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Engaging Faith

Practical Lesson Ideas and Activities for Catholic Educators
Archived - July 2013

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St. Ignatius and the Jesuits

Wednesday, July 31, is the Feast Day of St. Ignatius of Loyola. The day is more significant this year because of Pope Francis, the first Jesuit pope in the history of the Church. As Pope Francis continues his efforts to reform and renew the Church in many areas, it's important to remember that the Jesuits were essential in the reform of the Church following the Protestant Reformation. St. Ignatius (1491-1556) was a Basque from the Pyrenees in Spain. A leg wound ended his life as a knight. During a lengthy recovery, Ignatius read about the lives of Jesus and the saints and decided to serve the Kingdom of God as his life's new work. Ignatius spent a year in prayer and medication. From his own experiences in the spiritual life, he composed the Spiritual Exercises (1523), now a classical work on spiritual life for both Jesuits and all Catholics. During a ten-year period of schooling, largely spent at the University of Paris, Ignatius gathered around him six companions, including Blessed Peter Faber and St. Francis Xavier, who took the traditional vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. These men also took a fourth vow—obedience to the pope as a sign of their commitment to fight against the Protestant reformers. This vow distinguished the Jesuits from all other religious orders making them “shock troops” in the service of the Pope. Pope Paul III approved the Society in 1540, and, until his death in 1556, Ignatius served as general of the order. From his offices in Rome, he wrote more than 7,000 letters, directing the many important ministries around the world. The Jesuits engaged in preaching, teaching, writing, and the founding of schools and colleges. They directed retreats, advised leaders, and served as confessors. They were also a vigorous missionary order which brought the faith to the New World and to the East. The greatest of all Jesuit missionaries was St. Francis Xavier (1506-1552) who preached the Gospel in India, Indonesia, and Japan. Jesuit accomplishments in the history of the Church are many. By the time of Ignatius’s death, the Society of Jesus had over one thousand members. Vigorous men like St. Peter Canisius (1521–1597) helped the Jesuits win back many Germans, Hungarians, and Bohemians and all of Poland to Catholicism. The Jesuits founded more than eight-hundred schools by 1749. These schools swayed many to return to Catholicism and exerted a strong influence on the learned and the rich. This made the Jesuits a significant force in the politics of the day. However, in a later century (1773), their success would lead to the Bourbon kings of Spain and France conniving to get them dissolved by the Pope. The order was restored in 1814, and is today the largest religious order of men in the Catholic Church, numbering close to 20,000 companions worldwide. Prayer of St. Ignatius Loyola Lord, I freely yield all my freedom to you. Take my memory, my intellect, and my entire will. You have given me anything I am or have; I give it all back to you to stand under you will alone. Your love and your grace are enough for me; I shall ask for nothing more. Assignment Prepare a report on one of the following: St. Ignatius Loyola Another Jesuit saint The process for becoming a Jesuit The Spiritual Exercises The Jesuit colleges and universities in the United States

Infatuation vs. Love

Most teenage relationships are a combination of infatuation and friendship. When the relationship is more centered on friendship, it has a chance to develop into real love. When it is more focused on the sexual feelings that come with infatuation, ther is more of a chance that it will disintegrate into emotional and physical exploitation. Examine these characteristics of infatuation and love with your students. Make the point that infatuation is more concerned with self, true love is more concerned with the other. Infatuation comes suddenly and goes quickly. It is oven regretted. Love grows slowly. It's hard to pinpoint the beginning of love. Even if love ends, it is valued. Infatuation is insecure, distrustful, and jealous. It dies with distance. Love is secure, confident, and peaceful. It survives separation. Infatuation is emotional dependence. It's such an intense need for another that you will do anything to be in the other's presence. Rejection results in depression or thoughts of self-inflicted harm. Love is independence and mental balance. Infatuation is being pressured to act quickly before it disappears. Love can wait for the right time. Infatuation is centered around physical attraction, sex, and pleasure. Love involves the whole person. Sexual feelings are only part of the attraction. Infatuation may lead you to do things you'll regret, thinks you know are not right. Love brings out the best in you. It lifts you up. Infatuation harms your other relationships and makes you moody and irritable. Love enhances all your relationsihps. It makes you a more wonderful person. Infatuation makes it difficult to work. It absorbs your thoughts. Love helps you organize and work well. Infatuation is confining. It is possessive and manipulating. Love is freeing. Infatuation is self-centered, uses the words "I" and "me" and is concerned with what can be taken from the relationships. Love is other-centered, uses the words "we" and "our," and is concerned with how much can be given and shared. Student Assignments and Questions Read 1 Corinthians 13. Choose three of these descriptions and think of an example of how each can be lived out in someone's life. Describe a time you have used the phrase "in love" to describe your feelings for someone. Would "infatuation" have been a more likely substitute in this case or not? What are some other elements you can think of for really being in love?

Short Biography on Pope Francis

Catholic-link productions have produced a four-minute biography on Pope Francis. Check it out and pray for the Pope as he will soon arrive in Rio de Janeiro for the start of World Youth Day 2013. Check out Pope Francis' itinerary and make sure to keep the Pope and the youth of the world in your prayers.

St. Michael the Archangel Pray for the Church

In coming together last week to dedicate a beautiful new statue to honor St. Michael the Archangel. Pope Francis and Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI remind the Church of the importance of angels as those who aid our journey to God's Kingdom. Attested to in both Scripture and Tradition, angels are spiritual created beings, "surpassing in perfection all visible creatures" (CCC, 330). Personal and immortal, angels possess intelligence and free will. Like humans, they had an opportunity to love and accept God or reject him out of prideful self-interest. Angels are those who lovingly worshiped God from the beginning. Jesus Christ is the Lord of angels through and for him, serving as messengers (angel means "messenger") of his saving plan. St. Michael is one of the "principal" angels, or archangels. St. Raphael and St. Gabriel are the other archangels. St. Michael is especially called to defend the Church against evil and evil spirits, as the Benedict and Francis attested in their dedication of the statue. The following prayer is addressed to St. Michael: Holy Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle Be our protection against the wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray, and do thou, O Prince, of the heavenly host, by the power of God, thrust into hell Satan and all wicked spirits who wander through the world for the ruin of souls. Amen. Assignments Read Revelation 12, which tells in figurative language the battle between evil, represented by the dragon, and God's People. Note the reference to St. Michael and his angels in Revelation 12:7. Research information on the creation of the statue of St. Michael by artist Giuseppe Antonio Lomuscio.

Prayer for the Protection of Religious Liberty

O God our Creator, from your provident hand we have received our right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. You have called us as your people and given us the right and the duty to worship you, the only true God, and your Son, Jesus Christ. Through the power and working of your Holy Spirit, you call us to live out our faith in the midst of the world, bringing the light and the saving truth of the Gospel to every corner of society. We ask you to bless us in our vigilance for the gift of religious liberty. Give us the strength of mind and heart to readily defend our freedoms when they are threatened; give us courage in making our voices heard on behalf of the rights of your Church and the freedom of conscience of all people of faith. Grant, we pray, O heavenly Father, a clear and united voice to all your sons and daughters gathered in your Church in this decisive hour in the history of our nation, so that, with every trial withstood and every danger overcome— for the sake of our children, our grandchildren, and all who come after us— this great land will always be "one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all." We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. As the USCCB's Fortnight for Freedom draws to a close on July 4, make sure to keep the link to prayer resources for use throughout the school year.