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  • This abstract describes a historically significant spiritual exhortation in the form of a letter, dated to the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century, authored by Father Master Ignatius, Superior General and First Founder of the Society of Jesus, addressed to the Brothers of the College of Jesus in Coimbra, Portugal. The document comprises five manuscript pages containing theological, pedagogical, and ascetical instruction grounded in Ignatian spirituality. It articulates the distinctive Jesuit vocation as a ‘special’ calling to holiness and intellectual formation, emphasising the inseparability of rigorous study in the liberal arts and disciplined cultivation of virtue for the glory of God and the salvation of souls. Key themes include the necessity of obedience as the safeguard against both spiritual tepidity and excessive fervour, the doctrine of *caritas ordinata*, the four principal means of neighbourly assistance (instruction, personal sanctity, exemplary life, and intercessory prayer), and the integration of academic labour into apostolic service. Marginal annotations indicate contemporary reader engagement, though some remain illegible. The text employs scriptural citation, patristic and scholastic references, and technical spiritual terminology—including *mediocritas deformitatis* and *odor sanctus*—reflecting its intended use within a formal Jesuit educational and formative context. This document serves as primary evidence for the transmission of Ignatian ideals in the Iberian Peninsula during the Counter-Reformation.

Last update from database: 5/20/26, 10:01 PM (UTC)