When Spain was
taken over in the late 1400s, the Catholic Church finally had the opportunity
to make a Catholic country. In order to live in Spain, if you were of a
different faith you were faced with utter scrutiny and you could sometimes be
tortured, interrogated or even in some cases, executed. Out of this context
came the famous Ignatius of Loyola. He was well-studied and well-trained, and
desired greatly to go to battle and act in a chivalrous manner. He went to
defend Spain against the French in the early 1520s, and it became evident that
God had other plans for Ignatius. A cannon ball destroyed his leg and almost
killed Ignatius, and he was brought to his family castle to recover. After a
couple of failed surgeries, Ignatius claims to have had a vision (much like St.
Anthony’s) of the Virgin Mary holding Jesus in the form of a child. Having lost
his mother at a young age, this maternal image appealed directly to the heart
of Ignatius. After his recovery he began to write several works.
One of these works
is known as The Exercises. This work
detailed a process to undergo over the period of one month where you go through
a series of actions in order to truly begin to find yourself and find God.
Around this time, much like St. Francis several centuries before him, Ignatius
formed a small band of followers known as the Society of Jesus or the Jesuits (*which
Pope Francis is part of). Between the Council of Trent and the Jesuit Society,
the Catholic Church had enough fuel to fight the fire of Protestantism.
Ignatius burned with an unquenchable desire to convey the truth of Catholicism
to others, even if it meant martyrdom for his faith. People from outside of the
Catholic Church were portraying the Jesuits as pompous and arrogant men, but
this could not historically be farther from the truth. We often demonize those
whom we oppose or disagree with, and this was no exception.
The Jesuits were
actually known to associate with people of low economic and social standing,
and Ignatius became looked at different when he tried to minister to
prostitutes in Rome. For some in the Catholic Church, however, the Jesuit
Society was not going about the faith in the right manner. Various countries
began to go through a process of Christianization, yet when Jesuit missionaries
arrived in places such as Asia, South America or elsewhere, they recognized the
value and importance of the religious and cultural traditions held by these
people. It was unheard of at the time in the Church to actually claim that
other religions held even a grain of truth – which the Jesuits were seemingly
noticing – and as such, this was taken into consideration. Granted, the Jesuits
claimed that although some portions of the non-Christian religions held truth,
the Catholic religion was the truer or most true religion, and was therefore
superior.
While many
well-meaning Jesuits spread their messages, issues and deficiencies in the
implementation of Catholicism in other countries led to violence and death
among many. Although the Jesuits were intending on spreading the peace of the
gospel message, helping the poor and the sick, their companions back in Europe
did not agree with this line of thinking. In fact, it was these sort of
conditions that led to minority groups or foreign groups coming to be
completely victimized and in many cases, massacred. This, however, was not the
only issue at the time. The French Revolution was creating problems for the
Church, and it caused many bishops, nuns, priests and others to leave France –
ending, in many cases, in execution. The efforts of Ignatius and the Jesuits
were successful on many levels, but the Catholic Church was far from peace with
the world.
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