The
Society of Jesus ( ) is a
Catholic religious order of
clerks regular whose members are
called
Jesuits.
Jesuits are the largest male religious order in the
Catholic Church, with 18,815 members—13,305
priests, 2,295 scholastic students, 1,758 brothers and 827
novices—as of January 2008, although the Franciscan family of first
orders
OFM,
Capuchins, and
Conventuals has more total
members. The average age of the Jesuits in 2008 was
63.01 for
priests,
30.01 for scholastics, 65.06 for
Brothers, and an overall average of 57.53
years.
Jesuit
priests and brothers are engaged in
evangelization and apostolic ministry in 112 nations on six
continents. They are best known in the fields of
education (schools, colleges, universities,
seminaries, theological faculties),
intellectual research, and cultural pursuits.
They are also known in
missionary work,
giving retreats, hospital and parish ministry, promoting justice
and ecumenical dialogue.
The founder of the Society of Jesus, St.
Ignatius of Loyola, opened its charter
and rule with this famous line: "Whoever desires to serve as a
soldier of God beneath the banner of the cross in our Society,
which we desire to be designated by the name of Jesus, and to serve
the Lord alone and the Church, his spouse, under the Roman pontiff,
the vicar of Christ on earth, should, after a solemn vow of
perpetual chastity, poverty and obedience, keep what follows in
mind. He is a member of a Society founded chiefly for this
purpose:to strive especially for the defense and propagation of the
faith and for the progress of souls in Christian life and
doctrine."
The Society of Jesus is
consecrated under
the
patronage of
Madonna Della Strada, a title of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, and it is led by a
Superior
General, currently
Adolfo
Nicolás.
The headquarters of the Society, its General Curia, is in Rome
.
The
historic curia of St Ignatius is now part of the Collegio del
Gesù attached to the Church of the Gesù
, the Jesuit Mother
Church.
History
Foundation
On August
15, 1534, Ignatius of Loyola
(born Íñigo López de Loyola), a Spaniard of
Basque origin, and six other students
at the University of
Paris
(Francisco Xavier
from Navarre, Alfonso Salmeron, Diego Laínez, and Nicolás Bobadilla from Spain, Peter Faber from Savoy, and
Simão Rodrigues from Portugal
) met in
Montmartre
outside Paris
, in the
crypt of the Chapel of St Denis, Rue Yvonne le Tac.
This group
bound themselves by a vow of poverty and chastity, to "enter upon
hospital and missionary work in Jerusalem
, or to go without questioning wherever the pope
might direct".
They called themselves the Company of
Jesus,
and also "Amigos En El Señor" or "Friends in the Lord," because
they felt
they were placed together by Christ. The name
had echoes of the military (as in an infantry "
company"), as well as of
discipleship (the "companions" of Jesus). The word "company" comes
ultimately from Latin,
cum +
pane = "with bread,"
or a group that shares meals.
These initial steps led to the founding of what would be called the
Society of Jesus later in 1540. The term
societas in Latin
is derived from
socius, a partner or comrade.
In 1537,
they traveled to Italy
to seek
papal approval for their order. Pope Paul III gave them a commendation, and
permitted them to be ordained
priests.
They were
ordained at Venice
by the
bishop of Arbe (June 24). They devoted themselves to
preaching and charitable work in Italy, as the renewed
Italian War of 1535-1538 between
Charles V, Holy Roman
Emperor, Venice, the pope and the
Ottoman Empire rendered any journey to
Jerusalem impossible.
They presented the project to the Pope. After months of dispute, a
congregation of
cardinal
reported favorably upon the Constitution presented, and Paul III
confirmed the order through the
bull
Regimini militantis
ecclesiae ("To the Government of the Church Militant"), on
September 27, 1540, but limited the number of its members to sixty.
This is the founding document of the Jesuits as an official
Catholic religious order.
This limitation was removed through the bull
Injunctum nobis (March 14, 1543).
Ignatius was chosen as the first superior-general. He sent his
companions as missionaries around Europe to create schools,
colleges, and seminaries.
Ignatius lays out his original vision for the company in "The
Formula of the Institute", which is, in the words of Jesuit
historian John O'Malley,"the fundamental charter of the order, of
which all subsequent documents were elaborations and to which they
had to conform." (O'Malley, John,
The First Jesuits.
Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. 1993. p5) In the Formula's
opening statement, one detects the echo of Ignatius' military
background within his spirituality: "Whoever desires to serve as a
soldier of God beneath the banner of the cross in our Society,
which we desire to be designated by the name of Jesus, and to serve
the Lord alone and the Church his Spouse, under the Roman pontiff,
the vicar of Christ on earth, should, after a vow of perpetual
chastity, poverty, and obedience, keep the following in
mind."
According to the Formula, the Jesuits were founded "chiefly for
this purpose: to strive especially for the defense and propagation
of the faith and for the progress of souls in Christian life and
doctrine." In fulfilling this mission, the first Jesuits
concentrated on a few key activities. First, they founded schools
throughout Europe. Jesuit teachers were rigorously trained in both
classical studies and theology and their schools reflected this.
Second, they sent out missionaries across the globe to evangelize
those peoples who had not yet heard the Gospel, founding missions
in widely diverse regions, such as modern-day Paraguay, Japan,
Ontario, and Ethiopia. Finally, they aimed to stop Protestantism
from spreading and to preserve communion with Rome and the
successor of Peter.
The zeal of the Jesuits overcame the drift
toward Protestantism in Poland
-Lithuania
and southern Germany
.
Ignatius wrote the Jesuit
Constitutions, adopted in 1554,
which created a tightly centralized organization and stressed total
abnegation and obedience to the Pope and their religious superiors
(
perinde ac cadaver, "[well-disciplined] like a corpse" as
Ignatius put it).
His main principle became the unofficial Jesuit motto:
Ad Maiorem Dei Gloriam ("For the
greater glory of God"). This phrase is designed to reflect the idea
that any work that is not evil can be meritorious for the spiritual
life if it is performed with this intention, even things considered
normally indifferent.
The Society of Jesus is classified among institutes as a
mendicant order of
clerks regular, that is, a body of priests
organized for
apostolic work, following a
religious rule, and relying on
alms, or
donations, for support.
The term "Jesuit" (of fifteenth-century origin, meaning
one who
used too frequently or appropriated the name of Jesus), was first applied to the Society in
reproach (1544–52), and was never employed by its founder, though
members and friends of the Society in time appropriated the name in
its positive meaning.
Early works
The Jesuits were founded just before the
Counter-Reformation (or at least before
the date those historians with a classical view of the counter
reformation hold to be the beginning of the Counter-Reformation), a
movement whose purpose was to reform the Catholic Church from
within and to counter the
Protestant Reformers, whose teachings
were spreading throughout
Catholic
Europe.
As part of their service to the Roman Church, the Jesuits
encouraged people to continue their obedience to
scripture as interpreted by Catholic
doctrine. Ignatius is known to have written: "...:
I will believe that the white that I see is black if the
hierarchical Church so defines it."
Ignatius and the early Jesuits did recognize, though, that the
hierarchical Church was in dire need of reform, and some of their
greatest struggles were against corruption,
venality, and spiritual lassitude within the Roman
Catholic Church.
Ignatius's insistence on an extremely high level of academic
preparation for ministry, for instance, was a deliberate response
to the relatively poor education of much of the clergy of his time,
and the Jesuit vow against "ambitioning prelacies" was a deliberate
effort to prevent greed for money or power invading Jesuit
circles.
As a result, in spite of their loyalty, Ignatius and his successors
often tangled with the pope and the
Roman
Curia. Over the 450 years since its founding, the Society has
both been called the papal "elite troops" and been forced into
suppression.
St. Ignatius and the Jesuits who followed him believed that the
reform of the Church had to begin with the conversion of an
individual’s heart. One of the main tools the Jesuits have used to
bring about this conversion has been the Ignatian retreat, called
the
Spiritual
Exercises.
During a four-week period of silence, individuals undergo a series
of directed meditations on the life of Christ. During this period,
they meet regularly with a spiritual director, who helps them
understand whatever call or message God has offered in their
meditations.
The retreat follows a Purgative-Illuminative-Unitive pattern in the
tradition of the spirituality of
John
Cassian and the
Desert Fathers.
Ignatius' innovation was to make this style of contemplative
mysticism available to all people in active life, and to use it as
a means of rebuilding the spiritual life of the Church. The
Exercises became both the basis for the training of Jesuits
themselves and one of the essential ministries of the order: giving
the exercises to others in what became known as retreats.
The Jesuits’ contributions to the late
Renaissance were significant in their roles both
as a missionary order and as the first religious order to operate
colleges and
universities as a principal and distinct
ministry.
By the time of Ignatius' death in 1556, the Jesuits were already
operating a network of 74 colleges on three continents. A precursor
to
liberal education, the Jesuit plan
of studies incorporated the Classical teachings of
Renaissance humanism into the
Scholastic structure of Catholic
thought.
In addition to teaching
faith, the
Ratio Studiorum emphasized
the study of
Latin,
Greek, classical
literature,
poetry, and
philosophy as well as non-European
languages,
sciences and the
arts. Furthermore, Jesuit schools encouraged the study
of
vernacular literature and
rhetoric, and thereby became important
centers for the training of lawyers and public officials.
The Jesuit
schools played an important part in winning back to Catholicism a
number of European countries which had for a time been
predominantly Protestant, notably Poland
and Lithuania
. Today, Jesuit colleges and universities are
located in over one hundred nations around the world.
Under the notion that
God can be encountered
through created things and especially art, they encouraged the use
of ceremony and decoration in Catholic ritual and devotion. Perhaps
as a result of this appreciation for art, coupled with their
spiritual practice of "finding God in all things", many early
Jesuits distinguished themselves in the visual and
performing arts as well as in
music.
Jesuit priests often acted as
confessor
to
Kings during the
Early Modern Period. They were an
important force in the Counter-Reformation and in the Catholic
missions, in part because their relatively loose structure (without
the requirements of living in community, saying the
divine office together, etc.) allowed
them to be flexible to meet the needs of the people at the
time.
Expansion
Early
missions in Japan
resulted in
the government granting the Jesuits the feudal fiefdom of Nagasaki in 1580. However, this
was removed in 1587 due to fears over their growing
influence.
Francis Xavier arrived in Goa
, in Western
India
, in 1541 to consider evangelical service in the
Indies. He died in China after a decade of evangelism in
Southern India.
Two Jesuit missionaries, Johann Grueber and Albert Dorville, reached Lhasa
in Tibet in 1661.
Jesuit
mission in Latin America were very controversial in
Europe, especially in Spain
and Portugal
where they were seen as interfering with the proper
colonial enterprises of the royal governments. The Jesuits
were often the only force standing between the
Native Americans and
slavery.
Together throughout South America but especially in present-day
Brazil
and Paraguay
they formed Christian Native American city-states,
called "reductions" (Spanish
Reducciones, Portuguese Reduções). These
were societies set up according to an idealized
theocratic model. It is partly because the
Jesuits, such as
Antonio Ruiz de
Montoya, protected the natives (whom certain Spanish and
Portuguese colonizers wanted to enslave) that the Society of Jesus
was suppressed.
Jesuit
priests such as Manuel da
Nóbrega and José de
Anchieta founded several towns in Brazil in the 16th century,
including São
Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro
, and were very influential in the pacification, religious conversion and education of Indian
nations.
Jesuit scholars working in these foreign missions were very
important in understanding their unknown languages and strived to
produce Latinized
grammars and
dictionaries. This was done, for instance, for
Japanese (see
Nippo jisho also known as
Vocabvlario
da Lingoa de Iapam, (Vocabulary of the Japanese Language) a
Japanese-Portuguese dictionary written 1603),
Vietnamese (French Jesuit missionary
Alexandre de Rhodes formalized
the
Vietnamese alphabet in use
today with his 1651 Vietnamese-Portuguese-Latin dictionary
Dictionarium
Annamiticum Lusitanum et Latinum) and
Tupi-Guarani (a language group of South
American aborigines).
Jean
François Pons in the 1740s pioneered the study of
Sanskrit in the West.
Under Portuguese royal patronage, the order thrived in Goa and
until 1759 successfully expanded its activities to education and
healthcare.
On 17 December 1759, the Marquis of
Pombal
, Secretary of
State in Portugal, expelled the Jesuits from Portugal and
Portuguese possessions overseas.
Jesuit activity in China
The
Jesuit China missions of
the 16th and 17th centuries introduced Western science and
astronomy, then undergoing its own revolution, to China. The
Society of Jesus introduced, according to
Thomas Woods, "a substantial body of scientific
knowledge and a vast array of mental tools for understanding the
physical universe, including the Euclidean geometry that made
planetary motion comprehensible." Another expert quoted by Woods
said the scientific revolution brought by the Jesuits coincided
with a time when science was at a very low level in China:
Conversely, the Jesuits were very active in transmitting Chinese
knowledge to Europe.
Confucius's works
were translated into European languages through the agency of
Jesuit scholars stationed in China.
Matteo Ricci started to report on the
thoughts of Confucius, and father Prospero Intorcetta published the
life and works of Confucius into
Latin in
1687. It is thought that such works had considerable importance on
European thinkers of the period, particularly among the
Deists and other philosophical groups of the
Enlightenment who were interested by
the integration of the system of morality of Confucius into
Christianity. Two well known examples
are:
Suppression and restoration
The
Suppression of the Jesuits in Portugal
, France
, the
Two Sicilies, Parma and the Spanish Empire by 1767 was troubling to the
Society's defender, Pope Clement
XIII. A decree signed under secular pressure by
Pope Clement XIV in July 1773 suppressed
the Order.
The suppression was carried out in all
countries except Prussia and Russia
, where
Catherine the Great had
forbidden the papal decree to be
executed. Because millions of Catholics (including many
Jesuits) lived in the Polish western provinces of the Russian
Empire, the Society was able to maintain its existence and carry on
its work all through the period of suppression. Subsequently,
Pope Pius VI would grant formal
permission for the continuation of the Society in Russia and
Poland. Based on that permission,
Stanislaus Czerniewicz was elected
superior of the Society in 1782.
Pope Pius
VII during his captivity in France, had resolved to restore the
Jesuits universally; and after his return to Rome he did so with
little delay: on 7 August 1814, by the bull
Sollicitudo omnium
ecclesiarum, he reversed the suppression of the Order and
therewith, the then Superior in Russia,
Thaddeus Brzozowski, who had been
elected in 1805, acquired universal jurisdiction.
The period following the Restoration of the Jesuits in 1814 was
marked by tremendous growth, as evidenced by the large number of
Jesuit colleges and universities established in the 19th century.
In the
United
States
, 22 of the Society's 28 universities were founded
or taken over by the Jesuits during this time. Some claim
that the experience of suppression served to heighten
orthodoxy among the Jesuits upon restoration.
While this claim is debatable, Jesuits were generally supportive of
Papal authority within the Church, and some members were associated
with the
Ultramontanist movement and
the declaration of
Papal
Infallibility in 1870.
In
Switzerland
, following the defeat of the Ultramontanist Sonderbund by the other cantons, the constitution was modified and
Jesuits were banished in 1848. The ban was lifted on 20 May
1973, when 54.9% of voters accepted a
referendum modifying the Constitution.
The 20th century witnessed both aspects of growth and decline.
Following a trend within the Catholic priesthood at large, Jesuit
numbers peaked in the 1950s and have declined steadily since.
Meanwhile the number of Jesuit institutions has grown considerably,
due in large part to a late 20th century focus on the establishment
of Jesuit secondary schools in
inner-city
areas and an increase in lay association with the order. Among the
notable Jesuits of the 20th century,
John Courtney Murray, SJ, was called
one of the "architects of the
Second Vatican Council" and drafted
what eventually became the council's endorsement of religious
freedom,
Dignitatis Humanae Personae.
Jesuits today
The Jesuits today form the largest
religious order of priests and brothers in
the Catholic Church, with 19,216 serving in 112 nations on six
continents, the largest number being in India followed by those in
the United States. The current
Superior General of
the Jesuits is the Spaniard
Adolfo
Nicolás. The Society is characterized by its ministries in the
fields of
missionary work,
human rights,
social
justice and, most notably,
higher
education.
It operates colleges and universities in
various countries around the world and is particularly active in
the Philippines
and India
. In
the United States alone, it maintains over 50 colleges,
universities and high schools. A typical conception of the mission
of a Jesuit school will often contain such concepts as proposing
Christ as the model of human life, the pursuit of excellence in
teaching and learning and life-long spiritual and intellectual
growth. In Latin America, Liberal Jesuits have had significant
influence in the development of
liberation theology, a movement which
has been highly controversial in the Catholic theological community
and condemned by
Pope John Paul II
on several fundamental aspects.
Under Superior General
Pedro Arrupe,
social justice and the preferential
option for the poor emerged as dominant themes of the work of the
Jesuits.
On November 16, 1989, six Jesuit priests
(Ignacio Ellacuria, Segundo Montes, Ignacio Martin-Baro, Joaquin López y
López, Juan Ramon Moreno, and Amado López); their housekeeper, Elba
Ramos; and her daughter, Celia Marisela Ramos, were murdered by the
Salvadoran
military on the campus of the University of Central
America in San
Salvador
, El Salvador
, because they had been labeled as subversives by
the government. The assassinations galvanized the Society's
peace and justice movements, including annual protests at the
Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation at Fort
Benning
, Georgia
, United
States
, where the assassins were trained under US
government sponsorship.
On February 21, 2001, Father
Avery
Dulles, SJ, an internationally known author, lecturer and
theologian, was created a Cardinal of the Catholic Church by Pope
John Paul II. The son of former Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles, Cardinal Dulles was long known for his carefully reasoned
argumentation and fidelity to the teaching office of the Church. An
author of 22 books and over 700 theological articles, Cardinal
Dulles died on December 12, 2008 at Fordham University, where he
taught for twenty years as the Laurence J. McGinley Professor of
Religion and Society. He was, at his passing, one of ten Jesuit
cardinals in the Catholic Church.
In 2002,
Boston
College
president Father William P. Leahy, SJ, initiated the
Church in the 21st Century
program as a means of moving the Church "from crisis to renewal."
The initiative has provided the Society with a platform for
examining issues brought about by the worldwide
Roman Catholic sex abuse
cases, including the
priesthood,
celibacy,
sexuality, women's roles, and the role of
the
laity.
On January 6, 2005, Fr.
Peter Hans
Kolvenbach, on the occasion of the Jubilee Year, wrote that the
Jesuits "should truly profit from the jubilee year to examine our
way of life and taking the means to live more profoundly the
charisms received from our Founders."
In April 2005,
Thomas J.
Reese, SJ, editor of the American
Jesuit weekly magazine America, resigned at the request of
the Society. The move was widely published in the media as
the result of pressure from the Vatican, following years of
criticism by the
Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith on articles touching subjects such as
HIV/AIDS,
religious pluralism,
homosexuality and the right of life for the
unborn.
Following his resignation, Reese spent a
year-long sabbatical at Santa Clara
University
before being named a fellow
at the Woodstock
Theological Center in Washington, D.C.
.
On February 2, 2006, Fr.
Peter
Hans Kolvenbach, informed members of the Society of Jesus,
that, with the consent of
Pope
Benedict XVI, he intended to step down as Superior General in
2008, the year he would turn 80. The 35th General Congregation of
the Society of Jesus convened on 5 January 2008 and elected Fr.
Adolfo Nicolás as the new
Superior General on 19 January 2008. The deliberations of the
General Congregation on other important policies for the Jesuit
order continued until 8 March 2008.
On that date, the General Congregation
concluded its deliberations with a Mass of Thanksgiving at the
Church of the
Gesù
. While the Jesuit superior general is
elected for life, the order's constitutions allow him to step
down.
On April 22, 2006, Feast of Our Lady, Mother of the Society of
Jesus, Pope Benedict XVI greeted thousands of Jesuits on pilgrimage
to Rome, and took the opportunity to thank God "for having granted
to your Company the gift of men of extraordinary sanctity and of
exceptional apostolic zeal such as St Ignatius of Loyola, St
Francis Xavier and Bl Peter Faber." He said "St Ignatius of Loyola
was above all a man of God, who gave the first place of his life to
God, to his greater glory and his greater service. He was a man of
profound prayer, which found its center and its culmination in the
daily Eucharistic Celebration."
In May 2006, Benedict XVI also wrote a letter to Superior General
Peter Hans Kolvenbach on the
occasion of the 50
th anniversary of Pope Pius XII's
encyclical
Haurietis aquas,
on devotion to the Sacred Heart, because the Jesuits have always
been "extremely active in the promotion of this essential
devotion".
In his November 3, 2006 visit to the
Pontifical Gregorian
University
, Benedict XVI cited the university as "one of the
greatest services that the Society of Jesus carries out for the
universal Church".
On January 19, 2008,
Adolfo Nicolas
was elected by
General
Congregation (GC XXXV) as the Order’s thirtieth Superior
General and was promptly confirmed by Benedict XVI. A month after,
the Pope received members of the General Congregation and urged
them to "to continue on the path of this mission in full fidelity
to your original charism" and asked them to reflect so as "to
rediscover the fullest meaning of your characteristic 'fourth vow'
of obedience to the Successor of Peter." For this, he told them to
"adhere totally to the Word of God and to the Magisterium's task of
preserving the integral truth and unity of Catholic doctrine." This
clear identity, according to the Pope, is important so that "many
others may share in your ideals and join you effectively and
enthusiastically." The Congregation responded with a formal
declaration titled "With New Fervor and Dynamism, the Society of
Jesus Responds to the Call of Benedict XVI," whereby they confirmed
the Society's fidelity to the Pope.
Jesuits in the World (2007): 91 Provinces and 12 Dependent
Regions: 3 in Africa, 4 in the Americas and 5 in
Asia-Oceania.
| Region |
Jesuits |
Percentage |
| South Asia Assistancy |
4,018 |
20.9% |
| United States of America |
2,952 |
15.4% |
| South Europe |
2,448 |
12.7% |
| West Europe |
1,958 |
10.2% |
| East Asia-Oceania |
1,672 |
8.7% |
| South Latin America |
1,513 |
7.9% |
| Africa |
1,430 |
7.4% |
| North Latin America |
1,374 |
7.2% |
| East Europe |
1,119 |
5.8% |
| Central Europe |
732 |
3.8% |
Ignatian spirituality
Like all Catholic spirituality, the spirituality practiced by the
Jesuits, called Ignatian spirituality, is based on the Catholic
faith and the gospels. Aside from the "Constitutions," "The
Letters," and "Autobiography," Ignatian spirituality draws most
specially from St. Ignatius' "
Spiritual
Exercises," whose purpose is "to conquer oneself and to
regulate one's life in such a way that nodecision is made under the
influence of any inordinate attachment." In other words, the
Exercises are intended, in Ignatius' view, to give the exercitant
(the person undertaking them) a greater degree of freedom from his
or her own likes, dislikes, comforts, wants, needs, drives,
appetites and passions that they may choose based solely on what
they discern God's will is for them.
In the words of former Jesuit Superior General, Peter Hans
Kolvenbach, the Exercises try to "unite two apparently incompatible
realities:
exercises and
spiritual." It invites
to "unlimited generosity" in contemplating God, yet going down to
the level of many details.
Ignatian spirituality can be described as an active attentiveness
united with a prompt responsiveness to God, who is ever active in
people's lives. Though it includes many forms of prayer,
discernment, and apostolic service, it is the interior dispositions
of attentiveness and responsiveness that are ultimately crucial.
The result is that Ignatian spirituality has a remarkable
'nowness,' both in its attentiveness to God and in its desire to
respond to what God is asking of the person now.
The Ignatian ideal has the following characteristics:
God's greater
glory: St Ignatius of Loyola—"a man who gave the first
place of his life to God" says
Benedict
XVI—stressed that "Man is created to praise, reverence, and
serve God Our Lord and by this means to save his soul." This is the
"First Principle and Foundation" of the Exercises. Ignatius
declares: "The goal of our life is to live with God forever. God
who loves us, gave us life. Our own response of love allows God's
life to flow into us without limit... Our only desire and our one
choice should be this: I want and I choose what better leads to the
deepening of God's life in me."
Union with Jesus: Ignatius emphasized an ardent
love for the Saviour. In his Exercises, he devoted the last weeks
to the contemplation of Jesus: from infancy and public ministry, to
his passion and lastly his risen life. The Spiritual Exercises, in
104, sum this up in a prayer: "Lord, grant that I may see thee more
clearly, love thee more dearly, follow thee more nearly." There is
a great emphasis on the emotions in Ignatius' methods, and a call
for the person to be very sensitive to the emotional movements that
shape them.
Self-awareness: Ignatius recommends the
twice-daily
examen (examination). This is a guided method
of prayerfully reviewing the events of the day, to awaken one's
inner sensitivity to one's
own actions, desires, and
spiritual state, through each moment reviewed. The goals are to see
where God is challenging the person to change and to growth, where
God is calling the person to deeper reflection (especially apt when
discerning if one has a Jesuit vocation in life), to where sinful
or imperfect attitudes or blind spots are found. The general
examen, often at the end of the day, is, as the name
implies, a general review. The particular
examen, often in
the middle of the day, focuses on a particular fault—identified by
the person—to be worked upon in the course of some days or
weeks.
Spiritual direction: Meditation and contemplation,
and for instance the aforementioned examen, are best guided,
Ignatius says, by an experienced person. Jesuits, and those
following Ignatian spirituality, meet with their spiritual director
(traditionally a priest, though in recent years many laypersons
have undertaken this role) on a regular basis (weekly or monthly)
to discuss the fruits of their prayer life and be offered guidance.
Ignatius sees the director as someone who can rein in impulsiveness
or excesses, goad the complacent, and keep people honest with
themselves. If the director is a priest, spiritual direction may or
may not be connected with the Sacrament of Penance. Ignatius
counseled frequent use of sacrament and while some directors see
them as integrally linked, others hold them to be two separate
relationships.
Effective love: The founder of the Society of
Jesus put effective love (love shown in deeds) above affective love
(love based on nice feelings). He usually ended his most important
letters with "I implore God to grant us all the grace to know His
holy will and to accomplish it perfectly." True and perfect love
demands sacrifice, the abandonment of tastes and personal
preferences, and the perfect renunciation of self. This can be
taken together with the prayer for generosity, which asks for
teaching to be generous, to serve God as God deserves without
counting any cost or seeking any reward except knowing that one is
doing God's will.
Detachment: Where
Francis of Assisi's concept of poverty
emphasized the spiritual benefits of simplicity and dependency,
Ignatius emphasized detachment, or "indifference." For Ignatius,
whether one was rich or poor, healthy or sick, in an assignment one
enjoyed or one didn't, was comfortable in a culture or not, etc.,
should be a matter of spiritual indifference—a modern phrasing
might put it as serene acceptance. Hence, a Jesuit (or one
following Ignatian spirituality), placed in a comfortable, wealthy
neighborhood should continue to live the Gospel life without
anxiety or possessiveness, and if plucked instantly from that
situation to be placed in a poor area and subjected to hardships
should simply cheerfully accept that as well, without a sense of
loss or being deprived.
Prayers, efforts at self-conquest, and reflection:
Ignatius's little book, the
Spiritual
Exercises is a fruit of months of
prayer. Jesuits stress the need to take time to
reflect and to pray because prayer is at the foundation of Jesus's
life. Prayer, in Ignatian spirituality, does not dispense from
"helping oneself," a phrase frequently used by Ignatius. Thus, he
also speaks of
mortification and of
amendment.
Devotion to the Sacred Heart, the Eucharist, and Our
Lady: The Society of Jesus has a relationship with the
Order of the
Visitation of Holy Mary in a commitment to spread the devotion
to the Sacred Heart (though the concept of devotion to Christ's
mercy, as symbolized in the image of the Sacred Heart, is more
ancient, its modern origins can be traced to St.
Marie Alacoque, a Visitation nun, whose
spiritual director was St.
Claude de la Colombière). The
Jesuits particularly promoted this devotion to emphasize the
compassion and overwhelming love of Christ for people, and to
counteract the rigorism and spiritual pessimism of the
Jansenists.
St. Ignatius counselled people to receive the
Eucharist more often, and from the order's
earliest days the Jesuits were promoters of "frequent communion".
It should be noted that it was the custom for many Catholics at
this time to receive Holy Communion perhaps once or twice a year,
out of what Catholic theologians considered an exaggerated respect
for the sacrament; Ignatius and others advocated receiving the
sacrament at least monthly, emphasizing Holy Communion not as
reward but as spiritual food; by the time of Pope St.
Pius X (1903–1914), "frequent communion" had come to
mean weekly, and even daily reception, of the Eucharist.
Ignatius made his initial commitment to a new way of life by
leaving his soldier's weapons (and symbolically, his old values) on
an altar before an image of the Christ child seated on the lap of
Our Lady of Montserrat. The
Jesuits were long promoters of the Sodality of Our Lady, their
primary organization for their students until the 1960s, which they
used to encourage frequent attendance at Mass, reception of
communion, daily recitation of the
Rosary,
and attendance at retreats in the Ignatian tradition of the
Spiritual Exercises.
Zeal for souls: The purpose of the Order, says the
Summary of the Constitutions, is "not only to apply one's
self to one's own salvation and to perfection with the help of
divine grace but to employ all one's strength, for the salvation
and perfection of one's neighbor."
Finding God in All Things: The vision that
Ignatius places at the beginning of the Exercises keeps sight of
both the Creator and the creature, the One and the other swept
along in the same movement of love. In it, God offers himself to
humankind in an absolute way through the Son, and humankind
responds in an absolute way by a total self-donation. There is no
longer sacred or profane, natural or supernatural, mortification or
prayer—because it is one and the same Spirit who brings it about
that the Christian will "love God in all things—and all things in
God." Hence, Jesuits have always been active in the graphic and
dramatic arts, literature and the sciences.
Examen of Consciousness: The Examen of
Consciousness is a simple prayer directed toward developing a
spiritual sensitivity to the special ways God approaches, invites,
and calls. Ignatius recommends that the examen be done at least
twice, and suggests five points of prayer:
- Recalling that one is in the holy presence of God
- Thanking God for all the blessings one has received
- Examining how one has lived his day
- Asking God for forgiveness
- Resolution and offering a prayer of hopeful recommitment
It is important, however, that the person feels free to structure
the Examen in a way that is most helpful to him. There is no right
way to do it; nor is there a need to go through all of the five
points each time. A person might, for instance, find himself
spending the entire time on only one or two points. The basic rule
is: Go wherever God draws you. And this touches upon an important
point: the Examen of Consciousness is primarily a time of prayer;
it is a "being with God." It focuses on one's consciousness of God,
not necessarily one's conscience regarding sins and mistakes.
Discernment: Discernment is rooted in the
understanding that God is ever at work in one's life, "inviting,
directing, guiding and drawing" one "into the fullness of life."
Its central action is reflection on the ordinary events of one's
life. It presupposes an ability to reflect on the ordinary events
of one's life, a habit of personal prayer, self-knowledge,
knowledge of one's deepest desires and openness to God's direction
and guidance. Discernment is a prayerful 'pondering' or 'mulling
over' the choices a person wishes to consider. In his discernment,
the person's focus should be on a quiet attentiveness to God and
sensing rather than thinking. His goal is to understand the choices
in his heart: to see them, as it were, as God might see them. In
one sense, there is no limit to how long he might wish to continue
in this. Discernment is a repetitive process, yet as the person
continues, some choices should of their own accord fall by the
wayside while others should gain clarity and focus. It is a process
that should move inexorably toward a decision.
Service and humility: Ignatius emphasized the
active expression of God's love in life and the need to be
self-forgetful in humility. Part of Jesuit formation is the
undertaking of service specifically to the poor and sick in the
most humble ways: Ignatius wanted Jesuits in training to serve part
of their time as novices and in tertianship (see
Formation
below) as the equivalent of orderlies in hospitals, for instance,
emptying bed pans and washing patients, to learn humility and
loving service. Jesuit educational institutions often adopt mottoes
and mission statements that include the idea of making students
"men for others," and the like. Jesuit missions have generally
included medical clinics, schools and agricultural development
projects as ways to serve the poor or needy while preaching the
Gospel.
Jesuit Formation (training)
The formation (training) of Jesuits seeks to prepare men
spiritually, academically and practically for the ministries they
will be called to offer the Church and world.
St. Ignatius was strongly influenced by
the
Renaissance and wanted Jesuits to be
able to offer whatever ministries were most needed at any given
moment, and especially, to be ready to respond to missions
(assignments) from the
Pope. Formation for
Priesthood normally takes between 8 and
14 years, depending on the man's background and previous education,
and final vows are taken several years after that, making Jesuit
formation among the longest of any of the religious orders.
- Candidacy is an informal precursor to becoming a Jesuit,
wherein a man interested in joining the Jesuits explores his
calling with a spiritual director. This varies from country to
country. The candidate attends Jesuit
vocation events, including retreats and discussions with other
candidates and Jesuits. Candidacy can last any length of time, with
the norm being about a year. During this time, the candidate may or
may not live in a Jesuit community.
- Novitiate is the first stage of
formation. The Novice begins to live the
three vows of poverty, chastity, obedience (though he has not yet
vowed himself publicly), completes the Spiritual Exercises of
Ignatius of Loyola, learns about the history and practice of
the order and enters into a series of “experiments.” These
experiments are usually short ministerial assignments where the
novice tests his aptitude for various ministries, such as,
teaching, working with the marginalized or giving retreats. The
novitiate lasts two years. Jesuit novices may place the letters "n.
S.J." after their names.
At this point, the novice pronounces his First Vows (perpetual
Simple vows of poverty, chastity and
obedience and a vow to persevere to final profession and
ordination) and becomes either a Scholastic (entering onto the path
of priesthood) or a Jesuit brother (technically known as a
"temporal coadjutor", but officially styled "brother" today). The
scholastics (who may be addressed by the secular title "Mister")
and the Brothers (addressed by the title "Brother") of the Society
of Jesus have different courses of study, although they often
overlap.
For scholastics, the usual course of studies is as follows:
- First Studies is the period when the scholastic begins his
academic formation. Depending on his prior education it will last
2–4 years, guaranteeing a grounding in philosophy and the attainment of at least a first
university level degree thus, in the United States, a four-year
bachelor's degree (unless this has already been earned). It may
also introduce the study of theology or some other specialized
area.
- As Jesuits, particularly in the United States, serve on the
faculties of high schools and universities, and in a wide variety
of other positions, the Jesuit scholastic or Jesuit priest often
earns a master or doctoral degree on some area—it may be, for
instance, Theology or it may be History, English, Chemistry,
Educational Administration, Law or any other subject. Hence, a
Jesuit may spend another few years earning a graduate degree beyond
the bachelor's.
- Regency is the next stage, wherein the scholastic lives and
works in a typical Jesuit community (as opposed to the “formation
communities” he has lived insofar). He is engaged full-time in
ministry (an Apostolate), which is traditionally teaching in a
secondary school, but it may be any ministry Jesuits are engaged
in. Regency lasts for 2–3 years.
- Theology is the stage immediately
preceding ordination. By universal canon
law, every candidate for priestly ordination must complete four
years of theology studies, though part of this requirement may have
been met in first studies. This will include the attainment of a
first degree in theology (such as the Bachelor of Sacred Theology),
and usually a second (masters level) degree in a specialized area
related to theology. (As such, it is not uncommon for a Jesuit to
hold a master's level degree in Theology, and, as mentioned above,
a second master's or a doctorate in a completely different
field.)
- Ordination follows, and the new
priest may receive a ministerial assignment or be sent back for
further studies in any academic field.
- The ordained Jesuit priest will either be chosen for profession
as a "spiritual coadjutor", taking the usual perpetual vows of
poverty, chastity and obedience, or for profession as a "professed
of the four vows."
- A few years after ordination to priesthood, or for brothers
after a number of years work, a Jesuit will undertake Tertianship,
so named because it is something like a third year of novitiate.
After his first fews years of experience of ministry as a priest or
brother, the Jesuit completes the final stage of formal formation
by revisiting the essentials of Jesuit life which he learned as a
novice: once again, he studies the history and Constitutions of the
Jesuits, he makes the Spiritual Exercises and participates in
experimentism, most often by serving in ministries to the sick,
terminally ill or poor.
- Final Vows for the fully professed follow upon tertianship,
wherein the Jesuit pronounces perpetual solemn vows of poverty,
chastity, obedience, and the Fourth vow,
unique to Jesuits, of special obedience to the pope in matters
regarding mission, promising to undertake any mission laid out in
the Formula of the Institute the pope may choose.
- Only the professed of the Four Vows are eligible for posts like
novice master, provincial superior or assistant to the general of
the society.
- The professed of the Four Vows take, in addition to these
solemn perpetual vows five additional Simple Vows: not to consent
to any mitigation of the Society's observance of poverty; not to
"ambition" or seek any prelacies (ecclesiastical offices) outside
the Society; not to ambition any offices within the Society; a
commitment to report any Jesuit who does so ambition; and, if a
Jesuit does become a bishop, to permit the general to continue to
provide advice to that bishop, though the vow of obedience to
Jesuit superiors is not operative over matters the man undertakes
as bishop. Under these vows, no Jesuit may "campaign" or even offer
his name for appointment or election to any office, and if chosen
for one must remind the appointing authority (even the Pope) of
these Vows—if the Pope commands that the Jesuit accept ordination
as a bishop anyway, the Jesuit must keep an open ear to the Jesuit
general as an influence.
The formation of Jesuit brothers has a much less structured form.
Prior to the
Second Vatican
Council, Jesuit brothers worked almost exclusively within
Jesuit communities as cooks, tailors, farmers, secretaries,
accountants, librarians and maintenance support—they were thus
technically known as "temporal coadjutors", as they assisted the
professed priests by undertaking the more "worldly" jobs, freeing
the professed of the four vows and the "spiritual coadjutors" to
undertake the sacramental and spiritual missions of the Society.
Following the Second Vatican Council, which recognized the mission
of all the Christian faithful, not just those who are ordained, to
share in the ministries of the Church, Jesuit brothers began to
engage in ministries outside of their communities. Today, the
formation of a Jesuit brother may take many forms, depending on his
aptitude for ministry. He may pursue a highly academic formation
which mirrors that of the scholastics (there are, for instance,
some Jesuit brothers who serve as university professors), or he may
pursue more practical training in areas such as pastoral counseling
or spiritual direction (some assist in giving retreats, for
instance), or he may continue in the traditional “supporting” roles
in which so many Jesuit brothers have attained notable levels of
holiness (as administrative aides, for example). Since Vatican II
the Society has officially adopted the term "brother," which was
always the unofficial form of address for the temporal
coadjutors.
Regardless of the practical details, Jesuit formation is meant to
form men who are open and ready to serve whatever is the Church’s
current need. Today, all Jesuits are expected to learn
English, and those who speak English as a
first language are expected to learn
Spanish.
Government of the Society
The Society is headed by a Superior General. In the Jesuit Order,
the formal title of the Superior General is "Praepositus
Generalis," Latin for Provost-General, more commonly called Father
General or General, who is elected by the General Congregation for
life or until he resigns, is confirmed by the Pope, and has
absolute authority in running the Society. The current Superior
General of the Jesuits is the Spanish Jesuit, Fr.
Adolfo Nicolás Pachón who was elected on
January 19, 2008.
He is assisted by "assistants," four of whom are "assistants for
provident care" and serve as general advisors and a sort of inner
council to the superior general, and several other regional
assistants each of whom heads an "assistancy," which is either a
geographic area (for instance, the North American Assistancy) or an
area of ministry (for instance, higher education). The assistants
normally reside with the General Superior in Rome. The assistants,
together with a number of other advisors, form an advisory council
to the General. A vicar general and secretary of the Society run
day-to-day administration. The General is also required to have an
"admonitor," a confidential advisor whose specific job is to warn
the General honestly and confidentially when he is acting
imprudently or is straying toward disobedience to the Pope or
heresy. The central staff of the General is known as the
Curia.
The order is divided into geographic provinces, each of which is
headed by a Provincial Superior, generally called Father
Provincial, chosen by the General. He has authority over all
Jesuits and ministries in his area, and is assisted by a
socius, who acts as a sort of secretary and chief of
staff. With the approval of the General, the father provincial
appoints a novice master and a master of tertians to oversee
formation, and rectors of local houses of Jesuits.
Each individual Jesuit community within a province is normally
headed by a rector who is assisted by a "minister," from the Latin
for "servant," a priest who helps oversee the community's
day-to-day needs.
The General Congregation is a meeting of all of the assistants,
provincials and additional representatives who are elected by the
professed Jesuits of each province. It meets irregularly and
rarely, normally to elect a new superior general and/or to take up
some major policy issues for the order. The General meets more
regularly with smaller councils composed of just the
provincials.
Habit and dress
Jesuits do not have an official habit. In the Constitutions of the
Society, it gives these instructions concerning clothing; “The
clothing too should have three characteristics: first, it should be
proper; second, conformed to the usage of the country of residence;
and third, not contradictory to the poverty we profess…” (Const.
577)
Historically, a "Jesuit-style cassock" became standard issue: it
wrapped around the body and was tied with a cincture, rather than
the customary buttoned front, a tuftless biretta (only diocesan
clergy wore tufts), and a simple cape. As such, though Jesuit garb
appeared distinctive, and became identifiable over time, it was the
common priestly dress of Ignatius' day. During the missionary
periods of the Continental Americas, the various American Indian
tribes referred to Jesuits as "Blackrobes" because of their black
cassocks.
Today, most Jesuits wear the Roman collar tab shirts in
non-liturgical, ministerial settings.
Controversies
The
Monita Secreta, also known
as the "Secret Instructions of the Jesuits" was published (1612)
and (1614) in Kraków
, and is
alternately alleged to have been written by either Claudio Acquaviva, the fifth general of
the society, or by Jerome Zahorowski. The document appears
to lay down the methods to be adopted for the acquisition of
greater power and influence for the order and for the Roman
Catholic Church. Sympathizers for the Society of Jesus argue that
the
Secreta were merely fabricated to give the Jesuits a
sinister reputation; it has become widely considered a forgery by
Zahorowski.
Henry Garnet, one of the leading
English Jesuits, was hanged for
misprision of treason because of his
involvement in the
Gunpowder Plot.
The plan
had been an attempt to kill King James I of England and VI of Scotland,
his family, and most of the Protestant
aristocracy in a single attack by blowing up the Houses of
Parliament
in 1605; another Jesuit, Oswald Tesimond, managed to escape arrest
for involvement in the same plot.
Jesuit
Robert Southwell was
arrested while visiting the house of Richard Bellamy, who lived
near Harrow
and was
under suspicion on account of his connection with Jerome Bellamy, who had been executed for
sharing in Anthony Babington's
plot. He was hanged for treason.
John Ballard (also Jesuit) was executed
for being involved in an attempt to
assassinate Queen
Elizabeth I of England. The same fate
struck
Edmund Campion, a Jesuit
priest unjustly sentenced to death as a traitor.
They have also been accused of using
casuistry to obtain justifications for the
unjustifiable (See:
formulary
controversy; Blaise Pascals'
Lettres Provinciales). In English,
according to the
Concise
Oxford Dictionary, "Jesuitical" has acquired a secondary
meaning of "equivocating". The Jesuits have also been targeted by
many
anti-Catholics like
Jack Chick,
Avro
Manhattan,
Alberto Rivera (who
claimed to be a former Jesuit himself), and the late former Jesuit
priest,
Fr. Malachi Martin.
Within the Catholic Church, some Jesuits are criticized by some
parties for allegedly being overly liberal and allegedly deviating
substantially from official Church teaching and papal directives,
especially on such issues as abortion, priestly celibacy,
homosexuality, and
liberation
theology.
However, the last two Popes have appointed Jesuits to notable
positions within the Church. For instance, John Paul II appointed
Roberto Cardinal Tucci, S.J.,
to the College of Cardinals, after serving for many years as the
chief organizer of papal trips and public events. In all, John Paul
II and Benedict XVI have appointed 10
Jesuit Cardinals. Benedict XVI has appointed
several Jesuits to positions of prominence in his curia, such as
Archbishop
Luis Ladaria Ferrer,
S.J. as Secretary of the
Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, and Rev.
Federico Lombardi, S.J., Vatican Press
Secretary.
Jesuits rescue efforts during the Holocaust
12 Jesuit
priests have been formally recognized by Yad Vashem
, the Holocaust Martyrs'
and Heroes' Remembrance Authority in Jerusalem, for risking their
lives to save Jews during the Holocaust of World War II. Roger Braun (1910–1981) –
France, Pierre Chaillet (1900–1972) – France, Jean-Baptist De
Coster (1896–1968) – Belgium, Jean Fleury (1905–1982) – France,
Emile Gessler (1891–1958) – Belgium, John B. Janssens (1889–1964) –
Belgium, Alphonse Lambrette (1884–1970) – Belgium, Emile Planckaert
(b. 1906) – France, Jacob Raile (1894–1949) – Hungary, Henri Revol
(1904–1992) – France, Adam Sztark (1907–1942) – Poland, Henri Van
Oostayen (1906 -1945) – Belgium.
Several other Jesuits are known to have rescued or given refuge to
Jews during that period.
A plaque commemorating the 152 Jesuit
priests who gave of their lives during the Holocaust was installed
at Rockhurst University, a
Jesuit university, in Kansas City, Missouri
, United
States
, in April 2007, the first such plaque in the
world.
Famous Jesuits
Notable Jesuits include
missionaries,
educators,
scientists,
artists and
philosophers. Among many distinguished
early Jesuits was
St. Francis
Xavier, a missionary to
Asia who converted
more people to Catholicism than anyone before.
José de Anchieta and Manuel da Nóbrega, founders of the
city of São
Paulo
, Brazil
, were also
Jesuit priests. Another famous Jesuit was
St. Jean de Brebeuf, a French missionary
who was martyred in North America during the 1600s.
Jesuit Educational institutions
Though there is almost no occupation in civil life, and no ministry
within the Church, which a Jesuit has not held at one time or
another, and though the work of the Jesuits today embraces a wide
variety of apostolates and ministries, they are probably most well
known for their educational work.
Since the inception of the order, Jesuits have been teachers.
Today, there are Jesuit-run universities, colleges, high schools
and middle or elementary schools in dozens of countries. Jesuits
also serve on the faculties of both Catholic and secular schools as
well.
Europe
One of
the most prominent of these universities is the Gregorian University in Rome, one of
the Church's key seats of learning, associated in a consortium with
the Pontifical Biblical
Institute and Pontifical Oriental Institute
.
In
Ireland
, the Jesuits run five secondary schools: Belvedere
College
, Gonzaga College
(both in Dublin
), Clongowes
Wood College
in Clane
, Co.
Kildare
, St
Ignatius College, in Galway
city, and
Crescent
College
, which is in Limerick.
In the
United
Kingdom
the Jesuit educational institutions are: Wimbledon
College
, St.
Aloysius' College, Glasgow, Campion Hall, Oxford
, Heythrop College
(London
), Mount St
Mary's College
(Sheffield
) St Ignatius Enfield
and Stonyhurst College
(Clitheroe
).
In
Belgium
, the Jesuits run various secondary schools (high
schools) such as "Sint-Jozefscollege" in Aalst
(Dutch-speaking) and " Onze-Lieve-Vrouwecollege" and "Sint-Xaverius College"
both in Antwerp and "Sint-Jan Berchmans College" in
Brussels. "Universitair Centrum Sint-Ignatius" in Antwerp
(Dutch-speaking; now part of "
Universiteit Antwerpen") and the 'Facultés
Notre-Dame de la Paix' of Namur (French-speaking) are both Jesuit
universities.
North America
In the
United
States
, 28 Jesuit tertiary education institutions are
organized as the Association of
Jesuit Colleges and Universities, the oldest one being Georgetown
University
in Washington, D.C.
, founded by Bishop John
Carroll in 1789. One of its presidents, Father
Patrick Francis Healy, was the first
African American to head a major
university.
The largest institution is Loyola
University Chicago
. The 46 Jesuit high schools of America are
organized under the
Jesuit Secondary
Education Association. The Jesuits have recently opened a
number of
middle schools in poor
neighborhoods in New York, Boston, Baltimore, Washington, DC,
Chicago, Omaha, and St. Louis. There are also Jesuits serving on
the faculties of other Catholic colleges and universities;
additionally they serve on many secular faculties.
Jesuits also operate retreat houses, for the purpose of offering
the Spiritual Exercises (above) and other types of days of prayer
or spiritual programs extended over weekends or weeks. The oldest
Jesuit retreat house in the United States is Mount Manresa in
Staten Island, New York, and today there are 34 retreat houses or
spirituality centers run by the order in the U.S. Jesuits also
serve on the staffs of other retreat centers.
South America
In
Latin America Jesuit institutions
are organized into the
Asociación de Universidades Confiadas a la Compañía de Jesús en
América Latina (Association of Universities Entrusted to the
Jesuits in Latin America).
Asia
In the
Philippines
, the Jesuit universities are all independent,
although they maintain institutional ties. The Ateneo de
Manila University
, Sacred Heart
School-Jesuit Cebu, Ateneo
de Naga University, Xavier University-Ateneo de
Cagayan, Ateneo de
Zamboanga University, Marian
College of Ipil, and Ateneo de Davao University are
all loosely federated. An affiliated association, Mindanao Consortium
of Ateneo Universities, groups all of the Jesuit universities
located in Mindanao
island with the purpose of promoting
Muslim-Christian unity and dialogue as well as to exchange
knowledge and expertise in various academic fields.
In
India
, the Jesuits run top colleges and schools in the
country including St.
Lawrence High School, Kolkata, Loyola
College, Chennai
, St. Joseph's
College,Tiruchirapalli
, St. Xavier's College, Mumbai
, St.
Xavier's College, Calcutta, Xavier Labour
Relations Institute, Jamshedpur
, Xavier Institute of Management,
Bhubaneswar
(XIMB),Campion
School Bhopal, Loyola
School, Jamshedpur, St. Xavier's High School
Loyola Hall, Ahmedabad, Loyola
School, Thiruvananthapuram
,St.Aloysius College, Mangalore, St Xavier's
College, Thiruananthapuram, St Xavier's College, Palayamkottai,
Loyola College, Kunkuri, St Xavier's College, Balipara, St Joseph's
College, Tiruchirapalli, St Xavier's College, Goa, Andhra Loyola
College, Vijaywada, Loyola Academy, Secunderabad, Xavier Institute
of Social Service (XISS) and Xavier Institute of Development and
Service (XIDAS), St Vincent's High School, Pune and St Xavier's
College, Ranchi, St Xavier's College, Ahmedabad. They also
run some of the top theological colleges in India the famous ones
being Jnana Deepa Vidyapeeth, Pune (De Nobili College) and
Vidyajyoti College of Theology, Delhi. They also run 9 Regional
Theology Centers (RTC) for contextual theologies in diverse regions
of the country. Their educational institutions also have some of
the country's best sportspersons producing centers, prominent among
them being St Ignatius High School, Gumla, St Mary's High School,
Samtoli, Loyola School Jakhama (Kohima). Some of the top
bureaucrats and politicians (including those opposing Christianity)
are Jesuit school alumni.
In
Indonesia
, the Jesuits run seven junior and/or high schools,
including Canisius College (Kolese Kanisius
), St.Mikael College, De Britto College, Loyola
College (Kolese Loyola), Junior High
School of Wood Technology (PIKA), Gonzaga College, and Le Coq
d'Armanville College.
In
Hong
Kong
S.A.R., the Jesuits run two leading secondary
schools,Wah Yan College,
Kowloon and Wah Yan College, Hong Kong
.
In
Japan
, the Jesuits founded Sophia University. It is considered
to be one of the best private universities in the country, and is
one of
Tokyo's
top ranked private universities.
In
Korea
, the Jesuits are running Sogang University. It is
established in February, 1960. It is founded by Art Dethlefs, Basil
Price, Jin Song Man(진성만), Theodor Geppert, Ken Killoren and Clancy
Herbst. Nowadays Sogang University is considered to be one of the
best private universities in Korea.
In
Taiwan
, Jesuits
founded the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Management of the
Catholic Fu-Jen University during the 1950s. In 2003 another
new Faculty of Social Sciences was derived from the Faculty of Law.
Thus
until today, the Fu Jen Catholic University
is still considered to be one of the best
private universities in Taiwan.
Australia
In
Australia, the Jesuits run a number of
high schools including Xavier College
, St Ignatius' College,
Riverview
, Loyola Senior High School, Mt Druitt, Saint Ignatius' College,
Athelstone and St Aloysius' College
.
Africa
In Egypt, the Jesuits run College de la Sainte Famille, a private
boys school in Fagalla, Cairo. They are also involved in charitable
organisations in the South of the country.
Publications
Jesuits are also known for their involvement in publications.
La Civiltà Cattolica
, a periodical produced in Rome by the
Jesuits, has often been used as a semi-official platform for popes
and Vatican officials to float ideas for discussion or hint at
future statements or positions. In the United States,
America magazine has
long had a prominent place in intellectual Catholic circles, and
the Jesuits produce
Company, a periodical specifically
about Jesuit activities. Most Jesuit colleges and universities have
their own presses which produce a variety of books, book series,
textbooks and academic publications as well.
Ignatius Press, staffed by Jesuits, is an
independent publisher of Catholic books, most of which are of the
popular academic or lay-intellectual variety.
In Australia, the Jesuits run a winery at
Sevenhill, the
Jesuit Mission Australia, and they
produce a number of magazines, including
Eureka Street, Madonna, Australian Catholics,
and Province Express.
Jesuit buildings
Many buildings and ruins give witness to the order's construction
activity worldwide. Among these are:
- Sant'Ignazio
di Loyola in Rome
, Italy
- Basilica of
Bom Jesus, Old Goa The Shrine of Saint Francis Xavier
- Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis
Church in Paris
- Ruins of Saint Paul's Church
in Macau
- Ruins
of San Ignacio Church in the Philippines

- Basilica of Bom Jesus
near Panaji, Goa
, in India
- St. Aloysius College Chapel, Mangalore, India
- Church of the Gesù
in Rome
, Italy
- Iglesia de San
Ildefonso/Iglesia de los Jesuitas (The Jesuit church)in
Toledo,
Spain

- São Roque Church
in Lisbon
, Portugal
- Ateneo de Manila University
Church of the Gesu in the Philippines

- La Santisima Trinidad de
Parana
in Paraguay
- Jesuit Missions of the
Chiquitos
in Bolivia
- Colegio San Ignacio de Loyola
in San Juan
de Puerto
Rico
- Belen School in
Havana
, Cuba
- Belen Church
in Havana
, Cuba
- St. Ignatius Cathedral
in Xujiahui
, Shanghai, China
- Stonyhurst College
in Lancashire
, United Kingdom
- St Beuno's College a Jesuit
Spirituality and Retreat Centre in Wales, UK
- St Aloysius' College
in Sydney
, Australia
- Saint
Ignatius' College
, in Riverview, Australia
- St.
Ignatius College Preparatory School
in Chicago, Illinois
, United States of America
- Jesuit College Preparatory
School
in Dallas,
Texas
, United States of America
- St Ignatius Church in
San
Francisco, California
, United States of America
- St. Ignatius Chapel in Kowloon, Hong Kong S.A.R. (inside the
campus of Wah Yan College, Kowloon)
- The Church of the Society of
Jesus in Cuzco
– Peru
- St. Peter of
Lima – Peru

- Cathedral
of Salvador in Brazil

- New
Cathedral of Coimbra, in Portugal

- St. Ignatius
College in Galway
, Ireland
(Gaeilge Coláiste Iognáid)
- St Ignatius Primary School, church and college in North
London
- Regis High School
, a tuition-free private college preparatory in
New York
City
, New
York
- Loyola College
, one of India's top colleges, located at
Chennai
, India
- St. Xavier
High School, Cincinnati
a private, all-male, college-preparatory high
school in Cincinnati
, Ohio
- St. Francis Xavier High School, New York a
private, all-male, college preparatory high school in New York
, New
York
- Xavier College
a private school in Melbourne
, Australia for boys from
kindergarten to year 12. Well known for its chapel.
- Universidad Católica
Andrés Bello campus buildings, in Caracas
, Venezuela
- Pontificia Universidad
Javeriana
campus buildings, in Bogotá
, Colombia
- Colegio del
Salvador a private, all male college and school with Church in
Buenos
Aires
, Argentina
- St.
Ignatius High School
in Cleveland, Ohio
, an all-male college preparatory school
- University of Detroit Jesuit High School
and Academy
in Detroit, MI
, an all-male college preparatory school
- Walsh Jesuit High School
in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, a co-ed college
preparatory school.
- Church of Carolus Borromeus (
Carolus Borromeuskerk, Dutch wiki) in Antwerp
, with several magnificent works of Rubens.
First dedicated to Ignatius de Loyola, then in 1773 renamed to the
church of Charles Borromeo. More
Jesuit churches on the Dutch wiki.
- Church of
the Jesuits (Jesuitenkirche) 1712–1872 in Heidelberg
, Germany
.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Koblenz, Germany.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Mannheim, Germany.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche/St. Michael) in Munich, Germany.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Hall in Tirol, Austria.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Innsbruck, Austria.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Vienna, Austria.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Lucern, Switzerland.
- Church of the Jesuits
(Jesuitenkirche) in Soluthurn, Switzerland.
- St.
Raphael the Archangel Catholic Church, in North Carolina,
United States
- Church of the Sacred Hearth, in Valladolid, Spain.
- Saint Joseph School, Primary and Secondary School in
Valladolid, Spain
- Christ the King, High School in Valladolid, Spain
Popular culture
- The Mission 1986
award winning film in which 18th century Spanish Jesuits try to
protect a remote South American Indian tribe in danger of falling
under the rule of pro-slavery Portugal.
- Black Robe 1991 film about a
Jesuit in 17th century Quebec and his struggles with the Algonquin tribe.
- The Exorcist Novel and
film set at Georgetown University, a Jesuit school, with two Jesuit
priests as exorcists. The novel and screenplay were written by
William Peter Blatty, a 1950 graduate of the school.
- Possessed a film
based on a book by Thomas
B. Allen concerning the
same events that inspired The
Exorcist.
- The Sparrow 1996
science fiction novel about a Jesuit mission to an alien world.
(See also its 1998 sequel, Children of God.)
- A Case of
Conscience 1958 science fiction novel about a Jesuit
mission to an alien world.
- Donald Strachey movies,
Timothy was formerly a Jesuit student.
- The Vicomte de
Bragelonne Novel, by Alexandre
Dumas, in which Aramis, once musketeer now turned Jesuit, plays a key
role.
- Jack Ryan Series of Novels, by Tom
Clancey, which the main character Jack Ryan is noted as having
been educated by the Jesuits at Boston College and Georgetown.
- A Portrait of the Artist
as a Young Man 1916 novel by James
Joyce in which the protagonist, Stephen Dedalus is educated at Jesuit
schools Clongowes
Wood College
and Belvedere College
while growing up in Ireland.
Sesquicentennial Anniversary
On
December 10, 2010, the Society of Jesus in the Philippines
will celebrate the 150th year of the return of the
Jesuit mission in the Philippines since 1859, as well as the
founding of Ateneo de Manila University
.
See also
Notes and references
External links
Catholic Church documents
Jesuit documents
Jesuit websites in various regions
Africa
Asia-Oceania
Europe
North America
South America
Media