Confronting world hungers with St. Ignatius of Loyola
July 31, 2005 | 12:00am
The name Loyola has become such a proud name since the vast area known as Loyola Heights came to existence in Quezon City when the old Ateneo de Manila became its most famous landmark having transferred from its old place in Ermita, Manila. Subdivisions around the Ateneo would always specify in their addresses that the location was Loyola Heights, meaning a well-appointed place. The name has become prestigious; surely not in the way the Loyola was originally known in the 16th century.
The noble House of Loyola belonged to Basque nobleman Don Beltran and his lady, Doña Marina Sanchez de Licona, born in 1942 at Loyola castle in the Basque province of Guipuzcoa. He was apprenticed while still very young to Juan Velasquez de Cuellar, an official at the Spanish royal court who took charge of training him in the elements of Spanish chivalry. Chivalry and the romance which went with it was then in full flower. Concerning his early life, Ignatius had this to say: "Until I was twenty-six years of age, I was entirely given to the vanities of the world; I took special delight in the use of arms, urged on by great and vain craving for worldly renown."
While in the service of the Duke of Najera, a relative, Ignatius became chief defender of the Spanish garrison in Pamplona when it was besieged by French invaders. At an ensuing battle at which the French became victorious, Ignatius was seriously injured when a canon ball grazed him on the legs. The French treated the gallant adversary with honor and returned him in a litter at his ancestral home of Loyola. He became grievously ill.
To ease the torment and monotony of long years of convalescence, he called for books. Only the Life of Christ and the Lives of the Saints became available. What he learned about the imitation of Christ and the saints radically changed him. No longer would he be a soldier or a courtier but would imitate the saints, serving Gods Kingdom by entering the service of Jesus Christ. He journeyed to the shrine of Our Lady of Montserrat, offering his sword and knightly arms at her feet with the resolve to embark upon a life of total consecration in the service of Christ. Later on, he founded what we now know as the Society of Jesus or Jesuits. We celebrate his feast today, to commemorate his passing from this life to eternity on July 31, 1556.
What is the memory in the tradition of the House of Loyola where St. Ignatius grew up, which would highlight the Gospel of today? When Jesuits celebrate, the seal of the Ateneo with the letters in blue and gold "Lux in Domino" is borne aloft together with the coat-of-arms showing two wolves trying to get at the rim of the boiling pot. Scholars derive the name "Loyola" from "lobos y olla" which is Spanish for "the wolves and the pot". Hence, the pot or kettle emblazoned on the coat-of-arms of St. Ignatius family. The symbol is traditionally interpreted to signify the generosity of the House of Loyola, at whose feasts not even the wolves were sent empty away. Was it a prophetic sign that one member of the House of Loyola with his Jesuit sons would engage in feeding the hungers of the world today with Jesus Christ, the Bread of the World? Jesus fed 5,000 hungry men plus women and children with them out of sheer compassion for they followed Him from far-off places weary, hungering not just for bread but likewise for the Word of God, bread which never runs out no matter how much one gives.
It is not so much the proverbial Jesuit influence on the world of science and the arts, not its prominence within the Church, not so much its intellectual prowess in the field of philosophy, theology, mass communication. It is much more the help to poor people usually unknown to those engaged in intellectual pursuits; the Jesuit who for long hours in the confessional listens to the pain and torment of unimportant people; of reaching out to the unemployed, the sick, the disabled, the suffering, the broken-hearted; who in prison tries to restore sense and meaning in the lives of those convicted of some crime or even condemned to death; the Jesuit who heals the wounds of those oppressed, the people who desperately seek comfort where there are seemingly none; the Jesuit who plods away in awakening in those who are in darkness a spark of faith, of hope and of love. Such are the world hungers only Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life can satisfy.
Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Matthew 14:14-23.
The noble House of Loyola belonged to Basque nobleman Don Beltran and his lady, Doña Marina Sanchez de Licona, born in 1942 at Loyola castle in the Basque province of Guipuzcoa. He was apprenticed while still very young to Juan Velasquez de Cuellar, an official at the Spanish royal court who took charge of training him in the elements of Spanish chivalry. Chivalry and the romance which went with it was then in full flower. Concerning his early life, Ignatius had this to say: "Until I was twenty-six years of age, I was entirely given to the vanities of the world; I took special delight in the use of arms, urged on by great and vain craving for worldly renown."
While in the service of the Duke of Najera, a relative, Ignatius became chief defender of the Spanish garrison in Pamplona when it was besieged by French invaders. At an ensuing battle at which the French became victorious, Ignatius was seriously injured when a canon ball grazed him on the legs. The French treated the gallant adversary with honor and returned him in a litter at his ancestral home of Loyola. He became grievously ill.
To ease the torment and monotony of long years of convalescence, he called for books. Only the Life of Christ and the Lives of the Saints became available. What he learned about the imitation of Christ and the saints radically changed him. No longer would he be a soldier or a courtier but would imitate the saints, serving Gods Kingdom by entering the service of Jesus Christ. He journeyed to the shrine of Our Lady of Montserrat, offering his sword and knightly arms at her feet with the resolve to embark upon a life of total consecration in the service of Christ. Later on, he founded what we now know as the Society of Jesus or Jesuits. We celebrate his feast today, to commemorate his passing from this life to eternity on July 31, 1556.
What is the memory in the tradition of the House of Loyola where St. Ignatius grew up, which would highlight the Gospel of today? When Jesuits celebrate, the seal of the Ateneo with the letters in blue and gold "Lux in Domino" is borne aloft together with the coat-of-arms showing two wolves trying to get at the rim of the boiling pot. Scholars derive the name "Loyola" from "lobos y olla" which is Spanish for "the wolves and the pot". Hence, the pot or kettle emblazoned on the coat-of-arms of St. Ignatius family. The symbol is traditionally interpreted to signify the generosity of the House of Loyola, at whose feasts not even the wolves were sent empty away. Was it a prophetic sign that one member of the House of Loyola with his Jesuit sons would engage in feeding the hungers of the world today with Jesus Christ, the Bread of the World? Jesus fed 5,000 hungry men plus women and children with them out of sheer compassion for they followed Him from far-off places weary, hungering not just for bread but likewise for the Word of God, bread which never runs out no matter how much one gives.
It is not so much the proverbial Jesuit influence on the world of science and the arts, not its prominence within the Church, not so much its intellectual prowess in the field of philosophy, theology, mass communication. It is much more the help to poor people usually unknown to those engaged in intellectual pursuits; the Jesuit who for long hours in the confessional listens to the pain and torment of unimportant people; of reaching out to the unemployed, the sick, the disabled, the suffering, the broken-hearted; who in prison tries to restore sense and meaning in the lives of those convicted of some crime or even condemned to death; the Jesuit who heals the wounds of those oppressed, the people who desperately seek comfort where there are seemingly none; the Jesuit who plods away in awakening in those who are in darkness a spark of faith, of hope and of love. Such are the world hungers only Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life can satisfy.
Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Matthew 14:14-23.
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