John Predmore, S.J., is a USA East Province Jesuit and was the pastor of Jordan's English language parish. He teaches art and directs BC High's adult spiritual formation programs. Formerly a retreat director in Gloucester, Massachusetts. Ignatian Spirituality is given through guided meditations, weekend-, 8-day, and 30-day Retreats based on The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola. Ignatian Spirituality serves the contemporary world as people strive to develop a friendship with God.
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Monday, July 10, 2017
Spirituality: Laudato Si, par. 66
The creation accounts in the book of Genesis
contain, in their own symbolic and narrative
language, profound teachings about human existence
and its historical reality. They suggest that
human life is grounded in three fundamental and
closely intertwined relationships: with God, with
our neighbour and with the earth itself. According
to the Bible, these three vital relationships
have been broken, both outwardly and within us.
This rupture is sin. The harmony between the
Creator, humanity and creation as a whole was
disrupted by our presuming to take the place of
God and refusing to acknowledge our creaturely
limitations. This in turn distorted our mandate
to “have dominion” over the earth (cf. Gen 1:28),
to “till it and keep it” (Gen 2:15). As a result, the
originally harmonious relationship between human
beings and nature became conflictual (cf.
Gen 3:17-19). It is significant that the harmony
which Saint Francis of Assisi experienced with
all creatures was seen as a healing of that rupture.
Saint Bonaventure held that, through universal
reconciliation with every creature, Saint Francis
in some way returned to the state of original
innocence. This is a far cry from our situation
today, where sin is manifest in all its destructive
power in wars, the various forms of violence and
abuse, the abandonment of the most vulnerable,
and attacks on nature.
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