O
odile53
Guest
@ Brother JR–^ pretty good–LOL!
Not being a Jesuit, I don’t have access to their constitutions and I believe they may not be public documents. Many communities do not make their constitutions public. There is not hard rule about this. It’s really up to them to do so or not.Brother,
One thing which comes to mind as a question is the internal structure of the SJ. You mentioned that Jesuit Priests function quite autonomously for the most part. However, there must be some internal structure or hierarchy which serves as a way for superiors to lead, correct, and make decisions regarding the direction of the order.
Am I off on that?
I wouldn’t say that about entire provinces. There are certainly men who have said these kinds of things. They are not all Jesuits, but I would discourage someone from joining the Franciscans, Dominicans, Carmelites, Jesuits or a diocese between some men have said some off the wall things. You have to realize that these are huge provinces. The Jesuits are about the same size as the big Franciscans are (the OFMs). Their average province is about 500 men. In an order of almost 20,000 men, you can have many provinces in one country. Even there, the individual is not representative of the province. Remember, the superior has no authority to tell his men what they can and cannot say. The Jesuits are not friars or monks. They are deliberately very free. This serves a good purpose. They are often on missions, alone, very far from home. They can’t wait for permissions to come from across the globe.I would carefully check their theological position before getting involved with Jesuits in a particular country. Some of the Polish ones openly allow people to use contraception. I’ve mailed the proper authorities and am waiting for response.
The only times that Jesuits really live in and as a community are during their formation. In the novitiate, novices follow a strict schedule and routine of prayer and other communal activities to instill discipline.Many Jesuits live in community and many live independtly. Even those who live in community have much more freedom than does a Dominican or a Franciscans. We do things together, such as pray, play and eat. We answer to the local superior on all matters, not just our work. The superior has authority over everything, even the color of our toothbrush. This is not the case of the Jesuits. The local superior is a coordinator. He sees to it that things run well and that tasks are done. They do not have to pray together, eat together or be there all the time. They are in and out of the house, very much like secular priests are. I don’t know how they do money, whether they get an allowance or whether they have to ask for money when they need it. The mendicants usually get pocket money once a month and anything else you ask for. Some don’t even get pocket money. They get money as they need it.
Their initial formation is very conventual, like that of friars and monks. However, they are gradually released, as they mature in discipline. We have to remember, they are soldiers. A soldier has to be able to survive alone, if necessary. He has to make decisions on his own and not second-guess himself. Second-guessing himself may cause him his life. This was the modeal that St. Ignatius used to train the clerks.The only times that Jesuits really live in and as a community are during their formation. In the novitiate, novices follow a strict schedule and routine of prayer and other communal activities to instill discipline.
When they become scholastics, they live in formation houses but have less rigid schedules, though some still pray and eat together. However, the superior of the house or the rector assigns them tasks, sort of like practicing what they will face when they get ordained. For example: if a formation house is located in a school, the rector will assign the scholastic to a student organization that asked for a Jesuit moderator. However, the rector can pull the scholastic out if a more important need arises. Like, Bro. JR said, the rector will not micromanage what the scholastic will do. He will ask the scholastic though to share the implications of the assignment to his formation.
After a finishing his philosophy studies (2-4 years or until he gets a grade not lower than A-), the scholastic will go into regency for 2 years (or more depending on the rector). During this period he will be assigned outside of the formation house for apostolate work. They are actually commanded not to approach a formation house unless it’s really important. An example of this is this guy…
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=8357443&postcount=28
Right after regency, the scholastic then studies theology for four years leading to the priesthood.
It’s important to note though that a scholastic doesn’t go through each stage in formation automatically. If the rector or the superior of the house discerns that a scholastic is not yet ready for the next level, he will defer passage. Making the words of the rector at ordination when he presents the candidates to the provincial superior, “…I find them worthy of ordination,” all the more sweeter for them.
The last time they’ll live in and as a community is during the tertiary, when the ordained Jesuit goes back to the novitiate to relearn and remember his formative years and what it means to be basically a Jesuit.
As for financials, each scholastic receives an certain amount or “pocket money” that will let them survive the week or month.
**I think we’re forgetting something here. **The Op asked:
I think he could find an order more suited to him, considering what he told us about himself. I know that the Jesuits give a tremendous secular education. They used to give an education that was both superior in Catholicism & in secularism. We live in “Jesuit country” & both my husband & my brothers attended Jesuit high schools…they were more like prep schools. I was educated by the Sacred Heart nuns whom many considered the “sister order” of the Jesuits.One of the Orders I am looking at is the Society of Jesus. I was raised Baptist and came home to Rome as a teenager. During that time I became fascinated by Jesuit history. All my studies of their order bespoke of a group of priests** dedicated to the Pope of Rome and to the advancement of Catholic Orthodoxy.**Yet, my own spiritual director (though supportive of my considerations) has remarked that if I were to become a Jesuit, then I would be an anomaly. This is because I am fanatically loyal to the Magisterium. I consider my faith to be whatever Rome says it is. I am neither a traditionalist nor a progressive (and I intend to oppose both). I consider myself simply an orthodox Catholic.
The problem with this kind of interview is that you’re not going to find a religious community that has a position contrary to the Church. This is what we’ve been saying. Individuals do not make a community.Considering what the OP. told us about himself, I’d recommend
that he check into the Jesuits, asking a few questions:
What is their stance on homosexual acts-
What do they teach about ABC.?
How about remarriage after divorce??
What do they teach about the latest missive, written by our Pope, about ordaining gay priests?
Were they pleased by the conclave that turned Cardinal Ratzinger into Pope Benedict??
I think it’s very important that a man (or woman) entering a religious community be VERY sure that it fits them. It’s rather like marriage…it’s best to be sure BEFORE the wedding, that the two who are pledging their lives to one another are compatible.
That makes sense.The bottom line is whether or not they accept the outcome, no t whether or not they like the selection. There is no requirement that you like the selection.
Your response states that one cannot be a faithful Catholic and a Jesuit. I think that’s not only wrong, but slanders an entire religious order.No.
Not anymore. Their great history - which certainly extended well into the 1960s - doesn’t reflect their current state.
Try entering Jesuit in the search box at catholicculture.org/index.cfm
There is a whole lot of truth in this joke, which is why it’s funny
A man walked up to a Franciscan and Jesuit and asked, “How many novenas must you say to get a Mercedes Benz?”
The Franciscan asked, “What’s a Mercedes Benz?”
The Jesuit asked, “What’s a novena?”
Which is distinctly frowned upon on CAF……but slanders an entire religious order.
You need to read this sticky post here at the forum . . .No.
Not anymore. Their great history - which certainly extended well into the 1960s - doesn’t reflect their current state.
Try entering Jesuit in the search box at catholicculture.org/index.cfm
There is a whole lot of truth in this joke, which is why it’s funny
A man walked up to a Franciscan and Jesuit and asked, “How many novenas must you say to get a Mercedes Benz?”
The Franciscan asked, “What’s a Mercedes Benz?”
The Jesuit asked, “What’s a novena?”
Can I ask you, sir, if you have encountered the Jesuits personally? Or was your opinion just based on another person’s opinion?No.
Not anymore. Their great history - which certainly extended well into the 1960s - doesn’t reflect their current state.
Try entering Jesuit in the search box at catholicculture.org/index.cfm
There is a whole lot of truth in this joke, which is why it’s funny
A man walked up to a Franciscan and Jesuit and asked, “How many novenas must you say to get a Mercedes Benz?”
The Franciscan asked, “What’s a Mercedes Benz?”
The Jesuit asked, “What’s a novena?”
Yes, you may, and yes, I have.Can I ask you, sir, if you have encountered the Jesuits personally? Or was your opinion just based on another person’s opinion?
Firstly, you must known ALL of the Jesuits personally to lump them all together and make that conclusion.Yes, you may, and yes, I have.
I went to a retreat at a Jesuit center once. I left at lunchtime Saturday. I was disgusted.
Saturday morning was a prayer service, not a Mass. But it was in the chapel. There was no mention of Jesus, it was “Creator” and “Higher Power.” They did announce that Mass would be Saturday evening…in the conference center, not the chapel.
It was quite difficult to tell if anyone on the staff was a priest or a gardener - not a single Roman collar to be seen anywhere. They were, however, introduced as “Father so-and-so” later, so it appears there were a few priests after all.
I first heard that joke from a Jesuit.A man walked up to a Franciscan and Jesuit and asked, “How many novenas must you say to get a Mercedes Benz?”
The Franciscan asked, “What’s a Mercedes Benz?”
The Jesuit asked, “What’s a novena?”