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10. TO
THE FATHERS AND BROTHERS IN PADUA
| On Feeling the Effects
of Poverty |
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Rome, August 6, 1547 |
summary | text
of letter | footnotes
The founder of the college in Padua was Andrea Lippomani, prior of Santissima
Trinità in Venice. When Ignatius spent 1536 in Venice, waiting for his
companions to arrive from Paris, he lived with Lippomani and made use of the
latter's library to continue his theological studies. Greatly impressed by the
work of the young Society, Lippomani offered the revenue from the Priory of
the Maddalena in Padua, and half of that of Santissima Trinità to be used to
found a Jesuit college in Padua. The first Jesuits went to Padua in 1542. Five
years after its foundation the community was suffering the effects of poverty;
the financial assistance promised by Lippomani proved inadequate and the
Jesuits were in dire want. Pedro de Ribadeneira, a student at Padua at the
time, wrote to Ignatius two months after the community had received Ignatius'
letter, and described the typical meals in the community: "First, as to
our table. It is usually this: at noon a little vegetable soup and a little
meat, that's all! When fruit is in season, we get a few grapes or something
else according to the time of year. At night it is the same, a hodge-podge
cooked with chicory or something similar, and a little meat. Master Polanco1
can tell you better, as there has been no change since he left. Though the
doctor says that the scholastics must have veal or mutton, this cannot be
done, for veal is very high here, as in Rome, and mutton is not butchered in
winter, so we must do the best we can with beef."2 Though the
letter to the community at Padua had been drafted by Polanco, Ignatius'
secretary, the ideas are those of Ignatius. In the letter he consoles his
sons, telling them that poverty is equally a gift from God and should be
willingly embraced as any other divine gift. The letter was written in Italian
[Ep. 1:572-577].
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May the grace and
true love of Jesus Christ be ever in our hearts and increase from day to day
to the very end of our lives. Amen.
Dearly beloved
fathers and brothers in Christ:
A letter addressed
to Father Master Laínez in Florence has come to us through the hands of your
friend and ours, Pietro Santini.3 In it we learn, among other
things, of the love of poverty, of that poverty which you have chosen for the
love of the poor Christ, and the opportunity you sometimes have of suffering
some lack of necessities owing to the inadequacy of the help offered you by
the kind and charitable prior of the Trinità.
It is not necessary
to exhort to patience those who are mindful of their state who keep before
their eyes the naked Christ on His cross. And this is especially true since it
is clear from the aforementioned letter what a welcome this poverty is given
by all of you when you experience its effects. Yet since our Father Ignatius,
who has a true father's affection for you, has entrusted me with the task of
writing to you, I will console myself, while consoling all of you, with this
grace which His Infinite Goodness allows both you and us of feeling the
effects of that holy poverty. I have no means of knowing how high a degree of
this grace is yours, but with us it is in a very high degree, quite in keeping
with our profession.
I call poverty a
grace because it is a very special gift from God, as Scripture says: poverty
and riches are from God [Sir. 11:14]. How much God loved it His
only-begotten Son has shown us, who, coming down from the kingdom of heaven
[Wis. 18:15], chose to be born in poverty and to grow up in it. He loved it,
not only in life, suffering hunger and thirst, without any place to lay His
head [Matt. 8:20], but even in death, wishing to be despoiled of
everything, even His clothing, and to be in want of everything, even of water
in His thirst.
Wisdom which cannot
err wished to show the world, according to Saint Bernard,4 how
precious a jewel is poverty, the value of which the world did not know. He
chose it for Himself, so that His teaching, blessed are they that hunger
and thirst, blessed are the poor [Matt. 5:3, 6] etc., should not be out of
harmony with His life.
Christ likewise
showed us the high esteem He had for poverty in the choice and employment of
His friends, who lived in poverty, especially in the New Testament, beginning
with His most holy Mother and His apostles, and continuing on with so many
Christians through the course of the centuries up to the present, vassals
imitating their king, soldiers their captain, and members their head, Jesus
Christ.
So great are the
poor in the sight of God that it was especially for them that Jesus was sent
into the world: because of the misery of the needy and the groans of the
poor, now will I arise, says the Lord [Ps. 12:5]. And elsewhere, he has
anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor [Luke 4:18], words which our
Lord recalls when He tells them to give as answer to Saint John, the poor
have the gospel preached to them [Matt. 11:5]. Our Lord so preferred the
poor to the rich that he chose the entire college of His apostles from among
the poor, to live and associate with them, to make them princes of His church
and set them as judges over the twelve tribes of Israel—that is, over all
the faithful—and the poor will be His counselors. To such a degree has He
exalted the state of poverty!
Friendship with the
poor makes us friends of the eternal King. Love of poverty makes kings even on
earth, kings not of earth but of heaven. And this can be seen in that the
kingdom of heaven is promised in the future to others. To the poor and to
those who suffer persecution for justice's sake, Immutable Truth promises it
for the present: blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom
of heaven [Matt. 5:3]. Even in this world they have a right to the
kingdom.
Not only are they
kings, but they share their kingdom with others, as our Lord teaches us in
Saint Luke, make friends for yourselves with the mammon of iniquity, that
when they fail you, a lasting dwelling will be yours [16:9]. These friends
are the poor, particularly the voluntary poor, through whose merits they who
help them enter the tabernacles of glory. For they, according to Saint
Augustine, are the least of all,5 of whom our Lord says, as long
as you did it one of these my least brethren, you did it to me [Matt.
25:40].
In this, therefore,
we see the excellence of poverty which does not stoop to make a treasure of
the dunghill or of worthless earth, but with all the resources of its love
buys that precious treasure in the field of the Church, whether it be our Lord
Himself or His spiritual gifts, from which He Himself is never separated.
But if you consider
the genuine advantages which are properly to be found in those means that are
suited to help us attain our last end, you will see that holy poverty
preserves us from many sins, ridding us as it does of the occasion of sin, for
"poverty has not wherewith to feed its love."6 It slays
the worm of riches, which is pride; cuts off the infernal leeches of lust and
gluttony, and many other sins as well. And if one should fall through
weakness, it helps him to rise at once. For it has none of that attachment
which, like a band, binds the heart to earth and to earthly things and
deprives us of that ease in rising and turning once more to God. It enables us
better to hear in all things the voice—that is, the inspiration—of the
Holy Spirit by removing the obstructions that hinder it. It gives greater
efficacy to our prayers in the sight of God because the Lord will hear the
desire of the poor [Ps. 10:17]. If poverty is in the spirit, then the soul
is filled with every virtue, for the soul that is swept free of the love of
earthly things shall in the same proportion be full of God, having received
His gifts. And it is certain that it must be very rich, for God's promise is
at the rate of hundred to one, even in this life. The promise is fulfilled
even in a temporal sense, when that is for our good. But in the spiritual
sense it cannot fail of fulfillment. Thus it is inescapable that they, who
freely make themselves poor in earthly possessions, shall be rich in the gifts
of God.
This same poverty is
"that land fertile in strong men,"7 as the poet said in
words which are truer of Christian poverty than Roman. This poverty is the
furnace which tests the progress of fortitude and other virtues and the
touchstone which distinguishes genuine gold from counterfeit. It is also the
moat which renders secure the camp of our conscience in the religious life; it
is the foundation on which the edifice of perfection should rise, according to
the words of our Lord, If you wish to be perfect, go, sell what you have,
and give to the poor...and come, follow me [Matt. 19:21]. It is the
mother, the nurse, the guardian of religion, since it conceives, nourishes,
and preserves it;8 while, on the other hand, an abundance of
temporal possessions weakens, corrupts, and ruins it. Thus we can easily see
the great advantage and the excellence of holy poverty, especially since it is
poverty that wins salvation from Him who will save the poor and the humble
[Ps. 18:27], and obtains for us the eternal kingdom from the same Lord, who
says that the kingdom of heaven belongs to the poor, an advantage that is
beyond all comparison. So, no matter how hard it may happen to be, holy
poverty should be accepted voluntarily.
But really it is not
hard; rather it is the cause of great delight in him who embraces it
willingly. Even Seneca9 says that the poor man laughs with greater
ease because he has no cares to upset him, a truth which daily experience
shows us in the instance of the wayside beggar. If you were to observe the
satisfaction in his life, you would see that he is more cheerful than the
great merchants, magistrates, princes, and other persons of distinction.
If this is true of
people who are not poor by choice, what shall we say of those who are poor
because they choose to be? For, neither possessing nor loving anything earthly
which they could lose, they enjoy a peace that is imperturbable and a
tranquility that is supreme. On the other hand, riches are, for those who
possess them, like the sea that is tossed by the storm. Moreover, these
voluntary poor, through the peace and security of their conscience, enjoy an
uninterrupted cheerfulness which is like an endless banquet. They prepare
themselves in a very special way by this very poverty, for heavenly
consolations usually abound in the servants of God in proportion as they lack
an abundance of the goods and the comforts of earth; if they know how to fill
themselves with Christ, He will make up for everything and will occupy, in
their hearts, the vacancy left by all else.
But I must not
pursue this further. Let what I have said suffice for your consolation and
mine to encourage us to love holy poverty, remembering that the excellence,
advantage, and joy I have mentioned belong only to that poverty which is lived
and willingly embraced, not to the poverty that is accepted because it cannot
be avoided. I will add only this, that those who love poverty should, as
occasion offers, love her retinue which consists of poor meals, poor clothes,
poor sleeping accommodations, and to be held of little account. Whoever loves
poverty and is unwilling to feel want, or any of its effects, would be a very
finicky poor man and would give the impression of one who loved the name
rather than the reality, of one who loved in words rather than in the depth of
his heart.
That is all for the
present, except to ask our Lord, our Master and true model of spiritual
poverty, to grant us all the gift of this precious heritage, which He bestows
on His brothers and coheirs to the end that the spiritual riches of His grace
abound in us, and at the end, the ineffable riches of His glory. Amen.
From Rome, August 6,
1547.
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Footnotes
| 1 |
Juan Alfonso de Polanco was born
in Burgos, Spain, on December 24, 1517, and entered the Society in
Rome in 1541. In 1542 he was sent to Padua for his studies, where he
was ordained in1546. He was called to Rome in early 1547 to be
Ignatius’ secretary, and held that office throughout Ignatius’
lifetime. He was also secretary for Diego Laínez and Francisco de
Borja when each became general. Polanco died in Rome on December 20,
1576. |
| 2 |
Ribadeneira’s letter may be
found in Epistolae Mixtae (MHSI) 5:649-651. |
| 3 |
Santini was a native of Lucca,
Italy, who entered the Society about 1547, perhaps in Padua, but after
a short time had to leave to attend to family affairs. |
| 4 |
See In Vigilia Nativitatis
Domini, serm. 1, #5 in Sancti Bernardi opera 4:201. |
| 5 |
See Sermo 345 (PL
39:1520). |
| 6 |
Ovid, De remedio amoris, v.
749. |
| 7 |
Lucan, Pharsalia, 1,
165-166. |
| 8 |
The Constitutions of the
Society of Jesus exhort: "All should love poverty as a
mother" (Part III, c. 1, #25) and "poverty is like a bulwark
of religious institutes which preserves them in their existence and
discipline and defends them from many enemies" (Part X, 5). |
| 9 |
See Epistulae ad Lucilium,
80, 6. |
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