
Conversion experiences of saints like Ignatius Loyola are important. His conversion came about as he was recuperating from a serious battle wound in his family’s castle.He was looking for something to read, and the only books his sister-in-law had available were a Life of Christ and Lives of the Saints.
The Life of Christ, by Ludolph of Saxony, was likely the book he read. It invites the reader to enter the gospel story, and so Ignatius, the battle hardened soldier who already knew the basics of faith from the time of his Baptism, began to know Jesus in another way. The soldier who showed no mercy, learned mercy. The man trained to be hard and unfeeling, became tender by knowing Jesus in his Passion. He became a soldier of another kind.
The Passion of Jesus was the gospel story Ignatius reflected on most . Go in and stand with someone there, the book said, and see what they see and listen to them. Most likely Ignatius the soldier would stand with the soldiers there, familiar as he was with those hard, efficient men finishing the job and anxious to head back to the barracks Yet the day Jesus was crucified, one of them, the one in charge, suddenly saw Another hanging on the cross with the criminals of the day.”Truly, this man was the Son of God.”
Everything, everyone else on that dark hill changed then: the leaders shouting for death, the soldiers finishing up, the curious passing by, the women looking on from a distance. . Everything, everyone changed. The earth quaked and the tombs were opened. The Son of God saw them all as his Father’s children.
Too much to take in? Too much for the mind and moreso for the heart. That’s why the mystery of Jesus, especially his Passion, became a never-ending school for Ignatius. “Truly, this man was the Son of God,” who humbled himself to come among us, accepting even death on a cross. God loves us so.
It’s a school for our feelings too. Feelings of inferiority or superiority, resentment and judgment, futility and denial. The hard soldier and the women looking on learned compassion together. The passion of Jesus is a school of compassion, where we learn to see things and feel things as he did.
The antiphon for morning prayer for his feast sums up his experience. “Would that I might know Christ and the power of his resurrection and that I might share in his sufferings.”
The saints, from every time and place, invited Ignatius to be a disciple of Jesus too. You didn’t have to be a fisherman from Galilee to follow Jesus, they said, or a learned scholar. Just follow him day by day, And so Ignatius, the soldier, accepted the daily graces he was given.
Dear Father Victor, as you said, “The passion of Jesus is a school of compassion, where we learn to see things and feel things as he did.” Thank you for teaching me that, as I pray for the grace to be able to do that, especially in trying times. Fabienne
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the Passion THE MYSTERY FOR ME IS THAT HE LOVES ME TODAY, EXACTLY
AS I AM WITH MY FAULTS AND SINS , MY STRENGTH AND MY WEAKNESSES.
HE LOVES THE WHOLE PACKAGE OF ME, AND BECAUSE OF THAT I RECEIVE
HOPE FOR ME AND FOR MY FUTURE BECAUSE OF JESUS LOVING ME,
AS I AM.. I HOPE TO GROW IN HOPE AND LOVE BECAUSE OF JESUS
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Yes! to hope to grow because of Jesus in hope and love as we all are. How comforting a point you make. Thank you for sharing your compassionate perspective. It is hope for the hopeful and those in need of hope. Fabienne
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Often, I forget that the saints were earthen vessels like me. Through faith they allowed themselves to be open to the grace of God. They made their lives into a continuous “Fiat.”
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