Christian Spirituality and Counseling: Ignatian Spiritual Meditation

Meditation is a powerful imaginative tool to heal the body and connect it to higher meanings and purposes.  Secular society has branded it and many have turned to Eastern techniques to maximize its potential.  Even, AIHCP itself offers a variety of secular based meditation courses that lead to certification and aid individuals in utilizing meditation for better health.  However, within the norms of Christianity, meditation has always existed within its own right and discipline.  In AIHCP’s SC600 course, “Christian Meditation”, the ideals of Biblical base meditation are explored as the word opens the mind to the life of Christ and His mother.   For the Christian, the health and order meditation affords is a side benefit but the primary purpose is to lift one’s mind to God in a deeper union.  St Ignatius Loyola fully understood the power of meditation as a tool to becoming closer to God.  Ignatian spiritual meditation is best discovered and learned in his spiritual exercises.  St Ignatius’ Loyola’s meditations are Christ0-centric and biblical based upon the life of Christ and invite the senses and imagination to discover Christ and elevate one’s entire being to His worship.  This blog will take a closer look at how St Ignatius utilizes meditation in his exercises.

St Ignatius invites one to a deeper meditative experience with Christ that does not merely reflect but actively engages with Christ

Please also review AIHCP’s Christian Counseling Certification as well as AIHCP’s developing Spiritual Direction Program.

The Format of the Exercises

Throughout the four weeks, Ignatius invites the soul to live the life of Christ by meditating on His birth, His early life, His passion, as well as His resurrection.  Many times quoting Scripture directly, he invites the soul into the mysteries of Christ with deep commentary on Scripture that investigates the majesty of the Word becoming Flesh and focusing in great detail things that exist between the lines of the verses found in Scripture.

He presents each mystery or part of Christ’s life with various preludes.  He invites the reader to review each prelude, ranging from 1 to 3 preludes, to further enter into a deeper meditation about th the mystery.   For instance, when inviting the soul to contemplate the deeper mystery of the Nativity, he opens with a prayer and then presents 3 preludes to mediate upon and 3 additional points.  In doing, so he invites the reader to not only think about or read, but to encounter the moment as a witness.  He asks the reader to imagine oneself being there as an outside observer and as the reader becomes more quiet and focused, introduces other elements of the Nativity to dwell upon.  Within the Nativity, he asks us to dwell upon the cave or stable, the coldness of the weather, and the humility of Joseph and Mary.  He pushes us to consider their state of mind, as well as the quietness of the night and the ignorance of the world to not recognize the coming of God on earth.  He also invites what he refers to as a colloquy or short conversation with the person in the story.  Whether St Joseph, Mary, or the Christ child, the reader is invited to not only mediate and dwell but also to engage into the story.

Ignatius felt it prudent to apply the five senses to any meditation.  For instance, upon reception of Communion, he emphasized we engage the Eucharist with our senses of sight, hearing, taste and smell and touch.  In sight, he asks us to imagine the Christ in the Eucharist and the powerful mystical miracle behind it.  With our ears, to hear the words of Christ, either consoling, gentle reprimanding, forgiving, or advising us.  With our taste and smell, to feel the inner pains and joys of Christ in the world.  Finally with touch, to imagine literally, as the apostles did, reaching out and touching Christ.  Many times, Ignatius hoped to extract deep emotion, even tears, to provoke conversation and piety before the Lord.

Again, he utilizes the same procedure and format throughout Christ’s life.  As with the Nativity, he asks us during Christ’s passion to walk with Christ from the garden to the cross.  Again with preludes to focus upon and words of prayer to engage, we kneel and pray with Christ in the garden and stand with Him at the cross.  Since Christ is divine and God, the Divinity of Christ can hear our echoes of consolation and contrition in the moment of His suffering.  Like Symon of Cyrene, through meditation and placing ourselves at the spot, we can meditate upon the past but also be part of the living event.  Because again of Christ’s divinity and lack of temporal time limitations, He can hear and see all events.  So while dying for past, present and future sins not committed yet temporally on the cross, He can also hear and see our consolations and acts of love from the past and future.  St Ignatius invites our senses to help us be there and experience Christ in meditation and to not only think about what occurred but to also engage Him in the moment.   I make reference to this in my Echo Meditation blog.

Conclusion

So as we pray and mediate, mediate as if physically present and utilize the senses to become more close to God.  St Ignatius gives us the tools and images in his exercises to help aid us in finding Christ in the Gospels and opening Him to us in a real and present way.  Through his preludes, points and emphasis on engaging the senses, one can find a more intimate union with Christ in meditation.  This is a true Christian meditation that finds its basis in Scripture and Christ and helps the soul engage, learn and become closer to God.

Please also review AIHCP’s Christian Counseling Certification

Please also review AIHCP’s Christian Counseling Certification, as well as its future Spiritual Direction Program.  Also, please review AIHCP’s Meditation instructor Program which offers a more secular approach to meditation.  Please also if not enrolled, consider for CE purposes taking AIHCP’s Ignatian Spirituality course, SC620

Additional AIHCP Blogs

Echo Meditation: Access here

Eastern and Western Meditation.  Access here

References

The Spiritual Exercises of St Ignatius

Additional Resources

O’Brien, K. “Ignatian Contemplation: Imaginative Prayer”. IgnatianSpirituality.com.  Access here

How to Pray: A Step-by-Step Guide to Ignatian Contemplation (2024). Focus.  Access here

Lilly, J. “How to Do an Ignatian Meditation”  Youth Apostles. Access here