Saint Ignatius of Loyola (1491–1556)
Author of The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius
About the Author
Image credit: wikimedia commons
Series
Works by Saint Ignatius of Loyola
Counsels for Jesuits: Selected Letters and Instructions of Saint Ignatius Loyola (1985) 17 copies, 1 review
Letters to women 9 copies
The Constitutions of the society of Jesus : a critical edition with the complementary norms (2024) 5 copies
Companion to the Catechism of the Catholic Church : A Complete Book of References(Paperback) - 1994 Edition (1994) 4 copies
Constitutions de la Compagnie de Jésus, Tome I [Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, Volume I] (1967) 4 copies
Constitutions de la Compagnie de Jésus, Tome II [Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, Volume II] (1967) 4 copies
MANRESA 3 copies
Journal Spirituel [Spiritual Diary] 3 copies
St. Ignatius ̓own story, as told to Luis González de Cámara; with a sampling of his letters 3 copies
Lettres [Letters] 3 copies
El Autógrafo de los Ejercicios espirituales: The Autograph Copy of the Spiritual Exercises (2022) 2 copies, 1 review
Scéal an Oilithrigh: Iognáid Loyola ina chuid focal féin [The Pilgrim's Story: Ignatius Loyola in his own words] (2009) 2 copies
Cartas Espirituales de S. Ignacio de Loyola [Spiritual Letters of St. Ignatius of Loyola] 2 copies, 1 review
Il messaggio del suo epistolario II 2 copies
Exercicis espirituals de sant Ignasi de Loiola : una relectura del text (5) (2008) 2 copies, 2 reviews
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO II 2 copies
Exercicios espirituales 2 copies
Načela duhovnosti : Autobiografija, duhovne vježbe, misli, duhovni dnevnik, konstitucije, pisma (2008) 1 copy
Načela jezuita 1 copy
CONSTITUTIONES 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO XII 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO XI 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO X 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO IX 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO VII 1 copy
Načela duhovnosti 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO VI 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO V 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA IV 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO III 1 copy
MONUMENTA IGNATIANA TOMO I 1 copy
Eine diskrete Liebe 1 copy
EXERCICIOS SPIRITUALES 1 copy
Carta 1 copy
Scintillae Ignatianae, 1 copy
Eżerċizzi spiritwali 1 copy
Abbandono (copia nel doc.50) 1 copy
Textos Ignacianos 1 copy
[Selections. English. 1991] Ignatius of Loyola: The `Spiritual Exercises' and selected works. 1 copy
all 1 copy
Les exercices spirituels 1 copy
Geistliche Briefe 1 copy
EJERCICIOS ESPIRITUALES DE S. IGNACIO DE LOYOLA texto castellano seguido de varios apéndices 1 copy, 1 review
Écrits 1 copy
Pisma wybrane, Komentarze I 1 copy
For You, O God 1 copy
A Pilgrim's Testament 1 copy
Les épistres de S. Ignace 1 copy
Associated Works
God Makes the Rivers To Flow: Sacred Literature of the World (1982) — Contributor — 230 copies, 2 reviews
The Divine Office, Volume 1: Daily Prayer for Advent, Christmastide and Weeks 1-9 (1974) — Contributor — 197 copies, 1 review
The Liturgy of the Hours According to the Roman Rite (Volume II Lenten Season and Easter Season) (1974) — Contributor — 189 copies
The Liturgy of the Hours According to the Roman Rite (Volume III: The Weeks of the Year 6 - 34) (1974) — Contributor — 70 copies
The Sheed and Ward Anthology of Catholic Philosophy (A Sheed & Ward Classic) (2005) — Contributor — 33 copies
Witness of the Saints: Patristic Readings in the Liturgy of the Hours (2012) — Contributor — 29 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Saint Ignatius of Loyola
- Other names
- Loyola, Íñigo López de (birth name)
de Loyala, Ignacio - Birthdate
- 1491-10-23
- Date of death
- 1556-07-31
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Universidad de Alcalá
University of Paris - Occupations
- soldier
priest - Organizations
- Society of Jesus
Roman Catholic Church - Awards and honors
- beatified (1609)
canonised (1622) - Short biography
- Ignatius of Loyola (ca. October 27, 1491 – July 31, 1556) was a Spanish knight from a local Basque noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and, on 19 April 1541, became its first Superior General. Ignatius emerged as a religious leader during the Counter-Reformation.
- Nationality
- Spain
- Birthplace
- Loyola, Spain
- Places of residence
- Loyola, Spain
Rome, Italy - Place of death
- Rome, Italy
- Associated Place (for map)
- Loyola, Spain
Members
Reviews
Very interesting book - a form of Christian meditation with the focus being on the mercy of God, as well as focusing on aspects of his life and applying the most relevant parts to one's own life. Although I do not necessarily agree with everything the author says, his points about self-analysis and finding goodness still ring true to many non-Catholics.
Tells the tale of Ignatius of Loyola the founder of the Jesuits from his boyhood, his injury in battle, his conversion during his convalescence, his growing spiritual discernment, his pilgrimage to Jerusalem, his early ministry and education and the founding of the Jesuit order.
This is a quick read (I read it in one sitting). I liked how this book showed Ignatius's fortitude of character and growing discernment in Spiritual matters.
It is an autobiography, but was dictated and is written show more down in the third person. show less
This is a quick read (I read it in one sitting). I liked how this book showed Ignatius's fortitude of character and growing discernment in Spiritual matters.
It is an autobiography, but was dictated and is written show more down in the third person. show less
This is a review of the ca. 1900 O'Conner translation at Internet Archive:
http://www.archive.org/details/stignatiusautobi00ignauoft
St. Ignatius was the founder of the Catholic order of the Jesuits in the early 16th Century. He started from humble beginnings in Spain, and like many of his day, was zealously religious. He rose from obscurity and founded one of the most successful Catholic orders to this day. His life story is an inspiration for anyone who believes in something and has a vision show more and goal to overcome adversity. This is not just a story about Catholicism or even religion, it is inspirational for anyone.
Some of the memorable scenes from the book include his encounter with the Moore on the road and his struggle to decide if he should kill him or not for insulting the Virgin Mary. His trip to Jerusalem and sneaking past the guards to climb the Olive Mount. His days of begging in the streets of Paris while trying to earn a doctorate in the "Queen of sciences" (theology). Being imprisoned as a youth in Spain and standing up to what he believed in and overcoming the tribunals. His extreme mortifications (fasting, standing all night, roping his leg off with a cord). His injury to the legs with a cannonball and stoicism during three surgeries without anesthesia.
Ignatius was born into the "Reformation" generation, the same generation as Luther, Calvin, Henry VIII and many others who would re-shape religious life as we know it. It was a time when the bible was being made widely available because of the printing press, and a subsequent re-evaluation of what it meant to be Christian. Ignatius was a revolutionary like the Protestants who broke with the Catholic Church, but he was at the opposite extreme, fighting for Catholicism, not against it. The Jesuits would eventually win back Poland, Lithuania and other places from the Protestants, they were called the Catholic "shock troops" or front-line vanguard in the 'Counter Reformation'. They also went on to found some of the worlds top educational institutions which still exist today. show less
http://www.archive.org/details/stignatiusautobi00ignauoft
St. Ignatius was the founder of the Catholic order of the Jesuits in the early 16th Century. He started from humble beginnings in Spain, and like many of his day, was zealously religious. He rose from obscurity and founded one of the most successful Catholic orders to this day. His life story is an inspiration for anyone who believes in something and has a vision show more and goal to overcome adversity. This is not just a story about Catholicism or even religion, it is inspirational for anyone.
Some of the memorable scenes from the book include his encounter with the Moore on the road and his struggle to decide if he should kill him or not for insulting the Virgin Mary. His trip to Jerusalem and sneaking past the guards to climb the Olive Mount. His days of begging in the streets of Paris while trying to earn a doctorate in the "Queen of sciences" (theology). Being imprisoned as a youth in Spain and standing up to what he believed in and overcoming the tribunals. His extreme mortifications (fasting, standing all night, roping his leg off with a cord). His injury to the legs with a cannonball and stoicism during three surgeries without anesthesia.
Ignatius was born into the "Reformation" generation, the same generation as Luther, Calvin, Henry VIII and many others who would re-shape religious life as we know it. It was a time when the bible was being made widely available because of the printing press, and a subsequent re-evaluation of what it meant to be Christian. Ignatius was a revolutionary like the Protestants who broke with the Catholic Church, but he was at the opposite extreme, fighting for Catholicism, not against it. The Jesuits would eventually win back Poland, Lithuania and other places from the Protestants, they were called the Catholic "shock troops" or front-line vanguard in the 'Counter Reformation'. They also went on to found some of the worlds top educational institutions which still exist today. show less
Originallywritten in the 1600's these are obscure sayings by St. Ignatius. Some quite harsh and less "God in All Things". Daily meditations,
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Statistics
- Works
- 189
- Also by
- 6
- Members
- 5,176
- Popularity
- #4,805
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 78
- ISBNs
- 306
- Languages
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