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Glossary›Ignatian Spirituality

Glossary

Ignatian Spirituality

A Christian contemplative practice rooted in the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola, emphasizing discernment, meditation on Scripture, and finding God in all things.

What is Ignatian Spirituality?

Ignatian spirituality is a 500-year-old Catholic contemplative tradition founded on the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491–1556), the Spanish mystic who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). At its core, Ignatian spirituality teaches practitioners to discern God’s presence in everyday life through structured imaginative prayer, examination of consciousness, and attentiveness to interior movements of consolation and desolation. Unlike monastic traditions that emphasize withdrawal, Ignatian spirituality is often called a “spirituality for active life”—a contemplative practice designed for people engaged in work, relationships, and the world.

The tradition is characterized by three signature practices: the daily Examen (a five-step review of the day’s spiritual movements), imaginative contemplation of Gospel scenes using all five senses, and discernment of spirits—learning to distinguish life-giving inner movements from those that lead away from God. Ignatian spirituality meaning centers on becoming a “contemplative in action,” cultivating an inner freedom (indiferencia) that allows one to choose what most serves love and justice.

Origins & Lineage

Ignatian spirituality originates with Ignatius of Loyola, born Iñigo López de Loyola in the Basque region of Spain in 1491. A soldier until age 30, Ignatius underwent a dramatic conversion while recovering from a cannonball wound at the Battle of Pamplona in 1521. During months of convalescence at Loyola Castle, he read The Life of Christ by Ludolph of Saxony and The Golden Legend (lives of the saints), experiencing profound interior shifts he later called “movements of spirits.”

From 1522–1523, Ignatius lived as a hermit in a cave near Manresa, Spain, where he developed the core structure of the Spiritual Exercises—a four-week guided retreat combining Scripture meditation, imaginative prayer, and systematic discernment. He synthesized influences from the Devotio Moderna (a 15th-century reform movement emphasizing interior piety), medieval mystics, and his own direct mystical experiences.

Ignatius founded the Society of Jesus in 1540 with six companions, creating a religious order without monastic enclosure or choral prayer—radically innovative for its time. The Jesuits became primary transmitters of Ignatian spirituality through education, missionary work, and spiritual direction. Ignatius was canonized in 1622. His Spiritual Exercises, completed around 1548, remains the authoritative text of the tradition, typically given as a 30-day silent retreat or adapted as a 9-month “Spiritual Exercises in Daily Life” format.

How It’s Practiced

Ignatian spirituality for beginners typically starts with the daily Examen, a 10–15 minute evening prayer with five steps: gratitude for the day, asking for insight, reviewing the day hour by hour noting feelings, naming one feature that stands out (consolation or desolation), and looking toward tomorrow. This practice trains practitioners to notice where they felt alive, drained, connected, or distant from the sacred.

The second foundational practice is imaginative contemplation (also called application of the senses). Practitioners read a Gospel passage—often a scene from Jesus’s life—then re-enter it imaginatively: What do you see? Hear? Smell? What does the ground feel like beneath your feet? Practitioners might imagine themselves as a character in the scene or as an observer, allowing the narrative to unfold spontaneously and noticing what stirs emotions.

The third core practice is discernment of spirits, articulated in Ignatius’s 22 “Rules for Discernment.” Practitioners learn to distinguish consolation (movements toward faith, hope, love, peace, joy) from desolation (movements toward anxiety, darkness, turmoil, separation). The tradition teaches that God’s action typically brings deep peace even amid difficulty, while harmful influences create superficial comfort or restless agitation.

A fourth practice, less commonly taught to beginners, is the Consciousness Examen—distinct from a confession of sins, it examines one’s entire stance toward life: Where am I truly free? Where am I attached? What do I deeply desire? This connects to Ignatius’s concept of the magis (Latin: “the more”)—always moving toward greater love and service.

Ignatian Spirituality Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Ignatian spirituality primarily through Jesuit retreat centers, parish-based programs, and spiritual direction. The 30-day silent Spiritual Exercises retreat remains the gold standard, offered at over 60 Jesuit retreat houses in North America. More accessible is the 9-month “19th Annotation” retreat (named for paragraph 19 of the Exercises), where participants meet weekly with a trained director while continuing daily life.

Since the 1970s, Ignatian spirituality has expanded beyond Catholic contexts. Episcopal, Lutheran, and nondenominational Christians practice Ignatian prayer, and secular adaptations emphasize discernment and reflective awareness without explicit theological language. The Examen has been adopted in corporate settings, psychotherapy, and mindfulness communities as a tool for reflective journaling.

Key organizations teaching what is Ignatian spirituality include Loyola Press (publishers of popular guides like The Examen Prayer by Timothy Gallagher), Ignatian Spirituality Project (serving people experiencing homelessness and addiction), and the online Sacred Space daily prayer site run by Irish Jesuits, which attracts over 3 million users. Spiritual directors trained in Ignatian methods work in hospitals, universities, and private practice, often blending the tradition with depth psychology and somatic awareness.

Common Misconceptions

Ignatian spirituality is not synonymous with Jesuit identity, though Jesuits are its primary teachers. Laypeople, women religious, diocesan priests, and non-Catholics practice and teach Ignatian methods; the tradition belongs to the broader Christian contemplative lineage.

It is not quietist or emotion-focused in a self-absorbed sense. While practitioners attend carefully to feelings, the purpose is discernment for action—Ignatius expected prayer to lead to concrete choices about how to live. The tradition is activist and incarnational, seeking God in creation, relationships, and social structures, not only in interior states.

Ignatian spirituality is not the same as the Spiritual Exercises themselves. The Exercises are a specific 30-day retreat experience; Ignatian spirituality is the broader way of life that flows from those exercises—a lifelong practice of discernment, prayerful reflection, and responsive action. Not all practitioners make the full 30-day retreat, but all engage the core practices.

Finally, consolation and desolation are not simply positive and negative emotions. Consolation can accompany suffering (the peace of acting with integrity despite cost); desolation can accompany pleasure (restless dissatisfaction after indulgence). The distinction is functional: Does this movement draw me toward love, faith, and service, or away?

How to Begin

Beginners should start with the daily Examen. The Examen Prayer: Ignatian Wisdom for Our Lives Today by Timothy Gallagher (2006) offers a clear introduction with step-by-step guidance. Alternatively, the Pray As You Go app (Jesuit Media Initiatives) provides free daily 10-minute guided audio prayers combining music, Scripture, and Examen-style reflection.

For deeper immersion, seek an Ignatian spiritual director through the Spiritual Directors International directory or contact a local Jesuit retreat center to inquire about the “19th Annotation” retreat in daily life. The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius (multiple translations; the Louis Puhl translation is standard) is the primary text, though it reads more like a facilitator’s manual than a devotional book.

The Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything by James Martin, SJ (2010) presents Ignatian practices in accessible, contemporary language for a general audience. For those drawn to imaginative prayer specifically, God’s Word Is Alive by Margaret Silf introduces lectio divina and application of the senses with guided examples.

Annual 8-day or weekend Ignatian retreats at centers such as Loyola House (Guelph, Ontario), Manresa Jesuit Retreat House (Michigan), or Jesuit Retreat Center of Los Altos (California) offer immersive experience with trained directors. These silent retreats include daily one-on-one spiritual direction, Eucharist, and four to five hours of personal prayer time, typically using Gospel passages from the first week of the Exercises.

Related terms

christian contemplative prayerconsolation and desolationbenedictine spiritualitykataphatic prayercentering prayer
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