An Invitation into Your Imagination: Spiritual Exercises for a New Semester

This week’s post relies on the spiritual wisdom of Jesuit founder St. Ignatius of Loyola and invites us to use our imaginations as we begin this semester.  Photo credit: Jesuit and Ignatian Spirituality Australia

One of the core purposes of the SCS Mission in Motion blog is to help make connections between the teaching, learning, and service happening across the School and the living spiritual tradition of the Jesuits and their founder St. Ignatius of Loyola. The source for this spiritual wisdom is the Spiritual Exercises, a structured retreat designed by St. Ignatius that invites retreatants into greater and greater interior depth and growing union with God through contemplation and meditation. What remains such an enduring insight of the Exercises is that one of the surest paths to spiritual transformation comes through the imagination. St. Ignatius encourages retreatants to imagine themselves as active characters in the Gospel scenes that they are contemplating in prayer. But instead of potentially getting lost in the imaginative depths, Ignatius puts up some conditions about how to enter the imagination and ensures that the inner work of imaginative prayer should be discussed with a spiritual director or guide. 

This Labor Day weekend, as the new semester is now underway, I invite us to turn our attention to our imaginations. Do you desire deeper reflection about how to imagine yourself journeying the next few months at Georgetown in ways that bring you closer to your personal and professional purpose? This feels like an opportune time for such reflection before the work of the semester begins to accumulate. St. Ignatius offered some still very relevant suggestions for how to enter into the imagination that I would like to share with you. 

  • Take a moment to pause and grow quiet. Settle into your breathing and notice your body relaxing. When you feel grounded in quiet, I invite you to picture yourself from someone else’s perspective (perhaps a dear friend, family member, or even God). What does this other see about you when they look at you? How does it feel to be seen from another’s perspective? What do you notice about their gazing at you? How does this feel? 
  • In your imagination, relive in the present moment all the significant events of your life to this point. In these moments of quiet, I invite you to linger on the most important events that come up. Is there a single moment from your story of life that rises to the surface? What is the importance to you of this moment? Does it bring you peace? Or does it challenge you in some ways? Try this exercise over multiple days. Is there a pattern to the life events that show up in your imagination? 
  • St. Ignatius suggests that one technique of making discerned choices in the present is to imagine how you might interpret a present choice from a place in the future. Is there a choice that you are considering in your life right now? It might be a choice that concerns how you spend your time on a daily basis. Or it might be a bigger choice about your vocation (job, family, community involvement, etc.). As you contemplate this choice, how might your much older self in the future look back and assess your approach to this decision? 

One of my motivations for sharing these reflective suggestions is to encourage all of us to imagine more deeply the possibilities of making the most of our experience at Georgetown. As a student, faculty, or staff member, are there invitations and opportunities at the University that you want to pursue? Are there programs, events, communities, and spaces at Georgetown that you want to engage and learn about? You might take a few moments and scan the list of incredible events happening at the University. You might review the spiritual accompaniment resources offered at SCS and across Georgetown. Wherever your journey into the imagination leads you, I wish you peace and rest as you make your way.