If there is one very special characteristic, among many, which distinguished Ignatius of Loyola was his insatiable optimism and an inner drive which propelled him to pierce through status quo, to find pastures untrodden. He would not tolerate the good people, he would push them to better people; it is no point in being just good, he might have been telling his companions, they should become better people, after their encounter with the Lord, and that is how they would be able to show their love for the one who called them out of their stagnancy. This had made a lot of difference in the men he formed and sent on a mission.
If we skim through the writings of Ignatius, it would become obvious that he was fond of the comparative degree. Look at the Principle and Foundation of the Spiritual Exercises (23:7), where he already lays emphasis on this comparative ‘more’ : “Rather, we ought to desire and choose only that which is more conducive to the end for which we are created”. This ‘more’ has become one of the characteristic features of the Jesuit mission, where they would not be satisfied with the way things are going, but be always on the look out for doing things in a better way.
In the Kingdom of Christ meditation (91-100) of the Spiritual Exercises, Ignatius again employs this principle of ‘more’ to encourage the exercitant to greater generosity. This is what he observes in the Third Point of the Second Part (97): “Those who desire to show greater devotion and to distinguish themselves in total service to their eternal King and universal Lord, will not only offer their persons for the labour, but go further still.” This shows that Ignatius was not the one who entertained a mediocre, the complacent, but was prepared to push people as far as they could move, without coercing obviously into their personal freedom.
This had become the rallying point for Ignatius in the Spiritual Exercises. In the Second Week, on the very first Contemplation on the Incarnation, he invites the exercitant to ask for the grace (104) : “Here it will be to ask for an interior knowledge of Our Lord, who became human for me, that I may love him more intensely and follow him more closely.” He takes for granted that the exercitant is well disposed towards the Lord and doing his will, but he is also aware that he has to do something more as a proof of his love for the Lord, who became a human person for the sake of the fallen humanity. This ‘more’ obviously is open-ended, and even at the time of our death, we will still be searching for this ‘more’.
It was the insatiable thirst of the human persons which was responsible for the advancement of science and technology; Ignatius wishes us to explore the spiritual world with this notion of ‘magis’, as is so very evident in the motto of the Society of Jesus, which contains the trademark of Ignatius, Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam – For the Greater Glory of God! If everyone sought the glory of God, Ignatius wanted his sons to aim for the greater glory of God, thus going beyond the ordinary. Ignatius was a visionary, a dreamer, whose eyes were fixed on greater things, and that accounts for the many wonderful things that his sons are able to do here and now!
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