02 MacDonnell Brief History
02 MacDonnell Brief History
02 MacDonnell Brief History
Joseph F. MacDonnell, SJ
[Note: This page was last updated in 1999. The statistics found in it must be
updated.]
The Society of Jesus was founded in 1540 by St. Ignatius Loyola and since
then has grown from the original seven to 24, 400 members today who work
out of 1,825 houses in 112 countries. In the intervening 455 years many
Jesuits became renowned for their sanctity (41 Saints and 285 Blesseds), for
their scholarship in every conceivable field, for their explorations and
discoveries, but especially for their schools. The Society is governed by
General Congregations, the supreme legislative authority which meets
occasionally. The present Superior General Fr. Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, S.J.
is Dutch. Ignatius Loyola was a Spanish Basque soldier who underwent an
extraordinary conversion while recuperating from a leg broken by a cannon
ball in battle. He wrote down his experiences which he called his
From the very beginning, the Society served the Church with outstanding
men: Doctors of the Church in Europe as well as missionaries in Asia, India,
Africa and the Americas. Men like Robert Bellarmine and Peter Canisius
spearheaded the Counter Reformation in Europe, courageous men like
Edmund Campion assisted the Catholics in England suffering under the
terrible Elizabethan persecutions and missionaries like deNobili Claver,
González, deBrito, Brebeuf, and Kino brought the Gospel to the ends of the
earth. No other order has more martyrs for the Faith.
Five of the eight major rivers of the world were first charted by Jesuit
explorers. Two of the statues in Statuary Hall in the Capitol in Washington
are Jesuits: Eusebio Kino and Jacques Marquette. A 1978 Brazilian stamp
celebrates the Jesuit founding of São Paulo. Spanish Jesuits went to
Paraguay in 1607, built settlements which lasted from 1607 to 1767 for the
indigenous people and taught them how to govern and defend themselves
against the Spanish slave traders. They also taught agriculture, architecture,
metallurgy, farming, music, ranching and printing. The Guaraní natives of
Paraguay were printing books on art, literature as well as school texts in
these settlements before the American revolution. This Utopia was suddenly
crushed by the influential slave traders who were able to intimidate the
Spanish crown into destroying the settlements. King Charles III expelled the
Jesuits in 1767 when Paraguay boasted of 57 settlements serving 113,716
indigenous natives. These Jesuit Settlements were called "a triumph of
humanity which seems to expiate the cruelties of the first conquerors" by
Voltaire - hardly a friend of the Jesuits. The history of Latin America would
have been quite different if this form of settlement had been allowed to
develop according to its own momentum, offering democracy a century
before North America.
Jesuits were called the schoolmasters of Europe during the 16th, 17th and
18th centuries, not only because of their schools but also for their pre-
eminence as scholars scientists and the thousands of textbooks they
composed. During their first two centuries the Jesuits were involved in an
explosion of intellectual activity, and were engaged in over 740 schools.
Then suddenly these were all lost in 1773. Pope Clement XIV yielding to
pressure from the Bourbon courts, fearing the loss of his Papal States, and
anticipating that other European countries would follow the example of
Henry VIII (who abandoned the Catholic Church and took his whole country
with him), issued his brief Dominus ac Redemptor suppressing the Society
of Jesus. This religious Society of 23,000 men dedicated to the service of the
church was disbanded. The property of the Society's many schools was
either sold or made over into a state controlled system. The Society's
libraries were broken up and the books either burned, sold or snatched up by
those who collaborated in the Suppression. As if unsure of himself the Pope
promulgated the brief of suppression in an unusual manner which caused
perplexing canonical difficulties. So when Catherine, Empress of Russia,
rejected the brief outright and forbade its promulgation, 200 Jesuits
continued to function in Russia.
That Jesuits take their special vow of obedience to the pope quite seriously
is evident from their immediate compliance with distasteful papal edicts.
Clement XIV's Suppression is one example. Another occurred earlier in
1590 when Pope Sixtus V wanted to exclude Jesus from the official name of
the Society. Jesuits immediately complied and offered alternate names but
Sixtus died unexpectedly before his wish could be carried out. Included
among these occasional papal intrusions in the Society's governance was
Pope John Paul II's appointment of a delegate to govern the Society during
Superior General Arrupe's illness. So edified was he at the Society's
immediate compliance that the pope later lavished extraordinary praise on
the Jesuit Order.
The Society was restored 41 years after the Suppression in 1814 by Pope
Pius VII. Although many of the men had died by then, the memory of their
educational triumphs had not, and the new Society was flooded with
requests to take over new colleges: in France alone, for instance, 86 schools
were offered to the Jesuits. Since 1814 the Society has experienced amazing
growth and has since then surpassed the apostolic breadth of the early
Society in its educational, intellectual, pastoral and missionary endeavors.
They form a Jesuit network, not that they are administered in the same way,
but that they pursue the same goals and their success is evident in their
graduates, men and women of vast and varied talent.
Two outstanding Jesuits of the last century were Teilhard de Chardin and
Gerard Manley Hopkins. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, S. J. (1881 - 1955) was
a Jesuit paleontologist who attempted to interpret the findings of modern
science in the light of the Christian message. People read in Teilhard a
message of hope and optimism and his work was perhaps even more
influential outside the Catholic Church than within it. Gerard Manley
Hopkins, S.J. (1844 -1889) is a major figure in English literature. His
innovations in meter and rhythm, his abnormally sensitive use of language
and the depth and passion of his religious convictions made an immediate
impact on the young poets of the 1920s.