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S i d e b a r
The Holy Madness of Love


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This Rock
Volume 18, Number 4
April 2007
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When St. Ignatius recommends indifference, he not only tells us to eliminate subjective habits, but goes further: He tells his disciples that they should be disposed to "glorify God in riches, in honor, in poverty, in humiliations." This advice implies a deeper degree of freedom: freedom from both subjective ties and freedom from good habits when there is a call for it. In this case, it is the freedom to follow St. Paul, who could live in abundance and in poverty with equal supernatural joy. We should be indifferent to health and sickness. Which one of us does not know how bitterly disappointing it is when sickness prevents from giving a talk, attending a beautiful concert, going on a long-planned trip? Ignatius goes still further and even recommends that we should give preference to poverty and humiliations because in this we follow more closely the path chosen by Christ (Genelli, The Life of St. Ignatius, 141). To prefer humiliations to honor and poverty to riches truly calls for a supernatural spirit. Secular eyes will view it as madness. Supernaturally speaking, it is the holy madness of love.
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