Jean-Baptiste Janssens (
December 22,
1889—
October 5,
1964) was the
twenty-seventh
Superior General of the
Society of Jesus.
He was born in Mechelen
, Belgium
.
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Fr John-Baptist Janssens
Early Life and schooling
Janssens'
first schooling was in the Diocesan Secondary School in Hasselt
, and his
university years, where he excelled in philosophy and classical philology, were spent at
St. Aloysius University Faculty
in Brussels
.
He entered
the Jesuit novitiate
in Drongen
on September 23, 1907, and
took his first vows in September
1909.
After the
usual two years of philosophy spent at the Jesuit Theologicaql
college in Leuven
he earned
his doctorate in civil law at the Catholic
University of Louvain
. From 1921 to 1923 he attended the Gregorian
University
in Rome
where he
added a doctorate in Canon
law to the one he had earned at Louvain
.
He taught canon law at the Jesuit Theologate in Leuven from 1923
until 1929 and became its
rector on
August 17,
1929.
On August 15, 1935 he was
appointed Tertian Master and in 1938
became Provincial of the
Northern Belgian
Province of
the Jesuits.
In 1939,
Father Janssens made an official visit to the Jesuit missions in
Zaire
, at the time a colony of Belgium and known as the
Belgian Congo. With the exception of
this visitation and his two years studying in Rome, he had spent
most of his life in his own province: in Leuven, Drongen (Ghent
), Antwerp
, and
Brussels. In 1945 he kept in hiding a large group of
Jewish children in the very Provincial's
residence of Brussels, which earned him the title of
Righteous among the
nations.
Elected Superior General
When
Father General Ledochowski
died in 1942,
World War II was in full
fury in
Europe and Father Janssens was the
Jesuit Provincial trying to keep his province intact. The
Vicar General,
Norbert de Boynes, was unable to call a
General Congregation because of
the war. Thus, in effect, de Boynes was in charge of the governance
of the Society for three years.
The war ended in August 1945 and de Boynes was finally able to
convene a
General Congregation
— the 29th — between
September 6 and
October 23,
1946.
Janssens, as Provincial of his province, went to Rome as a
delegate. The Congregation was held under Spartan conditions and
many of the necessaries were provided by the delegates from
countries less affected by the war than the countries of Europe. On
September 15, the 57-year-old Belgian
Jean-Baptiste Janssens was elected Father General of the Society Of
Jesus.
Generalate
Because of
his delicate health and the oppressiveness of the Roman air, a
sizeable piece of property in the Alban Hills
—southeast of Rome—was purchased as a retreat for
the general and his curia. This
property, well known in the area as Villa Cavalletti, became a
place of retreat not only for the general and the curia but also
for the other Jesuits of Rome. It was also used by professors and
students of the Gregorian University who could manage to get away
for a few days of peace.
In his famous
Instruction on the Social Apostolate (1949),
considered a milestone in the Society's road to commitment to the
so-called "social question," Father General Janssens challenged the
Jesuit educaitonal institutions. In bold language for those days,
the general speaks of completely uprooting the spirit of "
caste" among Jesuits and their students. They should
not appear "to be allied with the rich and the
capitalists". Those especially who labor in the
educational ministry should manifest "an interest and concern for
the
proletaries that is equal to, or
even greater than, that shown to the rich". One can imagine the
impact of these words on the schools. Nevertheless, disaffection
toward the colleges remained strong, especially among young
Jesuits.
In 1957, after eleven years in office, he summoned the 30th General
Congregation to provide him with a vicar general.
During the September 6 to November
11 session, the delegates elected Canadian
Father John Swain
to the position.
In 1960, in a letter to those engaged in education, the general had
to confront those who doubted whether the colleges were a ministry
proper to the Society or who asserted that they were not in
conformity with the spirit of
St.
Ignatius.
Father Janssens took important steps for the restructuring of the
educational apostolate. Both on the provincial and national levels
he set up offices of general Prefects of Studies. In this way there
was more coordination among the colleges, both province and
nation-wide, as well as closer international collaboration.
He
appointed visitors of the colleges in various countries and
regions, for example, Spain
and Latin America. National and regional
educational associations were encouraged within the Society.
Statutes were elaborated to guide the work of the Prefects of
Studies. In
1960, the first international
meeting of experts in the college apostolate was held in Rome for
the purpose of formulating common criteria of inspiration and
action. The work of education in the Society was taking on a
corporate character.
Pope John XXIII had convened the
Second Vatican Council to
begin in 1962 to deal with many of the same problems that plagued
Janssens during his generalate, and with which he found it
difficult to cope.
Final Years
In his final years Janssens had to confront a dissension which was
arising among
theologians inside and
outside the Society. He tried to moderate the problem, but to no
avail, since the difficulty was not only within the Society, but
also throughout the whole Church. Some observers said it was the
massive re-emergence of the systematics of
modernism or neo-modernism,
others say it was the problem of general liberalism in society and
opposition to
hierarchy in all
institutions.
He was the last to see the numbers in the Society top out at 36,000
members. After which high point there was a steady drop for the
next thirty years. The turmoil in the Society and in the Church
would not go away.
After 18 years and one month as Superior General, Father Janssens
died at the age of 75 on
October 5,
1964.
His body was taken to the Jesuit vault at
Campo
Verano
where are interred most of the Jesuits who die in
Rome.