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An Examen of Care

caring man looking up at son on shoulders - photo by Keira Burton on Pexels.com

Editor’s note: Throughout July, we’re hosting 31 Days with St. Ignatius, a month-long celebration of Ignatian spirituality. In addition to the calendar of Ignatian articles found here, posts on dotMagis this month will explore the theme of “people for others.” This month marks the 50th anniversary of Fr. Pedro Arrupe’s famous address in which he challenged Jesuit school alumni to form what we now embrace as “people for others.”

Pedro Arrupe’s seminal call 50 years ago to the alumni of Jesuit schools resounds in our own day. That call to be people for others—and thereby to enact the concrete implications of a living faith in Christ—is now no less urgent and may, in fact, be even more urgent in the face of so many ethical and political challenges facing our global family. Environmental degradation; racism and strident nationalism; poverty and incarceration; callousness toward human life, especially at its beginnings and endings—all these challenges call for people committed to carrying on the ministry of Christ to show God’s loving care and invitation to friendship.

These challenges, while massive, are commonly rooted in the profound need for human beings to enter into deliberate, sustained, systematic collaboration at every level. And thus they call for the same metanoia, or change of heart, that the New Testament writers described as characteristic of those who change their ways in order to enter into fuller discipleship. It is no surprise, for example, that after the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, the disciples are described as sharing all things in common, having the same mind, and having no one among them in need. The gift of the Spirit enabled them to see past their small desires and to live toward the great goodness that God was unfolding in their midst.

Let us, then, take time to reflect on our care for and from others.

Photo by Keira Burton on Pexels.


Following along with 31 Days with St. Ignatius? Read God Wants Our Friendship by William A. Barry, SJ, today, and share your thoughts on social media with #31DayswithIgnatius.

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