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James Martin, S.J.October 16, 2016
Newly elected Superior General of the Society of Jesus, Arturo Sosa, S.J., celebrates Mass at the Church of the Gesù. (Photo: Don Doll, S.J.)

Often a pope’s first homily after his election is seen as a preview of his pontificate. This is also the case for other Catholic leaders—cardinals and bishops, as well as superiors of religious orders. Their first homilies are often taken as programmatic overviews of their hopes. Of course this overlooks the long tradition that the homily usually centers on the daily Gospel, which has its own particular theme. So, for example, if the Gospel for the day speaks about dietary laws, and the homilist on speaks on that topic, it does not mean that his time in office will focus on dietary laws! However, if he departs from the Gospel to emphasize certain themes, he may indeed be reflecting on his hopes for the future. 

So it was striking that the newly elected Superior General of the Society of Jesus, Arturo Sosa, S.J., touched only lightly on the Gospel in his first homily at the Mass of Thanksgiving at the Church of the Gesù in Rome yesterday, stressing instead his reflections on the mission of the Society of Jesus.

To me it seemed as if there were three main points:

First, Jesuits are to be bold. The theme of the 36th General Congregation is “Rowing into the Deep,” taken from the passage in which Jesus asks Peter in the Gospel of Luke (5:4) to take his fishing boat into deep water, a theme repeated by Pope Francis in 2014 on the 200th anniversary of the restoration of the Jesuit Order. In the Gospel passage, Jesus asks Peter, who has been fishing all night with no success, to row into the middle of the Sea of Galilee. 

There is an “audacity” in doing so, since we believe that with God’s help, we can do “not only the improbable but the impossible,” in Father Sosa’s words. For Peter to return to the spot where he had just fished and find a plentiful catch would certainly have seemed improbable, indeed impossible, to the experienced fisherman. But “nothing is impossible” for God, as the Angel Gabriel said to Mary (Lk 1:37). Jesuits and their colleagues are to be fearless as we confront things that seem almost hopeless, impossible, in today’s world. 

Second, Jesuits are to be men of depth. Father Sosa emphasized a theme that Father Adolfo Nicolás, his predecessor as Superior General, repeatedly stressed. Jesuits need to have “extraordinary intellectual depth” to think creatively about how we can respond to Christ’s call. We are not meant to be dilettantes, but men deeply grounded in the spiritual life, in learning and, especially, in our relationship with Christ.

Third, Jesuits are to collaborate. We are companions with Christ (as the original name of the Society, the Compañia de Jesús makes clear) but we are also companions with other men and women. And we want to collaborate not in stingy way—as in “We will allow you to collaborate with us”--but in a generous way, knowing that the mission of Christ is one to be shared joyfully.

RELATED: A "Holy Boldness Seen in New Superior General"

All of this points to an exciting generalate, and my brother Jesuits and I look forward to rowing into the deep with Father Sosa.

Here is the official text:

Dearest Brothers, A few days ago, in this very Church of the Gesù, where the remains of St. Ignatius and Pedro Arrupe are laid to rest, Fr. Bruno Cadorè invited us to have the audacity of the improbable as the distinctive stance of persons of faith, who seek to bear witness to such faith in the complex reality of human life. He invited us to leave behind our fear and to row out into the deep, as a kind of attitude for being at once creative and faithful during the General Congregation.

Certainly, the audacity that we need in order to be servants of the mission of Christ Jesus can flow only from faith. For this reason, our gaze is directed first of all to God, since you have only one Father, and He is in heaven, as the passage from the Gospel which we have just heard reminds us. And as the Formula of the Institute reminds us at paragraph no .1: “Let (the Jesuit) have before his eyes, as long as he lives, before anything else, God, and then the form of this his Institute.” In fact, it is the whole heart that we wish to have in tune with the Merciful Father, the God that is only Love, our Principle and Foundation – the heart of each of us and also the heart of the body of the Society.

If our faith is like that of Mary, Jesus’ own mother and the Mother of the Society of Jesus, our audacity can go even further and seek not only the improbable, but the impossible, because nothing is impossible for God, as the Archangel Gabriel proclaims in the scene of the Annunciation (Luke 1:37). It is the same faith held by St. Teresa of Avila, or St. Teresa of Jesus, whose memorial we celebrate today. She too, without fear, entrusted herself to the Lord in order to undertake the improbable and the impossible.

Let us ask, therefore, for this faith from the Lord, so that we, as the Society of Jesus, can also make our own the words of Mary in her response to the extraordinary call that she received: “Behold the servant of the Lord: Be it done to me according to your word.” Like Ignatius and the First Companions, like so many Jesuit brothers who have fought and who fight today under the banner of the cross, in service only to the Lord and to his Church, we too desire to contribute to that which today seems impossible: a humanity reconciled in justice, that dwells peacefully in a well-cared-for common home, where there is a place for all, since we recognize each other as brothers and sisters, as sons and daughters of the same and only Father.

For this reason, we reaffirm even today the conviction of Ignatius as he wrote the Constitutions: “Since the Society of Jesus was not instituted by human means, it is not through them that it can be preserved and increased, but with the all-powerful hand of Christ, our God and Lord; in Him alone must our hope be placed.” With our hope placed in God and in God alone the General Congregation will proceed with its deliberations and it will contribute to its duty to preserve and grow this whole body (Const. 719).

The preservation and growth of the body of the Society is tightly bound to the depth of the spiritual life of each of its members and of the communities in which we share life and mission with our companions. At the same time, it is necessary to have an extraordinary intellectual depth in order to think creatively about the ways in which our service to the mission of Christ Jesus can be more effective, in the creative tension of the Ignatian magis. To think about ways of deeply understanding the unique moment of human history in which we are living, and to contribute to the search for alternatives for overcoming poverty, inequality, and oppression. To think so that we never cease posing pertinent theological questions, and so that we continue to deepen our understanding of the faith that we ask the Lord to increase in ourselves.

We are not alone. As companions of Jesus we too want to follow the journey of the incarnation, to identify ourselves with the human beings that suffer the consequences of injustice. The Society of Jesus can develop only in collaboration with others, only if it becomes the least Society that collaborates. Let us be attentive to the linguistic pitfalls here. We want to increase collaboration, not just to seek that others collaborate with us, with our own works, only because we don’t want to lose the prestige of the position of who has the last word. We want to collaborate generously with others, inside and outside of the Church, in the awareness, which comes from the experience of God, of being called to the mission of Christ Jesus, which doesn’t belong to us exclusively, but whom we share with so many men and women who are consecrated to the service of others.

In the journey of collaboration, with the grace of God, we will also find new companions to increase the number, always much too small no matter how great, of collaborators who, along with the others, are invited to be part of this body. There is hardly any doubt about the need to increase our prayer and our work for vocations to the Society, and to continue the complex commitment to provide the formation that makes of them true Jesuits, members of this multicultural body that is called to testify to the richness of interculturalism as the face of humanity, created in the image and likeness of God.

Let us, therefore, today make our own the words of the Apostle Paul: may the God of patience and consolation grant you to be like-minded one toward the other according to the example of Christ Jesus, so that you may give glory to the God and Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ with one heart and one voice. (Rm. 15:5)

In the Church of the Gesù in Rome, October 15, 2016

Text courtesy of the 36th General Congregation, translated with the help of Griffin Oleynick.

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William Rydberg
7 years 5 months ago
The mention of Fr Arrupe in the same breath as St Ignatius is to say the least, "interesting"... Skipping over the last few Father Generals as he does as well as Cardinal Fr Dezza (also buried there). My guess is that the Society of Jesus is in for an interesting "Ride". Lets hope that there isn't a repeat of the Formation disaster inaugurated during Fr Arrupe's Tenure, one that we are still picking up the pieces today. In my opinion.. in Christ,
Roberto Blum
7 years 5 months ago
"Interesting" indeed, but not in the sense you imply that seems so similar to the Chinese curse. Of course everyone has a right to their own opinions.
Luis Gutierrez
7 years 5 months ago
Jesuits are to be bold? What about starting a parallel order of Jesuit nuns? I know one or two who would qualify as Jesuit priests. Any conjectures about why St. Ignatius didn't do it? My conjecture is the Ignatian magis. Why spend time and resources training "defective males"? Note: This is the only "theology of women" that Ignatius knew, per Thomas Aquinas; other theologies of gender came later.
Carlos Orozco
7 years 5 months ago
It would have been interesting to read how Loyola and Aquinas would have torn apart gender ideology.
Crystal Watson
7 years 5 months ago
This so exemplifies the church's thinking on women ... medieval.
William Rydberg
7 years 5 months ago
Ms Watson, I do hope that your looking into the Catholic Church doesn't begin and end on these webpages. A more balanced source might be www.catholic.com. I understand that they have an excellent Apologetics area. Although the best is visiting a Parish. In Christ,
Crystal Watson
7 years 5 months ago
I've been a Catholic for about 20 years now and I'm pretty familiar with the many aspects :)
Roberto Blum
7 years 5 months ago
Great to see Pedro Arrupe mentioned in the same phrase as St. Ignatius. Fr. Arrupe was a great humble man maligned by some who didn't understand the direction that the Society needed to take in the modern world. I hope Fr. Sosa will recover his legacy.

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