For
Ignatius, indifference was a means to reach the higher goal of the greater
good, and so Ignatius would be indifferent to success or failure, riches or
poverty, good health or sickness in order to achieve the greater good, which
was always the greater glory of God.
Often in
our lives we are disappointed when things do not go the way we would like them
to go, when things do not happen the way we want them to happen. It is
specially at times like these and with the grace of God at all times in our
lives, that we need to develop an attitude of Ignatian indifference, which does
not mean complacency, but a total acceptance of the outcome of any situation
knowing full well that it fits in perfectly with God’s plan for us.
This attitude
must so permeate our being that we are able to say with St. Paul – “I have
learned to be content in whatever situation I am… I can do all things in him
who strengthens me”.
Through the
intercession of St. Ignatius we pray for the grace to do our best at every
moment of every day and rest in the knowledge that God will do the rest.
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