Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Matt EmersonSeptember 09, 2014

As students and even teachers begin to plunge into the responsibilities of the new academic year (responsibilities that can lead to many late nights and early mornings), St. Ignatius of Loyola, ever the practical mystic, reminds us that we better not ignore the need for rest. In a 1536 letter to Teresa Rejadell, he wrote:

 . . . Many of those who are given to prayer and contemplation experience that just before it is time for them to go to sleep, they are unable to do so because they have been busy working their minds, and later they go on thinking of the subjects that they have been contemplating and imagining. This is where the Enemy does his best to maintain good thoughts, so that the body will suffer being deprived of sleep. Something to be avoided at all costs! With a healthy body, there is much that you can do; but with the body ill, I have no idea what you will be able to do. A healthy body is a great help, to do both much evil and much good -- much evil with those who are depraved of mind and accustomed to sin, much good with those who have their minds set on God Our Lord and are accustomed to good deeds.

 

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Perhaps a revealing question is whether the church will continue the radical novelty Francis brought as a pope from a religious order—and whether this is the continuity needed now.
'America' is covering its 10th papal conclave this week—and while the technology has changed, the content remains much the same.
James T. KeaneMay 06, 2025
No one gathers Christians—Catholics and non-Catholics alike—throughout the world, however imperfectly, in the way the pope does. The world needs the pope.
Quang D. TranMay 06, 2025
Co-leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla of the Alternative for Germany party hold a press conference in Berlin Sept. 2, 2024, after state elections in the Saxony and Thuringia regions of eastern Germany. (OSV News/Lisi Niesner, Reuters)
German Catholic bishops say that even where the party has not tipped into extremism, it has failed to reform itself of such tendencies. They charge that a nationalism incompatible with Christianity has become the AfD’s animating ideology.
Bridget RyderMay 06, 2025