method par excellence which made possible a return to the heart, the beginning of docility to the Spirit which awakens and propels the exercitant to personal fidelity to God (Pierre Favre, Memorial, Paris, Desclée, 1959; cf Introduction de M. DeCertau, pg. 76).
2.- Letting ourselves be moved by our Lord placed on the cross
We can always take a step forward in letting ourselves be moved by the crucified Lord, by him
in person, by him present in so many of our brothers and sisters who are suffering – the great
majority of humankind! Father Arrupe used to say that wherever there is pain, the Society is
there.
The Jubilee of Mercy is an appropriate time to reflect about the works of mercy. I have
deliberately used the plural, because mercy is not an abstract word, but a lifestyle that places
concrete gestures before the word. These gestures touch the flesh of the neighbour and
become institutionalized in works of mercy. For those who do the Exercises this grace by which
Jesus commands us to resemble the Father (cf Lk 6:36), begins with this colloquy of mercy
which is the expansion of the colloquy with the Lord placed on the cross for my sins. The entire
second exercise is a colloquy full of sentiments of shame, confusion, pain and grateful tears,
seeing who I am – making myself less – and who God is – making Him more – who has given
me life till now – who Jesus is, hanging on the cross for me (Spiritual Exercises, 61 and preceding). The way Ignatius lives and formulates his experience of mercy is of great personal and apostolic benefit, and requires an acute and sustained experience of discernment. Our father said to Borgia: I
am personally convinced regarding myself that both before and after I am totally an obstacle.
Because of this I feel increased spiritual happiness and joy in the Lord in as much as I cannot
attribute to myself even a semblance of good (Ignatius of Loyola, Letter 26 to Francisco de Borja, completed in 1545). So Ignatius lives from the pure mercy of God even in the smallest details of his life and of his person. And he used to feel that, the greater an obstacle he might pose, the more the Lord treated him with goodness: Such was the mercy of the Lord, and such was the abundance of his tenderness and the sweetness of his grace with him, that the more he wished to be punished in this way, so much more benign was the Lord, and the more generously he lavished his treasures from his infinite freedom. With that, he said that he believed that there is no person in the world in whom these two things coincided as much as in him: how much he failed God, and received all and many continuous graces from his hand (Father Ribadeneira, Life of Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Rome, La Civiltà Cattolica, 1863, 336).
Ignatius, describing his experience of mercy in these comparative terms – the more he failed
the Lord, the more the Lord reached out in giving him his grace – released the life-giving power
of mercy which we, many times, dilute with our abstract formulations and legalistic conditions.
The Lord who looks at us with mercy and chooses us, sends us out to bring with all its
effectiveness, that same mercy to the poor, to sinners, to those discarded people, and
those crucified in the present world, who suffer injustice and violence. Only if we experience
this healing power first-hand in our own wounds, as people and as a body, will we lose the fear
of allowing ourselves be moved by the immense suffering of our brothers and sisters, and will
we hasten to walk patiently with our people, learning from them the best way of helping and
serving them (cf GC 32, d.4 n.50).
At the conclusion of his speech, the Holy Father remained with the Jesuit Fathers for a private conversation.
These two accompanied him into the aula, and the Pope participated in morning prayer with the delegates. The theme of the prayer, the good shepherd, had been chosen for the occasion. The Ignatian tradition of reflection made a reference to Father Franz van de Lugt, who made himself pastor of his own in Homs, Syria, until he was killed by the insanity of war. The members of the Congregation prayed for Pope Francis, as he often requests of all those he meets.
After the completion of Morning Prayer, there was a brief greeting offered by the Superior General, Father Arturo Sosa Abascal, and then the Pope delivered the following speech.
Intervention presented by His Holiness, Pope Francis
to the participants taking part in the
36th General Chapter of the Company of Jesus
Dear brothers and friends of the Lord,
While I was praying and thinking about what I would say, I remembered with particular emotion the final words that were spoken by Blessed Paul VI at the conclusion of the XXXII General Congregation: In this way, in this way brothers and sons. Go forward in the Name of God. Let us walk together, free, obedient, united in the love of Christ, for the greater glory of God (Speech to the participants taking part in the 32nd General Council of the Company of Jesus, 3 December 1974).
Also, Saint John Paul II and Benedict XVI have encouraged us to “lead a life worthy of the
vocation to which we have been called (Eph 4:1 - Homily during the inaugural celebration of the 33rd General Congregation of the Company of Jesus, 2 September 1983) and following the path of mission in full fidelity to your original charism in the ecclesial and social context that characterizes this beginning of the millennium. As my predecessors have often said, the Church needs you,
counts on you and continues to turn to you with confidence, particularly to reach the
geographical and spiritual places where others do not reach, or find it difficult to reach (Speech to participants taking part in the 35th General Congregation of the Company of Jesus, 21 February 2008).
Walking together – free and obedient – going to the peripheries where others do not reach,
under Jesus’ gaze and looking to the horizon which is the ever greater glory of God, who
ceaselessly surprises us (Homily on the Feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus, Church of Jesus, 3 January 2014). The Jesuit is called as Ignatius says our vocation is to travel through
the world and to live in any part of it where there is hope of greater service to God and of help
of souls (Con, 304). That is, as Nadal used to say for the Society the whole world is our
home (MNadal V 364-365).
Ignatius wrote to Borgia regarding a criticism of the Jesuits who were called angels (Oviedo and Onfroy). Some critics used to say that the Society was not well instituted, that it had to be instituted more in spirit. The Spirit which is guiding these critics – Ignatius used to say – does not know the state of things of the Society which are in the making, other than what is necessary (and substantial) (Letter 51, to Francisco de Borja, July 1549, 17 N. 9. Cf M.A. Fiorito and A Swinnen, La Fórmula del Instituto de la Compañía de Jesús (introducción y versión castellana), Stromata, July-December 1977 – nº 3/4, 259-260). I very much appreciate Ignatius’s way of seeing things which are
coming into being, removing oneself from the constraints of the concrete. It takes the Society
from all that paralyses it, freeing it from frivolities.
What is necessary and substantial is the Formula of the Institute, which we should keep
before our eyes every day, keeping our eyes on God our Lord. The nature of this Institute
which is its pathway to God. This is how it was for the first companions and they foresaw that
this is how it would be for those who would follow us in this pathway. So both poverty and
obedience or the fact of not being obliged to sing the office in choir, are neither demands nor
privileges, but aids to mobility and thus being available in the Society: “to run in the path of Christ our Lord (Con 582). In virtue of the vow of obedience to the Pope we have a surer
direction from the Holy Spirit (Formula of the Institute, 3. In the Formula, we have this
Ignatian intuition. Its centrality is what makes the Constitutions stress that we always keep in
mind places, times and persons so that all rules are aids – tantum quantum – for concrete
things.
For Ignatius, being on the road is not only coming and going, but it translates into something
qualitative: It is drawing profit, and progress, is going forward, to do something for others. This
is how the two Formulas of the Institute, approved by Paul III (1540) and Julius III (1550)
express it, when they focus the work of the Society on the faith - and its defence and
propagation – and on the life and teaching of persons. So Ignatius and the first companions
used the expression to draw greater fruit (aprovechamiento) (Ad profectum animarum in vita et doctrina Christiana in Monumenta Ignatiana, Constitutiones T. I (MHSI), Rome, 1934 , 26 y 376; cf Constitutions of the Company of Jesus, quoted in CG 34 e Norme complementari, Rome, ADP, 1995, 32-33) (cf Phil. 1:12 and 25) which is the practical criterion of discernment proper to our spirituality.
Drawing profit is not individualistic, but it is for the common good: The end of this Society is
to devote itself with Gods grace not only to the salvation and perfection of the members own
souls, but also with that same grace to labour strenuously in giving aid toward the salvation
and perfection of the souls of their neighbours (General Examen, I, 2). If at all the balance of
Ignatius’ heart was inclined towards something, that was towards helping our neighbours, so
much so that he used to get angry if somebody was to tell him that the reason that someone
remained in the Society was in order to save his own soul. Ignatius did not want men, who
although being good, were not zealous for the service of their neighbour (Aicardo I punto 10
p. 41).
We are to draw profit from everything. The Formula of Ignatius expresses a tension: not
only… but also… and this conceptual framework combining tensions – the salvation and
perfection of one’s own soul, and the salvation and perfection of one’s neighbour’s – from the
higher realm of Grace – is proper to the Society of Jesus. The harmonization of this and of all
the other tensions (contemplation and action, faith and justice, charism and institution,
community and mission…) is not expressed in abstract formulations but is achieved in the
course of time through what Faber called our way of proceeding (Cf MF. 50, 69, 111, 114 etc.). Journeying and progressing in the following of the Lord, the Society moves towards harmonizing the tensions brought about by the diversity of the men whom it brings together and of the missions it
receives.
Drawing profit is not elitist. In the Formula, Ignatius proceeds to describe the means for
seeking the greater and more universal good which are truly sacerdotal. However, we observe
that the works of mercy are taken for granted. The Formula says without these being an
obstacle to mercy!!! Works of mercy – caring for the sick in hospitals, begging for alms,
sharing, teaching catechism to children, the patient suffering of insults … are the daily bread of
Ignatius and his first companions. They took care that none of these became obstacles!
Drawing profit in the final analysis is that which they sought the most. This is the magis, this
more, which moves Ignatius to start accompanying people and helping them reflect on the
various experiences of their lives with regard to faith, justice, mercy and charity. The magis is
the fire, the fervour in action, awakening those who have become dormant. Our saints have
always incarnated this fervour. It used to be said of Saint Alberto Hurtado that he was a thorn in
the flesh of the dormant Church. This militates against that temptation which Paul VI called
spiritus vertiginis and de Lubac called spiritual worldliness. This temptation is not primarily
moral, but spiritual, and distracts us from the essential: that we be fruitful persons, to let our footsteps leave marks in history, especially in the lives of the very least in our society.
The Society is zealous (Cf MNad V, 310) as Nadal used to say. To revive the zeal for mission for the greater good of persons in their life and doctrine, I would like to make more concrete these reflections in three points: given that the Society’s way of proceeding for the greater good is accomplished through joy, the cross and through the Church our Mother. We need to look at how we move forward by overcoming the impediments which the enemy of our human nature tries to put in
our way when we are in the service of God and seeking the greater good.
1.- To ask insistently for consolation
We can always take a step forward asking insistently for consolation. In the two Apostolic
Exhortations and in Laudato Si', I consistently underlined the importance of joy. In the Spiritual
Exercises, Ignatius invites us to contemplate the office of consolation, which is the work of
the Risen Christ Himself (Spiritual Exercises, 224). This is the true work of the Society: to console the faithful people of God and to help them through discernment so that the enemy of human
nature does not rob us of our joy: the joy of evangelizing, the joy of the family, the joy of the
Church, the joy of creation …. Let the enemy of our human nature not rob us of our joy, neither
by despair before the magnitude of the evils of the world, and the misunderstandings between
those who want to do good, nor let him replace it with foolish joys that are always at hand in
all human enterprises.
This service of joy and spiritual consolation roots us in prayer. This consists in animating
ourselves and animating others to ask insistently for God’s consolation. Ignatius formulated
this in a negative way in the sixth rule of the first week when he said It is very profitable to
make rigorous changes in ourselves against desolation by insisting more on prayer (Spiritual Exercises, 319). It is beneficial because one is worth little in time of desolation (Spiritual Exercises, 324). To practice and teach this prayer of petition and supplication for consolation is the principal service we render to joy. If somebody does not consider himself worthy (something which is very
common in practice), he should at least remain persistent in prayer for consolation for love of
the message, because joy is constitutive of the Gospel message; he should therefore also ask
for it for love of others, for his family and for the world. One cannot give a good piece of news
with a sad face. Joy is not only decorative, it is also a clear indicator of grace, it shows that love
is active, working and present. For this reason, in an age of instant gratification and unabated
consumption, the search for joy should not be confused with the search for a spiritual effect,
when our existential identity is more concerned with long lasting effects: Ignatius opens the
eyes and wakes us up to the discernment of Spirits to discover the difference between long-lasting
joys and transient joys (Autobiography, 8). Time is the key to recognizing the action of
the Spirit.
In the Exercises, progress in the spiritual life is brought about in consolation. It is to go from
good to better, it is also every increase in hope, faith and charity and every interior joy.
(Spiritual Exercises, 316) This service to joy was what led the first companions to decide not to disperse, but to institute the Society and celebrate spontaneously their companionship, which was
characterized by joy and which made them pray together, go on missions together and then to
reunite again, in imitation of the life of the Lord and his apostles. This joy of the explicit
announcing of the Gospel - through preaching, faith and the practice of justice and mercy – is
that which leads the Society to go to the peripheries. The Jesuit is a servant of the joy of the
Gospel, both when he is working as an artisan, conversing and giving the spiritual exercises to
a single person, helping him or her to encounter this interior forum whence comes the power
of the Spirit, which guide, free and renew him (Pierre Favre, Memorial, Paris, Desclée, 1959; cf Introduction de M. DeCertau, pg. 74) and when he is working with structures, organizing works of formation, of mercy, or of reflection which are institutional expansions of those turning points where the individual will is broken down and the Spirit enters to act. As M. deCerteau rightly said: The Spiritual Exercises are the apostolic method par excellence which made possible a return to the heart, the beginning of docility to the Spirit which awakens and propels the exercitant to personal fidelity to God (Pierre Favre, Memorial, Paris, Desclée, 1959; cf Introduction de M. DeCertau, pg. 76).
2.- Letting ourselves be moved by our Lord placed on the cross
We can always take a step forward in letting ourselves be moved by the crucified Lord, by him
in person, by him present in so many of our brothers and sisters who are suffering – the great
majority of humankind! Father Arrupe used to say that wherever there is pain, the Society is
there.
The Jubilee of Mercy is an appropriate time to reflect about the works of mercy. I have
deliberately used the plural, because mercy is not an abstract word, but a lifestyle that places
concrete gestures before the word. These gestures touch the flesh of the neighbour and
become institutionalized in works of mercy. For those who do the Exercises this grace by which
Jesus commands us to resemble the Father (cf Lk 6:36), begins with this colloquy of mercy
which is the expansion of the colloquy with the Lord placed on the cross for my sins. The entire
second exercise is a colloquy full of sentiments of shame, confusion, pain and grateful tears,
seeing who I am – making myself less – and who God is – making Him more – who has given
me life till now – who Jesus is, hanging on the cross for me (Spiritual Exercises, 61 and preceding). The way Ignatius lives and formulates his experience of mercy is of great personal and apostolic benefit, and requires an acute and sustained experience of discernment. Our father said to Borgia: I
am personally convinced regarding myself that both before and after I am totally an obstacle.
Because of this I feel increased spiritual happiness and joy in the Lord in as much as I cannot
attribute to myself even a semblance of good (Ignatius of Loyola, Letter 26 to Francisco de Borja, completed in 1545). So Ignatius lives from the pure mercy of God even in the smallest details of his life and of his person. And he used to feel that, the greater an obstacle he might pose, the more the Lord treated him with goodness: Such was the mercy of the Lord, and such was the abundance of his tenderness and the sweetness of his grace with him, that the more he wished to be punished in this way, so much more benign was the Lord, and the more generously he lavished his treasures from his infinite freedom. With that, he said that he believed that there is no person in the world in whom these two things coincided as much as in him: how much he failed God, and received all and many continuous graces from his hand (Father Ribadeneira, Life of Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Rome, La Civiltà Cattolica, 1863, 336).
Ignatius, describing his experience of mercy in these comparative terms – the more he failed
the Lord, the more the Lord reached out in giving him his grace – released the life-giving power
of mercy which we, many times, dilute with our abstract formulations and legalistic conditions.
The Lord who looks at us with mercy and chooses us, sends us out to bring with all its
effectiveness, that same mercy to the poor, to sinners, to those discarded people, and
those crucified in the present world, who suffer injustice and violence. Only if we experience
this healing power first-hand in our own wounds, as people and as a body, will we lose the fear
of allowing ourselves be moved by the immense suffering of our brothers and sisters, and will
we hasten to walk patiently with our people, learning from them the best way of helping and
serving them (cf GC 32, d.4 n.50).
3.- Doing good led by the good spirit, thinking with the Church
We can always take a step forward in doing good in the Good Spirit, sentire cum ecclesia, as
Ignatius says. The way we do things in using discernment is also proper to the Society. Faber
used to formulate it asking for the grace that everything good would be realized, thought or
organized, be done through the good spirit and not through the bad (Pierre Favre, Memorial cit. nº 5114). This grace of discernment, it’s not enough to think, do or organise the good, but do it of the good spirit, is what roots us in the Church, in which the Spirit works and distributes the diverse charisms for the common good. Faber used to say that, in many things, those who wanted to reform the Church were right, but that God did not want to correct it through their means.
It is proper of the Society to do things thinking with the Church. Doing this without losing
peace and with joy, in the context of the sins we see, in us as well as in others, and in the
structures that we have created, involves carrying the cross, experiencing poverty and
humiliations, where Ignatius encourages us to choose between bearing them patiently or
desiring them (cf Directorio Autógrafo 23). Where the contradiction was very clear, Ignatius used to advise to recollect oneself, before talking or acting, in order to work in the Good Spirit. We do not read the rules for thinking with the Church as precise instructions about controversial points (some rules could be out of date), but examples where Ignatius was inviting in his times to act against
the anti-ecclesial spirit, inclining ourselves totally and decisively towards our Mother, the
Church, not in order to justify a debatable position, but to open space so that the spirit could
act in its own time.
Service of the good spirit and of discernment makes us men of the Church – not clericalists,
but ecclesiastics – men for others, with nothing of our own which cuts us off from others,
but rather everything that is ours placed in common and for service.
We neither walk alone nor comfortably, but we walk with a heart that does not rest, that
does not close in on itself but beats to the rhythm of a journey undertaken together with all
the people faithful to God (Homily for the Feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus, Church of Jesus, 3 January 2014). We walk becoming all things to all people, with the goal of helping others.
This self-emptying makes the Society have and always able to have more the face, the accent
and the lifestyle of all peoples, of every culture, inserting ourselves in all of them, in the very
heart of every people, to become the church, there with every people, inculturating the gospel
and evangelizing every culture.
In a filial colloquy, or as a servant to his Mistress, we beg Our Lady of la Strada to intercede for
us before the Father of mercies and God of all consolation (2 Cor 1:3), to constantly place us
with her Son, with Jesus who carries, and invites us to carry the cross of the world with Him.
We entrust to Her our way of proceeding that it should be ecclesial, inculturated, poor,
attentive, free from all worldly ambition. We beg Our Mother to direct and accompany every
Jesuit along with that part of the people faithful to God whom he has been sent, along these
paths of consolation, of compassion and discernment.
(Original text in Spanish)At the conclusion of his speech, the Holy Father remained with the Jesuit Fathers for a private conversation.
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