Ignatian Prayer? Fr. Brian Grogan, SJ

Similar documents
IGNATIAN SPIRITUALITY

Giving the Exercises of St. Ignatius - Year 1 ( ) Two Year Training Course for Spiritual Directors

Suggested Process for Responding to CLC Enquirers

PRAYING THE IGNATIAN SPIRITUALITY

Leadership Development and Meaning-making for Mission

JUNE 2011 RECOLLECTION GUIDE. Theme: A Spirituality of Deep Personal Love fo. Sub-Theme: DEVOTION TO THE TRINITY DEVOTION TO THE TRINITY

Unit 1.9 The Spiritual Exercises

TRADITIONS OF SPIRITUAL GUIDANCE

TABLE 1: DIMENSIONS OF CLC VOCATION

Ignatian Prayer. Extracts from. Twenty-four Spiritual Exercises for the New Story of Universal Communion

THE IGNATIAN 'EXERCISE' IN DAILY LIFE

Ignatian Spirituality and Leadership Bibliography

In a dark night? An Ignatian approach

Retreat in Daily Life y Week 2, Part 1, #1-4

A Model for Understanding the Identity and Mission of a Catholic School

ACCEPTING THE EMBRACE of GOD: THE ANCIENT ART of LECTIO DIVINA

ACCEPTING THE EMBRACE of GOD THE ANCIENT ART of LECTIO DIVINA

PRESENTING THE CAI I OF THE KING

Terms Defined Spirituality. Spiritual Formation. Spiritual Practice

Those who do not dedicate time and resources to

Lectio - reading/listening

RELIGIOUS EDUCATION RELIGIOUS EDUCATION CURRICULUM P-12

THE CONTEMPLATION TO ATTAIN LOVE

How Does God Speak to Us in Prayer?

THE STORY OF THE FIRST SPIRITUAL EXERCISES

2017/11 TO THE WHOLE SOCIETY

A Do-It-at-Home Retreat

On The Way with Jesus

Ignatian Spirituality

Printer Friendly Version: Week 19

DISCOURSE ON EXERCISES AND CO-WORKERS 18 February 2002

Jesus on Location: Purgation Overcoming barriers to intimacy with God March 5&6, 2016 John Ortberg

Ramona Miller OSF, IFC-TOR Conference, May 9, 2017 PRAYER

COOPERATION WITH THE LAITY IN MISSION *

Resurrection and imagination

REFLECTIONS ON THE SPIRITUAL EXERCISES

Stopping to Think. Brian Grogan SJ

The experience of grace... is the experience of a transformation one did not bring about but rather underwent...

Jesuit Pupil Profile

FOR MISSION 1. Samuel Yáñez Professor of Philosophy, Universidad Alberto Hurtado Member of CLC Santiago, Chile

DISCERNING THE WILL OF GOD

SPIRITUAL ACCOMPANIMENT AND DISCERNMENT

Ignatian Spirituality and Spiritual Direction

Christine Gizard Spiritual Ministry Diocese of Lille France

THE CONTEMPLATION TO ATTAIN DIVINE LOVE

Ignatian Spirituality for Ministry (Hybrid) SPGR Lowenstein (Lincoln Ctr) January 11-15, AM-4:30PM

prayer guide for the journey CONFIRMED IN THE SPIRIT Meal Prayers Morning Prayer Evening Prayer

THE EXAMEN AND THE EXERCISES A RE-APPRAISAL

Notes for a Prophetic Lay Community guided by the Spirit of God

The Spiritual Journey of Ignatius of Loyola:

IS THE NINETEENTH ANNOTATION THE FULL EXERCISES?

Readings for October 28, th Sunday in Ordinary Time. I Want To See

Session 3: The People Question: Relationships and Community

St Mary of Eton with St Augustine. The Examen. a daily practice of being closer to God in LENT 2015

THE IGNATIAN EXAMEN: A METHOD OF THEOLOGICAL REFLECTION

SPIRITUAL ARMOUR PRAYER. Pray every morning and night.

IGNATIAN SPIRITUALITY AND MANAGEMENT

Resources for Jesuit Schools

Retreat Programme 2018

it is necessary to make ourselves indifferent to all created things in all that is allowed to the choice of our free will

MY EXPERIENCE OF THE VOW OF OBEDIENCE DURING FORMATION

Spiritual Path for Dehonian Associates

NOVENA TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

IGNATIAN MYSTICISM. By JOHN R. SACHS

Guidelines of Good Practice for offering the Ministry of Spiritual Direction

Like every engaged couple that meets a priest to arrange for a wedding, you have your own expectations. Generally, the man and woman expect a

THE FIRST METHOD OF PRAYER

NATURE OF SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE. A religious experience is a situation or event in life where one feels closeness to God

1 Resources on the Prayer to the Holy Spirit

Companions of Christ, Chatham

THE SPIRITUALIT ALITY OF MY SCIENTIFIC WORK. Ignacimuthu Savarimuthu, SJ Director Entomology Research Institute Loyola College, Chennai, India

IMAGINING IGNATIAN SPIRITUAL DIRECTION

MEDITATION MADE EASY

Sacred Space: A Resource for Small-group Ministry

Provincial Visitation. Guidance for Jesuit Schools of the British Province

29. The grace of spiritual marriage

20. The Beginnings of Passive Prayer

Class #5 Life of Prayer Overview Goals: Resources. Glossary (Words to know)

The Gifts of the Holy Spirit. What Are They & What Do They Do?

Teresa of Jesus (Avila)

Video: Saint Ignatius of Loyola

Ignatius of Loyola: Theology as a way of living

A Spirituality of Spiritual Freedom - 1 -

Service Simplicity Community

In the words of St. Ignatius, a spiritual exercise is every way of examining

LECTIO DIVINA METHOD

Ignatian Communal Discernment. Seeking God s Desire for a Group or Community

JESUIT EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH ASIA

Saint Raphael. Ignatian Spiritual Exercises Retreats at St. Raphael Parish. Beginning Thursday, Feb. 23, Dr. Andy Kereky, February 2017

SOCIAL COMMITMENT AND IGNATIAN SPIRITUALIT ALITY. Jean Ilboudo General Assistant S.J. - Africa SJ Curia, Rome - Italy

Five Finger Prayer ACTS Prayer Physical Prayer Breath Prayer Lectio Divina Praying the Psalms... 12

Unit 14: Collaboration

FOUNDATIONS. By HOWARD J. GRAY RCENTLY r FACILITATED A communal apostolic discernment

To: General Assembly of the Regnum Christi Federation, November-December 2018

GENERAL CHAPTER 2011 PREPARATION PHASE II WALKING THE EMMAUS JOURNEY TOGETHER

A RELATIONSHIP DEVELOPS BY A PROCESS OF GROWING INTIMACY. increased attentiveness as an encounter with Christ. as a basis for a conversation

FRIENDSHIP POWER. John 15:1-15

Resources for Jesuit Schools

The Sacrament of Confirmation A Four Part Catechetical Video Series with Cardinal Wuerl

Ignatian Spirituality & Sustainability. By: Annette Marksberry Office of Strategic Information Resources Spring 2009

Transcription:

Ignatian Prayer? Fr. Brian Grogan, SJ Introduction Ignatius would be unhappy with the term Ignatian Prayer if it were used to label some forms of prayer as Ignatian, to the exclusion of others. For him, it is the Holy Spirit who teaches us in prayer, by leading us as he wills. Ignatius saw his own role as that of the prompter who hints at possible ways of proceeding in prayer. The role of the guide in the Spiritual Exercises is to help the retreatant to notice and follow the drawing of the Holy Spirit: the ways in which the retreatant prays is secondary to the goal of meeting God. However, granted the above reservations, some of the characteristics of what is known as Ignatian Prayer are as follows: Deep love for Jesus Christ. Imaginative Contemplation is a help to this. In this form of prayer the Spirit enables the winning over of the total person to the person of the Lord. There is a delicate transforming of imagination, vision, memory, mind, will, affectivity, emotions, even the body. A person is made over to the Lord. St Paul speaks twice of a new creation when a person s life is centred on Christ (2 Cor 5:17; Gal 6:15). Loving Service. The mysticism of Ignatius has been termed a mysticism of service, rather than of contemplation alone. Lord, what would you have me do? - This is the attitude of Mary, of Jesus, of Paul and of all the saints. Ignatius simple desire was to serve or help others. The focus of discernment, another key Ignatian concept, is on deciding just how best to serve. Seeking and finding God in All Things. This endless dynamic is played out in the Examen (see below). The capacity to find God in all one does is the source of great consolation it brings a deep joy, no matter how demanding the work or the suffering may be. The Beginnings of Prayer The little book of the Exercises is full of hints about prayer, and these help people who are starting out on their spiritual journey. Ignatius himself had to learn the art of disposing himself for meeting God, and he offers well-proven methods drawn from the tradition he had received at Montserrat and elsewhere. Among these hints are the following: the numbers refer to the Exercises. 1

Bodily Reverence: Begin the prayer, not casually but in a formal way by standing or kneeling (75-76). An attentive sitting would surely be acceptable too! Notice how God sees you (75). A French mystic s phrase may help to get things right here: You gazed on me and you smiled. Ask for what you desire, and seek Our Lady s help (48, 63 etc). Desire is crucial: it fuels our prayer, and without it we drift. Deepest down is our simple yearning for God. Imagine the scene (47, 92, 112 etc). Engage with the mystery you are preparing to pray about (74, 78-81, 127-130). Compose yourself within the story: speak with the persons in it (114-117). Use your gifts of memory, understanding and will. Recall the facts or the events; try to understand them; rouse your will to desire what you need (50, etc) Speak with the Lord as one friend with another the colloquy means a face to face conversation (53, 54, 61, 71 etc). Ignatian prayer is relational, an I-Thou encounter, not a spectator event. God is engaging with me, so in return I try to engage with God rather than thinking about God (or other things!). Perseverance: Stay with the time you have decided, even if the prayer time seems wasted (12, 13). Perhaps time alone is all you can give, but that is enough. It is a sign of generosity: you wait and wait until God shows up. This shows that you are putting God first. Closure: End the prayer formally, with the Our Father (54) Review the prayer: What went on, and what am I to learn from this? (77, also 6, 7, 17). Notice the play of emotions of consolation and desolation which are the language of the spirit. Out of this review emerges repetition, which is a returning to where God may wish to draw me again (118-120). The prayer of the senses is offered to help a retreatant to rest gently in what has been given (121). It is a delicate savouring of the presence of God. Taste and see that the Lord is sweet (Ps 19:10 etc). The Examen: We will treat of the Examen in the following Lesson. No prayer is more characteristic of Ignatius than this. It is an invaluable help to anyone engaged in a busy life, who wants to keep in touch with God and be led by the good Spirit. Keep God Before Your Eyes! Few people find prayer easy: most of us wonder if our prayer has any value, and we would dearly wish that it might go better. The desire to pray better is good, but deception occurs when I imagine that methods and techniques alone will produce improved performance. I cannot control the encounter between God and myself. God does not engage with me in prayer in the ways I want, but in the ways God sees best. 2

The Spirit blows where it wishes, and as Hopkins puts it: I greet him the days I meet him and bless when I understand. Thus Ignatius, who could be so wellordered in every area of life, left no instructions about how formed Jesuits were to pray, except to ask them always to keep God before their eyes (Formula of the Institute n.3). The fragments of Ignatius Spiritual Diary, 1544-1545, are a silent testimony to the prayer that went on in him, a prayer we term mystical because God is clearly leading the dance. Our own efforts in keeping God before our eyes whether through quiet or noisy contemplation, are also exercises in a practical, if rather messy mysticism. Relational: Note that Ignatian prayer is relational: it is not a one-way event in which I do everything, nor is it a spectator event in which I am not personally engaged. Nor yet is it only a quiet contemplation of the Beloved though this obviously will be a dimension of my prayer. Rather, God and I are intimately engaged with one another, wrestling or dancing or companionably silent. Awesome: Ignatian prayer is Trinitarian in its scope. Its key image is given in the Exercises (101-109) where I join the three Divine Persons who contemplate our world, and determine to save it. They enlist my help. The focus then becomes Christo-centric: I will beg for grace to follow and imitate more closely Our Lord who has just become human for me (109). God as Father is an awesome figure for Ignatius: Creator, Lord, Divine Majesty! (Exx 15, 16). In a democratic age when everyone is levelled down to manageable size, we have to labour to regain a proper appreciation of God as the Mystery who is both attractive and awesome in Rudolf Otto s phrase. provide me with what is needed. Petitionary: Another dimension of prayer for Ignatius is petition: I ask for what I want. This might seem to some a secondclass mode of prayer. Certainly, if used exclusively, it misses the point about the range of Ignatian prayer, but it does acknowledge the helpless need and yet the intimacy of the creature before God. It highlights Ignatius operative theology; that is, he has a huge confidence in God as provident. If God calls me into his service and sends me on my mission, God must True Prayer: For Ignatius, there is no ascending ladder of prayer. Different ways will help at different times. Do we make progress in prayer? Perhaps, but not by virtue of 3

reaching higher states of prayer, but rather by our growing ability to find God in all things. Anybody can join in searching for God in ordinary circumstances, whether child or busy adult or terminally ill patient. Ignatius would judge the authenticity of your prayer not by what went on within it, but by its fruits. What fruits? A growing gratitude to God for his goodness, leading to the desire to love and serve in all things (Exx 233). If that desire is developing in your heart, then prayer is going on in you; you are being made over to God; you are becoming like the Son in relation to his Father: you are open to the action of the Spirit, you are available for service. The single goal in Ignatian terms is to find God in all things. He would have agreed, we may think, with Nadal s term contemplative in action. This means that you keep your eye on God in the midst of activity, and keep God s agenda in mind in every circumstance. We have looked in Lesson Two above at the interplay between God, God s world and yourself. To be willingly in that interplay is to be a person of real prayer. To have a right sense of God, and of yourself in relation to God, and to be open to play your part in the world as God wishes - this is to be living out the divine life within you. When you allow yourself to be caught up into the divine dream for yourself and for the world, your reality is that of being-in-love -- and you know it! As the three divine Persons are totally for-one-another and for-us, you become for-god and for-all-others. The simple word for carries a wealth of meaning: God is reaching out to me and I am reaching out to God and others. We are for one another. There are no prescriptions for this. A wise guide will not get in the way, but will be unobtrusively available to listen and to offer advice when obstacles arise or this dynamic is inhibited. The point in all of this is that while Ignatius could be highly prescriptive in helping beginners to prepare for the dynamics of their relationship which God, his goal is to help them experience God for themselves, and then stand back. Allow God to deal directly with the creature, and the creature with its creator and Lord (Exx 15). Prayer, for Ignatius, is not a searching for a distant God but a recognising of the God who impresses himself on us through all things. God is trying to contact us. All is from God; the divine is all around in every detail of creation. Wake up, Ignatius would whisper, open your eyes, notice God, and respond! Action as Prayer A unique dimension of Ignatius view of prayer is that when I am doing what I believe God wants me to do, that is itself prayer. He would say that we can find God no less in action done at God s invitation than in silent prayer. This is consoling for those who have to live busy lives. The Godward orientation of Ignatius whole life of work, prayer, and relationships is glimpsed in the Constitutions where he is describing how the General of the Society should shape his day. The general ought to employ the time which his health and energies allow him, partly with God, partly with... officials and helpers... and partly with himself in privately reflecting and thinking out and deciding what should be done with the help and favour of God our Lord (809). God is in charge! Discernment If Ignatius would say that action done at God s invitation is itself prayer, we have to engage in the process of discernment to see what God s invitation actually is. This is where seeking God comes in. If a choice between worthwhile options has to be made, to which of them is God leading me? We have already noted Ignatius own first 4

experiences of noticing God s action on his heart, and how one set of thoughts brought him consolation and the other brought desolation. We will look at discernment in the two following Lessons to see how our experience of these heart movements can guide us in making choices. Reflection Looking at your own prayer, what advice do you imagine Ignatius might offer you? Recommended reading Barry, W A., SJ: Prayer as Conscious Relationship in Traub, G W., SJ, ed: An Ignatian Spirituality Reader. Chicago: Loyola Press, 2008, 99-103 Burghardt, W J., SJ: Contemplation: A Long, Loving Look at the Real in Traub, G W., SJ, ed: An Ignatian Spirituality Reader. Chicago: Loyola Press, 2008, 89-98 Gallagher T., OMV: An Ignatian Introduction to Prayer: Scriptural Reflections according to the Spiritual Exercises. [Note: The OMV, Oblates of the Virgin Mary, are a religious community dedicated to retreats and spiritual formation according to the Spiritual Exercises of St Ignatius of Loyola] Gallagher T., OMV: Meditation and Contemplation: An Ignatian Guide to Praying with Scripture. Veale, J., SJ: Manifold Gifts. Oxford: Way Books, 2006, essays 1, 2, 8, 9 Note: This Article was adapted from the Ignatian Spirituality and Leadership Course by Fr. Brian Grogan, SJ 5