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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
B00242 The glory of the B. Father S. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Iesus. Łęczycki, Mikołaj, 1574-1652. 1633 (1633) STC 15188.7; ESTC S120479 62,723 362

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presence with which he was so taken that immediately he conceaued a sensible hatred of all such things as blind mortall men hould most in esteeme and of those things especially which carry with them any shew of vnlawfull delight so that frō thence-forward the remembrance of them how deeply soeuer by long vse and custome rooted in his imagination was vtterly extinct in him washed away At other tymes in like manner the Mother of God often shewed her selfe to S. Ignatius but principally whilst he composed the Constitutions of the Society either offering vp her prayers and comforting him with her presence or confirming the Constitutions he wrote of the Society Besides Christ our Sauiour himselfe vouchsafed often to comfort him with his desired presence at Manresa and other places In his iourney to Venice being left behind by his fellow-trauellers in certaine meddowes neare the Riuer Po not being able through weakenes to hould on his iourney with them our Sauiour Christ as he had often done appeared vnto him the next night and hauing exceedingly encouraged him conducted him the direct way to the Towne of Padua first and after wards to Venter In his sea-voyage to Hierusalem our B. Sauiour often appeared to him to his infinite incouragement and conducted him at last to a safe Hauen in Palestine At Hierusalem being reuiled with opprobrious words by a certayne Armenian who laying violent hands vpon him dragged him in an iniurious manner to his Inne in the midst of these affronts he behold our Sauiour present with him accompanying him in his iniuryes to his great contentment As he trauelled to Rome with his two Companions to found the Society he entred into a certaine Church of which there are many standing vpon the high way not far from the Citty to performe some deuotiōs being as he was accustomed rapt into an Extasie and trāsported in Contemplation God the Father appeared to him in a glorious light with his B. sonne bearing his Crosse making shew of the bitter pangs and torments he endured who commending S. Ignatius with his Companions to his Father God the Father when he had graciously receaued them to his protection turning to the Saint with a cherefull browe wouchsafed to vtter these comfortable words Ego vobis Romae propitius ero And this was the cheife cause that after the Confirmation of te Society S. Ignatius imposed vpon it the soueraigne name of Iesus Besides the writers of his life affirme that he had often visions of the Diuine persons sometymes all togeather at other tymes only some one of the alone and of the diuine Essence it selfe and these things especially at the sacrifice of the Masse and at such tyme as being busy with composing the Constitutions of the Society he implored the light and approbation of the diuine Wisdome This appeareth euidently by a large volume of his visions which for piety and memory sake himselfe tooke the paynes to reduce to a methode which visions in him were so admirable and so penetrating the profoundest mysteries of the diuine Essence that the most learned and famous Doctours of mysticall and schole-Diuinity of our age doubt not to professe in their printed books that if that opinion be true which with Saint Thomas and other Fathers of the Church many men follow that Moyses and S. Paul the Apostle euen in this life though for a short tyme beheld perfectly and not in a figure as the Saints in the next life do the diuine Essence and as other moderne writers beleiue of S. Ausien S. Bennet and S Giles Companion to S. F●ancis the like perfect vision of God euen in this life may probably be beleiued to haue been seene by S. Ignatius who hath left behind him of himselfe with his owne hand writing that at such tyme as he wrote the Rules of the Society he often beheld the diuine Essence and Be●●● And before he had studied being yet vtterly vnlearned he was in so admirable a manner instructed by intellectuall vi●●●s in matters of the Vnity of the Essence and Trinity of the Persons that in that Nonage of his conuersion he was able to compose a Booke of the B. Trinity That famous vision of the holy Ghost is not to be omitted who appeared to S. Ignatius whilst he composed the Constitutions of the Society sometymes in that admirable fashion of fiery flames as heretofore to the Apostles sometymes in other shapes Besides all which it was a thing vsual to this glorious Saint to be comforted with frequent visions of Saints Angels At such tyme as he ministred the Spirituall exercise in Mont Cassino to one Peter Ortizius an Agent of the Emperours praiyng earnestly for the health of B. Hosius his Companion whom he knew to ly grieuously sick he suddainely saw a thing reported to haue hapned to S. Bennet in the same place at the tyme of the decease of German the Bishop the soule of his Cōpanion shining woūdrous bright carried vp by Angels enter into Heauen And not long after going one day to the Altar in the very Introite of his Masse imploring the aide of all the Saints a glorious Squadron of Saints appeared before him amōgst whom he perfectly saw B. Hosius in a most glorious manner With which two visions he was so ouerioyed that for many dayes after he could not containe himselfe from weeping When Father Iohn Codurius one of the first Fathers lay in daunger of his life with a violent sicknes S. Ignatius intending to offer vp the holy Sacrifice of the Masse for him at S. Peters in Mo●te Aure● in his iourney thither being almost halfe way ouer the bridge ●a●iculus commonly knowen now by the name of Po●●e Six●● he cast vp and fixed his eyes vpon the heauens and behold the soule of F. Iohn Codurius gloriously carried vp amongst the Quires of Angels turning afterwards to F Baptista Viola his Cōpanion let vs quot he returne home for our Codurius is deceased At an other tyme whilst he was writing the Rules of the Society he behold the Saints in their glory in so Maiesticall a fashion as he confessed was not to be expressed And whilst he was busy with the same Rules he often heard not with the eares of his vndestanding only but with the eares of his body most harmonious musicke from Heauen with which he was enflamed with diuine loue and melted into teares The yeare after his conuersion being present at Masse in the Dominicans Church at the eleuation of the sacred Host he perfectly saw that vnder that figure true God and man was really contained At such tyme as hee composed the Constitutions of his Society hauing one day consecrated the holy Host and offered to Almighty God the Rules of his Society God the Father appeared most graciously vnto him insinuating by some mysticall signification that it would be a thing pleasing to his diuine Maiesty that the Mother of God should offer vp her prayers vnto him for him Wherevpon