1. Shadows and
lights of individualism
Today, we carry
out our mission in a cultural environment shot through with an individualism
that challenges community life. In its survey of the Society, the last
Congregation emphatically noted that this individualism has invaded us and
shows itself in a kind of holy everyone for himself stance that damages
common life and common work. This individualism explains why there is
widespread lack of apostolic availability; why individual Jesuits allow
themselves to issue public statements or perform political acts in their own
names and against the esprit de corps of this "body for the
Spirit"; and why missionary zeal has slackened as we give priority to
individual interests – at times quite justified in themselves – rather than to
the demands of the mission of Christ.
The Society will
not endure if it is made up of Jesuits individually engaged each in his own
work. It must be said, however, that while individualism itself carries a
negative force that destroys the sense of the other, the tradition of the
Society discloses that it also has some positive aspects. These have put a
distinctive stamp on Jesuit community life, clearly differentiating it from
monastic or conventual community life.
Though it is a
mistake to see a fundamentally individualistic orientation in the spirituality
of the Spiritual Exercises, it is nonetheless true that Master Ignatius
insists on the self to emphasize our personal responsibility in the
drama of sin and grace. We learn in line with that how God makes each of us a
unique creation, unlike any other, and how each is called by name to become a
servant of his Son's mission in communion with others each of whom has affirmed
his own personhood in Christ (cf. Ex. 98 and 145). The result of this call in
Christ's name – that each man be aware of his uniqueness, his capacities and
limits, his creative powers and history – is that no one in the community is
reduced to a cipher, to being merely one among many. However, this result
depends on the men responsibly concentrating their energies to build the
community, so that "a certain atmosphere can be created that makes
communication possible and in which no one is neglected or looked down
upon" (NC 325).
Thus, our
community life will be characterized by a constant struggle against the
negative aspects of this penetrating individualism, this total absorption in
oneself and one's own work, ideas, and concerns; and it will be characterized
by a continually renewed effort to create an affectionate atmosphere of mutual
concern and sharing, through conviviality and prayerful discernment, that will
allow each one in the apostolic community to open himself responsibly to
Christ's mission. A community can never develop among people who seek nothing
but themselves; a community can reconcile individual personal development with
true belonging in apostolic body – by the power of the One "who in the
name of His Father gathers us together into one body... for the sake of a life
that is apostolic in many ways" (NC 314).
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