Monday, 29 July 2013
Become a Jesuit
Become a Jesuit
"The
Church needs you, relies on you and continues to turn to you with trust,
particularly to reach those physical and spiritual places which others do not
reach or have difficulty in reaching."
With
the words above, His Holiness Benedict XVI reiterated a centuries old charge of
the Catholic Church to the Jesuits during the 35th General Congregation of the
Society of Jesus in February 2008.
The Society of Jesus
is a community of priests and brothers dedicated to the service of God and the
Church for the betterment of the world around us. No matter what our work, from
university to infirmary to barrio, it is for the glory of God and the help and
salvation of souls. Even within the Society of Jesus, there is a great variety
of voices, an array of talents, but we are all at the service of the call and
the mission. Some are gifted at social analysis, others at immediate and
effective working with people at the margins of life or society. Many are scholars,
many are missionaries. Whether teaching, preaching, giving the sacraments or
praying for the society, our voices are as varied as the corporal and spiritual
works of mercy, but there must be one message: to love God with all our hearts
and to love our neighbors as ourselves.
Responding to God’s Call
Discernment is a word that describes the process of coming to understand how the Lord is calling me and inviting me to serve Him. It is a spiritual and personal journey.
Ask the Lord
for these gifts of the Spirit as you move through the process.
Seven Stages of
Vocation Discernment
2.
Inquiry… taking the
initiative
3.
Information
Gathering… being proactive
4.
Discernment…
understanding the experience
5.
Confirmation…
moving toward a decision
6.
Application
Process… submitting the application
7.
Entrance…
if accepted, becoming a Jesuit Novice
Inquiry
A Community in Christ
This type of
communal living demands a special kind of person. A man who joins the Society
of Jesus has to have a social personality and be someone who is capable of
living peacefully with a variety of temperaments, personal histories and
styles. Jesuit communities incorporate men of all ages, forged into a union of
minds and hearts intent on finding where God wants us to be most effective in
the work of the Kingdom.
Jesuit
community life also requires a healthy, mature independence different from the
kind found in a monastic order. Prayer, study and the demands of our apostolic
work can lead some to experience periods of solitude in their lives. Yet this
solitude is not withdrawal, but mature self-direction, whose ultimate goal is
greater service to the Lord.
It is all of these qualities that make Jesuit community
life fraternal, personal and ecclesial. In their communal life, Jesuits share a
common bond stronger than their differences and learn together how to be men
for others within a wider reality of the Church.
Consecrated for
Service
“This life of
chastity consecrated to God offers a living witness that Christ can engage
human beings in so comprehensive a love and a prophetic reminder that we were
created finally for that future life with God in which the children of the
resurrection will “neither marry nor give in marriage” (Luke 20:34-36).
In this way living unmarried for the sake of the kingdom of heaven preaches the
Gospel in deed rather than words..
The vow of
poverty helps a Jesuit to live more simply, renouncing personal ownership of
material possessions, seeking greater solidarity with the poor, and sharing
things in common in imitation of the early disciples of Jesus.
“Our poverty
is apostolic because it witnesses to God as the one Lord of our lives and the
only Absolute; it distances us from material goods and frees us from all
attachment so that we can be fully available to serve the Gospel and dedicate
ourselves to the most needy. In this way, poverty is itself a mission and a
proclamation of the Beatitudes of the Kingdom.”
The vow of
obedience is the touchstone of Jesuit life. St. Ignatius wanted his
companions to be ready at any time to respond to the greatest needs of the
Church. Jesuits seek to follow the will of God as it is revealed in the
mission given to each Jesuit by his religious Superior in the Society of
Jesus. Solemnly professed Jesuits take a special vow of obedience to the
Holy Father, the Pope, to be available for special missions.
“Impelled by the love of Christ, we embrace obedience
as a distinctive grace conferred by God on the Society through its founder,
whereby we may be united the more surely and constantly with God’s salvific
will, and at the same time be made one in Christ among ourselves…”
Training for Mission
·
· With these vows Jesuit scholastics and brothers normally
begin a three-year period of philosophy and theology studies. If the man
has not yet received a bachelor’s degree, he studies for that at this
time. He may also be asked to use this time to begin graduate work in a
field of specialization. In the United States, there are three Jesuit
First Studies programs: Fordham University (New York City), Loyola
University (Chicago), and St. Louis University (St. Louis).Regency is the next
stage of formation. The Jesuit works for two or three years in a Jesuit
school or other approved ministry while he lives in a Jesuit community.
· After regency, Jesuit scholastics begin an intensive
three-year study of theology which leads to priestly ordination. In the
United States, the Jesuits study theology at the Jesuit School of Theology in
Berkeley, California and the Boston College School of Theology and Ministry in
Massachusetts. This may be followed either by full-time apostolic work or
specialized studies.
· After completing his theological studies and some years of
ministry, the Jesuit completes his formal formation of prayer, guidance and
studies with tertianship, a time of spiritual renewal and ministry with the
poor. After the tertianship period, the Jesuit is called to final vows in the
Society of Jesus.
Monday, 8 July 2013
Sunday, 7 July 2013
Thursday, 4 July 2013
Monday, 1 July 2013
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