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Spiritual Exercises My Path to Heaven: A Young Persons Guide to the Faith St. Ignatius did not plan his retreat for children, although it stands to reason that children, too, would benefit from a spiritual retreat. For, it is truly when they are young that many first hear the call from God to their vocation, and every vocation implies a mission, a direction and challenge, commitment and risk. Moreover, youth is the time of maturing bodies and minds, when the temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil are beginning to be a part of their lives and imaginations (temptations which, if given into, will cost them much. Children thus need encouragement, at such a time, from parents and godparents to live a life of faith according to Gods will. So too parents need, as well, special aids of spiritual beauty to foster their childrens inner (and outer) life of virtue. And now these parents may receive a gift to help them. Geoffrey Bliss, S.J., attentive to the spiritual needs of children and the Lords command to let the children come to me, wrote, in 1936, A Retreat with Saint Ignatius: In Pictures for Children. Father Bliss edited the Messenger of the Sacred Heart and the Childrens Messenger. The book was written especially for the child Crusaders of the Apostleship of Prayer (or League of the Sacred Heart of Jesus). Sophia Institute Press has now reprinted the book under the title My Path to Heaven: A Young Persons Guide to the Faith. It is a gem. Father Bliss distills the four weeks of the Exercises into twelve meditations: Made for God; the Best Way of Life; the Three Sins; My Own Sins; the Call of a King; the Incarnation; the Two Standards; the Election; the Agony in the Garden; the Cross of Jesus; Jesus the Consoler; How to Love God. Each meditation is accompanied by an intricate, black and white illustration. The illustrations are by Caryll Houselander, the well-known author of The Reed of God, A Rocking-Horse Catholic, and Wood of the Cradle, Wood of the Cross. The illustrations and the text have been finely crafted together. The text directs the reader to look closely at the illustrations, and looking into the illustrations the reader is drawn to again read the text with care. For example, the illustrations show a young boy, with a cross on his clothes (a child crusader), making his way in life, making choices that will help him to get to heaven. The devil and his temptations are also in the picture, as they are in life. The illustrations are truly beautiful, so that a childs attention is immediately drawn into them and thus better focused upon the path the young crusader is taking. The meditations are followed by questions to be answered yes or no. These also cause the young reader to consider again thoughtfully, and prayerfully, the text and illustrations of the meditation. Likewise, the appendix, which highlights a selection of small figures from the illustrations, invites the young reader to return to the meditations in order to find these figures in the illustration and to reflect, once more, on their meaning. The charming illustrations and the simple, clear language make the book a spiritual treasure for children, just as the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius are a treasure for adults. Patricia Steiger is responsible for art research for The Catholic Faith magazine. |
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