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36. TO
FATHER GIOVANNI FRANCESCO ARALDO
| On Humble Obedience
to Superiors' Decisions
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Rome, September 16, 1554 |
summary | text
of letter | footnotes
Fr. Giovanni Francesco Araldo1 was one of the first Jesuits
assigned to the college in Naples. The occasion of this letter was Araldo's
taking exception to a decision of his superior Alfonso Salmerón. In Naples a
certain Feliciana had, in her charity, taken in six or seven poor girls,
supported them by begging alms, and took them once a week to the Jesuit church
to receive the sacraments. When the Jesuits decided to move into a residence
of their own, Feliciana also thought of moving so that she and her young
ladies could be near them, making it easier for her charges to receive
spiritual direction. Salmerón approached Feliciana and suggested that it
would not be a good idea for her to move so near to them, for such a move
could only become fuel for the Neapolitan gossips. If she insisted on moving,
Salmerón informed her, he would have no other alternative but to deny them
the sacraments at the Jesuit church. The Jesuits moved and so did Feliciana.
The house she rented was opposite the Jesuits, and her windows looked into
those of the Jesuits. Araldo continued directing the young ladies, but now
that they were so near he also began paying them frequent visits. To prevent
any scandal Salmerón felt it necessary to carry out the threat he had
previously made and, thus, he denied the sacraments to Feliciana and her
ladies. Thinking Salmerón's action wrong and unjust, Araldo wrote to Andrés
de Oviedo2 to intercede with Ignatius so that he could countermand
Salmerón's order. Having read Araldo's letter Ignatius sent this stern
reproof telling him that he had overstepped the limits of obedience and
humility, and that his superior would not have done what he had done unless he
had good reasons to do so. The problem was solved when Salmerón found places
for the young ladies in several reputable monasteries. Polanco's letter was
written in Italian [Ep. 7:528-529].
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My dear Father in
Christ, Master John Francis:
I have read your
letter to Master Andrew, and feel convinced that your good will and fervent
desire to serve God have prompted you to write as you have. It is clear,
however, that you have gone beyond the limits of holy obedience and her
mother, humility, in thus manifesting an opinion that differs from and is even
opposed to that of Father Master Salmerón, whose mind you wish to change as
though he had made a mistake. And yet, if you remember that he is superior
with the light of learning and prudence and experience that are his, to say
nothing of the special help and light he receives from God our Lord to direct
him in his duty as head of the college, you would see that it is easier for
your judgment to be wrong than his, and that you ought to be more willing to
submit your judgment to his than to set aside his for yours. For myself, I
believe that Father Salmerón would not have forbidden these ladies to receive
the sacraments in your church except for grave reasons. While he does not
write me so, I fancy that the proximity of their house to the college could
give rise to some suspicion. There might, of course, be a different reason
known to him who has a more general view of the situation than has he who
looks at it from a single point of view. It is because of this special love I
bear your reverence that I wish to bring this to your attention.
I commend myself to
the prayers and sacrifices of your charity.
September 16, 1554.
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Footnotes
| 1 |
Araldo was born in Cagli, near
Pesaro, Italy, in 1522. He entered the Society in Rome on February 24,
1551, after serving Cardinal Rodolfo Pio di Carpi, the Society’s
Cardinal Protector, as secretary for seven years. In January 1552
Araldo went in the first group of Jesuits to open a college in Naples,
where he was ordained on February 4, 1553. The notes he used for
teaching Christian doctrine to his students were published in 1553 as Compendio
della dottrina cristiana, one of the first Jesuit attempts at
producing a catechism. In 1554, the year of the Feliciana affair,
Araldo also initiated among the laity of Naples
two successful sodalities or congregations (one for men, the other for
women), whose members received the sacraments regularly, taught
catechism, visited hospitals, reconciled enemies, and encouraged
others to the frequent reception of the sacraments. Araldo was called
to Rome in 1569, but returned to Naples in 1577, and died there on May
10, 1599. |
| 2 |
When Araldo went to Naples, Oviedo
was the superior of the group and the first rector of the new college.
Having been named a bishop, Oviedo was in Rome waiting to set out for
Lisbon, whence he would embark for Ethiopia. |
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