10 May 2021, The Tablet

Self-reform is aimed at mission, says Pope

by Carol Glatz, CNS


Self-reform is aimed at mission, says Pope

St Ignatius of Loyola at Saint Ignace Church,
Godong / Alamy

The Christian idea of reforming one’s life is not about making it perfect but initiating a process of going outside of oneself to best follow one’s vocation and carry out a mission, Pope Francis said.

“Reform does not have a functional role nor one of self-perfection, but rather it is aimed at mission – the vocation of each of us in life,” the Pope said in a video message released today.

The message was released ahead of the publication of a book in Italian by the late Jesuit Father Miguel Ángel Fiorito, the Pope’s longtime spiritual director, on the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola.

The book, Cercare e trovare la volontà di Dio – Seeking and finding the will of God – is scheduled for release tomorrow. The book’s preface is written by Pope Francis.

In the video message, the Pope said the text, written as a practical guidebook, can be helpful for entering “into the soul of St Ignatius’ spiritual exercises”.

One of the book’s aims is to take the time “to feel the emotion of the Spirit and to seek in concrete terms the will of God through the reform of one’s own life,” the Pope said.

In the spiritual exercises, he said, the concept of reform is “in tension not only with what was once deformed. Reform is also conforming to what is new, to take on a new form”.

It is a form that leads toward or conforms “to the life, to the style, to the criteria and choices of the Lord,” he said.

That is why reform is less about perfection and more aimed at mission and one’s vocation, he said.

Regarding St Peter, for example, the Lord always called on him each time he confessed to being a sinner. The Lord called the apostle to follow him, “perfecting him not in everything, but in what was needed to be a fisher of men and to shepherd his sheep”.

The Pope said: “The Lord will not ask Peter to reform all the faults he carries with him from his past life.”  In fact, many of these faults will accompany him for the rest of his life.

Rather, Jesus invited St Peter to “go out of himself to proclaim the Gospel” with a mission in which the past will need reform with some things, but not everything, he said.

Ignatian exercises seek to aid in that “inner action of knowing, through discernment, the divine will on the relevant issues of our spiritual life,” the Pope said.


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