Ignatius of Loyola vs. Gobnait

Yesterday, in a hotly contested matchup, Pandita Ramabai made it past William Wilberforce 55% to 45% to claim the second spot in the Faithful Four. She joins Martha of Bethany and awaits two more companions as we move ever closer to awarding the coveted 2019 Golden Halo.

On tap today we have Ignatius of Loyola vs. Gobnait. To get to this point, Ignatius made it past Tikhon of Zadonsk and Marina the Monk, while Gobnait defeated and Hrotsvitha and Paula of Rome.

Also, in a move of largesse reminiscent of the recently defeated Nichols of Myra, the Supreme Executive Committee has devised a method for giving away (yes, for free!) the last three remaining France Perkins Golden Halo mugs. Rather than donating them to the Lent Museum, they will be given away at random to three lucky winners. Click here for details. And if you gave up Facebook for Lent or for Zuckerberg, add not being eligible to your list of crosses to bear. Alas, it's Lent.

Ignatius of Loyola

Leo Tolstoy quite famously did not write in Anna Karenina that “tasteful saintly goods are all alike; every kitschy saintly good is kitschy in its own way.” But he should have – because it’s true. Year after year, Lent Madness digs for Saintly Kitsch, and you’d think, after ten years, we’d run out. You might begin to think that the jig is up, the game is run, the kitsch is kaput! Never fear, dear reader, never fear. When you have a saint as popular as Ignatius of Loyola, you’ll never be wanting for kitsch.

Perhaps you’ve seen the portraits of Ignatius from previous rounds and thought, “you know, he seems ok, but I don’t know I like the cut of his jib.” Well, for the low price of $9.00 on Etsy, you won’t have to look at Ignatius’ jib at all – because this Ignatius’ jib is covered with a BIG BUSHY BEARD! To be clear, while Ignatius did have a beard, and Ignatian spirituality does ask you what you desire, Ignatius is not Santa Claus. Sorry.

Maybe you’ve read Ignatius’ works, and know well that Ignatian spirituality centers in finding God in all things. But as you search for where God is moving in your life, you find yourself frustrated because you can’t peg down what Ignatius would think in a given situation. Oh, beloved, don’t worry. For a limited-time, you not only can peg Ignatius down, you can have Ignatius on a peg! ($25.91 on Etsy; void where prohibited; tax, title and license extra.)

 

If you’re trying to chase down Ignatius, then exercise is important. Physical exercise does the body good and leads to healthy living; the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius help us examine our desires, discern the movement of God in our lives, and find God in all things – giving us spiritual health. And thanks to the good folks at Zazzle, for $34.85, you can let folks know you’re working through the spiritual exercises as you do your physical exercise, with this snazzy “Exercising with Ignatius” tee-shirt.

 

The t-shirt shows our hero sitting happily with a cup of coffee. After all, if you’re going to find God in everyday life, you need to be sure to have your caffeine fix as you begin the day. Luckily, an Ignatius of Loyola knitted coffee cozy can keep your coffee hot and your hand cool! It’s only $16.95 on Etsy, and includes a quote Ignatius supposedly used with members of the Jesuit order – “Go forth and set the world on fire.” Just make sure your coffee isn’t fire-hot. That would be painful.

 

Ignatius sought to develop contemplatives in action – but even contemplatives in action need to rest. So as you wind down your day, pray your examen, and resolve to respond to God again tomorrow, you can nest your head one person’s paraphrase of Ignatius’ spirituality. Rest well. Tomorrow, there’s work to be done for the Greater Glory of God – AMDG!

-David Sibley

 

Gobnait

Saint Gobnait is one of the national saints of Ireland – her story is tied to the place where she waits for her resurrection. What a great reason to travel – a pilgrimage to picturesque Ballyvourney, in County Cork.

 

 

Once you’ve visited the church there you can continue with the other pilgrims to the ruins of Gobnait’s house, her gravesite, and pray for healing at Gobnait’s Well.

Or perhaps you are looking to get into the spirit of Gobnait a little more locally.

 

 

What better way to remember Gobnait than to make a home for her beloved bees! Remembering that saving the bees is saving God’s creation, why don’t we make more hives shaped like churches – reminders of the holy work of caring for creation.

If you provide a home for Gobnait’s bees, you will also want to provide them with food. As you plant you plant a bee-friendly garden, say prayers of intercession for those in need of healing and for our world.

Beeswax is often associated with Easter, as we light the new fire of the paschal candle. But with an artistic eye we could weave the wax form Gobnait’s bees into remembrances of every season, including Christmas.

Whether you make a pilgrimage to Ballyvourney, stay home and plant a bee garden, or fashion beautiful devotional art from beeswax, show your support for the Gobnait every day.

-David Hansen

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123 comments on “Ignatius of Loyola vs. Gobnait”

  1. I opened the link to read the kitschy offerings today, having already decided to vote for Gobnait of the Bees, partially because I’m in the process of planting a bee garden. However, the Ignatian kitsch got to me and won the day. Great job, David. I want one of those pegs! And I love the Daily Examen.

  2. I never heard of Gobnait before and I am a big fan of everything Irish and Celtic having my /Dna tested and finding I am 96% Irish and know all the words to Black Velvet Band. I did vote for Ignatius, however, but I must say that the writer of the Kitsch section for Gobnait did a phenomenal job finding and inventing stuff. Kudos!!

  3. To paraphrase the late-Mohamed Ali - "Gimme Ignatius, 'cause he floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee."

  4. Gobnait was the last thought I had before sleep last night, bees and gardens and her quirky name in my head. That made my vote clear when she came up for today .Call me crazy if you will!

  5. Gobnait's 'stuff' is honey sweet and gave me a chuckle but Ignatz kitsch made me laugh out loud. . . and you writers! Thank youfor sharing YOUR gifts with the rest of the Lent Madness community. How delightful and insightful!

  6. Because of the plight of bees in today's world, my vote goes to Gobnait. As people are spraying their lawns in the spring to kill dandelions, they do not realize that dandelions are a main source of food for the bees before flowers start blooming. The spray kills the bees. Save the bees! And vote for Gobnait while you're at it!!

  7. Have to vote for Gobnait with a beehive just newly established in an attempt to beat colony collapse this year. Maybe she will cause the deadly neonicotinoid pesticide to spill before it reaches the corn or whatever they put that stuff on, and our bees will make it through the season for a change. But I have to admit, her kitsch is pathetic!

    1. "Pathetic," from the Greek, means "filled with feeling." So, yes. Nothing says "sweet" like a beeswax baby Jesus.

  8. Can’t I vote for both of them? I’m drawn to Gobnait because she’s Irish, but I’m drawn to Ignatius Loyola because I have a cousin who’s a Jesuit. And at 50%-50%, there’s no underdog to support.

  9. Along with many others, I wish I could have voted for both.
    Our church shares space with the Newman Center, currently shepherded by a couple of delightful Jesuits. (And that was great kitsch!)
    My husband and I visited Ireland a couple of years ago and the photo of Gobnait's house/grave reminded me of some of the stone circles--thin places--we saw.
    So it's Gobnait, for those places where we sense the Holy.

  10. Ooh!! It’s a really tight race, and I completely understand why. I wanted to bot for both of them. . Even though the coffee cozy almost drove me to vote for Gobnait, my loyalty to Ignatious won out in the end. But... someone should definitely make a classier coffee cozy to commemorate Ignatious of Loyola. This one is much to... kitschy.

  11. I voted for Gobnaint. Ignatius and the Jesuits are instruments of God and have done god, but we can’t pretend missionaries and the Catholic Church have not caused immense harm in many cases.

    1. Thank you!

      Ignatius shouldn't bear unearned guilt for mistakes made by individuals belonging to the Order he founded.

  12. Gobnait's bees are not always honey and sweetness. I carry a needle to prevent anaphylactic shock in case one gets too friendly. I voted for her anyway and hope if I ever get stung, she will remember I voted for her and intercede.

  13. Gung by what Ignatius says, Whatever you are doing, that which makes you feel most alive, that is where God is, leads me to vote for Gobnait. Hmmm.

  14. How can I resist a sobriquet like Gobnait?
    Who can vote against her killer bees?
    All are well beside the well of Deborah -
    Her Irish peace will bring me to my knees!

    But how then can I turn against Ignatius?
    He makes me think and sets my heart on fire!
    How can I ever choose?
    Yet one of them must lose...
    Whose words and deeds will holy lives inspire?
    I think I must be loyal to Loyala;
    credit his theolog'cal emulsifier!

    1. "I think I must be loyal to Loyala"---Brilliant!!
      This and "Gobnait and Ignatius" will be going through my head today.

  15. The bees are in trouble, not of their own doing), because we have exploited them with pesticides, habitat destruction, etc. They need all the help we can give---sainthood of their patron should encourage us to honor Gobnait and in her name, petition the pesticide companies to also honor her by reducing or getting alternatives to their poisonous products.

    1. I recommend the group Beyond Pesticides.org. They have weekly missions involving emails to congresspersons, or commmittee chairs to advocate for some action to protect us from pesticides. It’s very easy to join and send the emails.

  16. Even though I have been to Ireland and visited Gobnait's well as well as the church in the photo, I had to vote for Ignatius. If this round is about kitsch then Ignatius has some great stuff! Truly a match up where I am happy with either winner.

  17. This is a terrible choice for me. I love Ireland, bees, and Gobnaits story. However, my Grandpa’s nickname for me when I was a little girl was “Ignatz”. I never figured out why, especially after he told me about the great man, but admit to a personal bias for I of L to win the halo this year...

  18. This was a difficult one for me. I love and admire them both .. that said, I secretly hope Ignatius pulls ahead!

  19. I finally decided that the irony of Ignatius’s winning a largely Anglican halo would be too delicious to ignore. Take that, St. Iggy, you misguided, holy person!

    1. Hmmm, not sure how that posted twice - perhaps it's a sign that Gobnait should win. But I didn't vote twice! I promise!

  20. From Ignatius' instructions to his people working amidst Protestants:
    "They should make efforts to make friends with the leaders of their opponents, as also with those who are most influential among the heretics … . They must try to bring them back from their error by sensitive skill and signs of love. … They should defend the Apostolic See and its authority, and attract people towards true obedience to it, in such a way as not to lose credibility, as ‘papists’, through ill-judged partisanship. On the contrary, their zeal in countering heresy must be of such a quality as to reveal love for the heretics themselves, and a compassionate desire for their salvation."

    1. So close! I went with Gobnait. She had a love of bees. We need to support "bee-loud glades."

    2. "the heretics"; beginning to formulate a desire, out of ardent love and zeal, to smack Ignaz across the face should I chance upon him in heaven, just my little way of setting the world on fire

      1. Ignaz and his ilk have never grasped the difference between heresy and schism. A smack could be the best way to go.

        1. Historical context, please! Nobody knew at the time that it was going to be a permanent schism.

          1. My point is that Anglicans are schismatics, not heretics. That was also the case in Ignatius’s day: perhaps even more so, as no additional articles of belief had been superimposed on the historical creeds. I believe that from the Orthodox point of view the Western Church, because of the addition of the “filioque” to the Nicene Creed, is both heretic and schismatic, but I’m quite out of my depth.

      2. But from his POV, the Protestants *were* heretics. I like that he's saying to try to change their ways with love instead of, you know, burn them at the stake.

        1. I think we can all agree that burning someone at the stake is a more serious offense than calling someone a heretic. However, words often have consequences, and words like "heretic" and "infidel" have an unfortunate history in Christianity and many other religions.

  21. Gobnait! Bee-cause. Flowers have brought joy and healing into my life, so I also like the idea of a bee-friendly garden. Another reason I voted for Gobnait was to honor a friend of mine who visited Gobnait's Well a few years ago.

  22. Ignatius! Ignatius! Remember if you were a fan of the tv show, M*A*S*H*, Fr. Mulcahey quoted St. Ignatius of Loyola often. If St. Ignatius could get Fr. Mulcahy, Hawkeye, Frank, Hot Lips, and all the rest though the Korean War, he is your Saint!

  23. I'm predicting an all female final four. On the other hand, Gobnait vs. Mary of Bethany will be a tough one I think.