Who is Saint Ignatius?
Saint Ignatius was born in 1491 and came from a noble, wealthy family. Because of his family's high ranking, he had many connections. He became a page for Juan Velazquez de Cuellar, treasurer of the kingdom of Castile. He then became a knight and joined the military. This life of his shortly ended due to being injured by a cannonball. His injury was a blessing in disguise because, without it, he would not have converted.
Ignatius, to comfort himself, read books about heroes. Yet, when he was healing in the hospital, the only books that were available were of the saints, and a book about the life of Christ. He became fascinated by the way these people lived so differently from the world. They became heroes to him, replacing the stories of men in battle.
After he fully healed in the hospital, he started to begin his new life. The saints and Jesus made him realize that the materialistic world was nothing compared to what God had to offer. He began making changes, leaving his sword at the altar of a church, and changing his nice clothes for ragged ones. Leaving his whole life behind, he stayed in a cave for eleven months to pray. In that cave, he developed the Spiritual Exercises.
The Spiritual Exercises is not your typical book, not something you would read front to back, but more of a handbook you would go to for spiritual guidance. Many spiritual directors use it as a tool to help others understand God's voice. Saint Ignatius wrote this book when he was filled with so many different emotions while reading the bible. He processed them by writing down his thoughts. The book is divided up into four parts, or as Ignatius called them, weeks.
After he finished writing The Spiritual Exercises, he was called to join the priesthood. However, Ignatius did not have the proper schooling to join the seminary, so he had to go back to school where he learned alongside children. After finishing school with the youngins, he went on and studied at the University of Paris from 1528 to 1535, where he introduced his writings to some of his peers.
His life at the University of Paris was the start of The Society of Jesus. Ignatius roomed with two men who helped form the society, Saint Francis Xavier and Saint Peter Faber. The society started to grow, in 1540 four more men joined. In the same year Pope Paul III made the society an official order in the Catholic Church.
Learn more about the Life and Works of St. Ignatius
The Church of Saint Ignatius was partly funded by Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi (1595-1632). The architecture was done by Carlo Maderno