- AMDG
BY HAP BURKE '82, CURRENT PARENT (HAP, JR. '15, JOHN '18), FATHERS CLUB PRESIDENT AND LEADER OF ALUMNI MANRESA (IGNATIAN SPIRITUALITY) GROUP
When we think of “innovation” and “innovators,” one image that would not come to mind is one of Ignatius of Loyola as a young man.
He was attracted to whatever was prestigious and worldly – fame, the court, military glory, the “in-crowd.” His deepest desire was to be part of the establishment, not outside of it, and certainly not to reform it. Recall the effort he exerted after his war injury to conform himself to the established standards – insisting on surgery to remove a bone spur in his leg so that he could wear the hose and costumes of the day.
Of course, that wasn’t the end of the story. Through prayer and contemplation during his recovery, Ignatius let God change him, and he became responsive to God’s call. As he read the lives of the saints and of Christ, he noticed how God’s spirit moved him. And as he let God work on him, Ignatius began to give up his attachments to the things in his life that were not bringing him closer to Jesus.
There were a lot of spiritual dead-ends for Ignatius along his journey: a failed attempt to live as a hermit, a refusal to cut his fingernails on spiritual grounds, brushes with the inquisition, an aborted pilgrimage to the Holy Land. At each step of the way, he paused and reflected on how God spoke to him, what he was thankful for, what he could improve, and what more he could do for Christ.
As a result, Ignatius became one of the most influential innovators and reformers who ever lived, helping restore the Church in the 16th century amidst the chaos of The Reformation. All of us in the greater SLUH community – almost 500 years after Ignatius founded the Jesuits – are heirs to his legacy, which includes not just this school (amazingly, at the brink of its third century), but also the university course of study, retreats, Spiritual Exercises, missions, exploration, scientific work, and a remarkable group of saints and blesseds.
In fact, the word “innovate” first came into usage in the 16th century. It’s a word almost tailor-made for what Ignatius did – introducing change to an established system through new ideas and processes.
Perhaps as we contemplate innovation and its proper role, Ignatius’s life is a good frame of reference. Not to endlessly pursue the latest fashion or trend, not to pursue change for change’s sake, but to indifferently hold all things in balance, desiring only what brings us closer to God and what helps us follow Jesus more perfectly. Ignatius did his greatest work – for Christ, for His Church and for us – when he did just that.
Hap Burke '82 (far left) pictured with SLUH President David Laughlin (middle) and Dan Lally '82 at a Fathers Club meeting at SLUH in August.