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The Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius (written between 1522 and 1548)
are a very representative example of Catholic Christianity.
Although they were elaborated by one individual, they echo the
practice of the preceding thousand years. The reality of the
Exercises is rooted in the principle of personalisation, and in the
discernment of how the act of following Jesus makes itself concrete
in history. Javier Melloni follows up his popular exploration of
the Spiritual Exercises in their Christian setting, The Exercises
of St Ignatius in the Western Tradition, with a new book examining
three spiritual pathways which underlie three different religious
traditions the Spiritual Exercise of St Ignatius, linked with
Christianity; Yoga, which proceeds from Hinduism; and Zen,
originating from the womb of Buddhism. With an understanding of
these three ways we place ourselves at the heart of their
respective traditions, as suggested by the Latin saying: Lex
orandi, lex credendi, that is to say, prayer and by extension,
every spiritual practice is the reflection of a mode of belief,
just as every belief is configured to the extent to which it is
prayed. He presents these three ways with a double purpose: to show
the specific elements of each one, as well as their common or
convergent points. Only if we do not confuse them can we recognise
both the difficulty and the richness to be found in placing them in
relation with one another. To integrate is not the same as to mix
up. Above all, what certainly unites the three ways is that they
are not speculative, but initiatory or mystagogical. Their
objective is the transformation of the person who undertakes them,
to admit that person into the experience of the Absolute. This book
explores the Spiritual Exercises through the Yoga Sutras (the Yoga
Karma or the Yoga of Action, the Bhakti Yoga or the Yoga of
Devotion, the Jnana Yoga or the Yoga of Knowledge), through Zen
Buddhism, and by looking at the role of images and of discursive
thought, emptying and decentring, effort and grace, and the
presence and absence of a divine 'Thou'. Javier Melloni was born in
Barcelona. He has studied in Kerala and in Paris, and is now
working in his home country in the retreat house known as the Cave
of St Ignatius in Manresa.
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