Exercising the Senses, Exercising the Soul: The Spiritual Exercises and the Uses of Jesuit Art
 

 

Thesis of the Day:

 

The Jesuits used the power of imagination to persuade people all over the world to live a life devoted to Christ and the Church.

They employed external stimuli, such as architecture and art, to create internal change.

Although their means of persuasion were very powerful, Jesuits were not propagandists. Nor could they fully control individual responses to their techniques of persuasion.

 

Propaganda versus Visual Rhetoric: Is There a Difference?

Adolf Hitler, July 1941:

"When all's said, we should be grateful to the Jesuits. Who knows if, but for them, we might not have abandoned Gothic architecture for the light, airy, bright architecture of the Counter-Reformation? .... [T]he Jesuits restored to the world the joy of the senses"

Hitler considers Catholic examples.

Jesuits as Propagandists:

Gymnastics of Sight and Soul

A. "A Picture Worth a Thousand Words": Early Modern Ideas about Sight

The Spiritual Exercises

A. A Unique Book

B. Instructions for Making the Right Choice ("Election")

  1. Four Weeks, Three Stages
    • Purgative: Turning away from sinful life (week 1)
    • Illuminative: Turning to a devout life, following Christ's example (week 1-3)
    • Unitive: Achieving state of union with God and his Church (week 4)
  2. Self-reform plus reform of others: "throughout the world to spread his doctrine among people of every state and condition" (Standard of Christ, p. 149)

C. Working the Senses

  1. Imagining the Place - again, and again, and again
  2. For example: Hell

BUT: just like everyone's daily experience, so everyone's hell is unique

 

Let's Help You Imagine Things: the Example of St. Michael and Facade
  1. Meet Satan , enter the house of God

  2. Three stages of the soul, three spaces of the church
  3. Let's walk through the church in 2006: Movie
External stimuli, internal change: Can guided imagination really change a person?

In case you are thinking of leaving lecture early, St. Ignatius has an exercise for you:

"[W]hen a thought of commiting a mortal sin comes to me (....) I resist it immediately, and it remains banished."(Spiritual Exercises, p. 134)