Saint Ignatius Loyola: The Pilgrim Years, 1491-1538

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Ignatius Press, 1998 - 346 pages

It is generally agreed among his foes no less than among his friends that Ignatius of Loyola was a maker of history. A hundred books could be cited in proof of this statement, but the aim of this classic work is rather to show history and the grace of God forming the person of St. Ignatius. In this definitive biographical work, Fr. Brodrick combines scholarly research with a readable, enjoyable style in a book that endeavors to show the stages by which God led the wounded cavalier out of his dream-world of romantic battles in the service of fair ladies into the noontide of divine reality.

"The Pilgrimage," as he liked to call the difficult period of his spiritual apprenticeship, began when he was thirty and lasted for seventeen years of endless and often very moving trials. Out of it emerged a man completely transformed in Christ, one of the great saints in the history of the Church. Includes maps and index.

 

Contents

List of Maps
9
Gentleman Soldier
37
Assignation with God
61
Nueva Vida
83
Pilgrims Progress
105
A Caballero at School
135
Paul in Chains
165
La Ville Lumière
189
A Third Class of Men
221
IO Sunrise on Montmartre
259
The Ship that Failed
291
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About the author (1998)

Fr. James Brodrick, S.J., is considered by many as the greatest Jesuit historian, and author of important classic works on Jesuit history and saints. He is the author of definitive biographies of St. Robert Bellarmine and St. Peter Canisius, and also the well-regarded works, The Origin of the Jesuits and The Progress of the Jesuits.

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