J. A. Appleyard, S.J., vice president, University Mission and Ministry, Boston College
A thoughtful, clever, and very practical introduction to Ignatian spirituality.
J. Michael Sparough, S.J., director of Charis Ministries, Ignatian Spirituality for Young Adults
A valuable contribution to contemporary writing on Ignatian spirituality. Muldoon does a fine job.
Book Description
We live in a body-conscious society with people filling gyms in an attempt to get, and stay, physically fit. The Ignatian Workout promotes the importance of achieving spiritual fitness and presents a dynamic program of ìworkoutsî based on Saint Ignatius Loyolaís Spiritual Exercises. Designed for reading, reflection, and prayer, The Ignatian Workout includes a brief history of St. Ignatius and an overview of the Spiritual Exercises. Based on a four-week program, originally designed as a 30-day retreat, each week focuses on different elements of the mystery of the Christian faith. Full of practical suggestions for becoming spiritually fit, the book concludes with a complete resource guide of books and Web sites for continued study.
About the Author
Tim Muldoon is a theologian, an experienced spiritual director, and a professor of religious studies at Mount Aloysius College in Pennsylvania. He currently resides in Indiana, Pennsylvania.
The Ignatian Workout: Daily Spiritual Exercises for a Healthy Faith SYNOPSIS
We live in a body-conscious society with people filling gyms in an attempt to get, and stay, physically fit. The Ignatian Workout promotes the importance of achieving spiritual fitness and presents a dynamic program of 'workouts' based on Saint Ignatius Loyolaᄑs Spiritual Exercises.
Designed for reading, reflection, and prayer, The Ignatian Workout includes a brief history of St. Ignatius and an overview of the Spiritual Exercises. Based on a four-week program, originally designed as a 30-day retreat, each week focuses on different elements of the mystery of the Christian faith. Full of practical suggestions for becoming spiritually fit, the book concludes with a complete resource guide of books and Web sites for continued study.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Using athletics as a metaphor for the spiritual life is not exactly a new idea, but Muldoon, a theologian who teaches religious studies at Mount Aloysius College in Pennsylvania, attempts to give it a fresh treatment in this handbook based on the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius. The exercises are a time-honored method of self-examination and reflection that Muldoon believes to be especially well-suited to postmoderns in search of answers to life's most basic questions. In drawing parallels between the life of prayer and his own experience of physical exercise, which is largely centered around the sport of rowing, Muldoon begins by explaining the idea of the spiritual workout, offering two introductory exercises as illustrations: the spiritual autobiography and the "examen," a kind of rigorous self-inventory. He also offers helpful tips and practices such as using the imagination in prayer and practicing the presence of God, then launches into four "workouts" that consist largely of guided reflections on key Bible passages. In these, he does best when he sticks to traditional texts. His effort to put a contemporary spin on the story of the prodigal son, for example, falls a bit flat as he tries to substitute a party-loving college dropout for the son who squandered his inheritance in the gospel account. That aside, Muldoon has put together a down-to-earth, practical guide that will be useful for novices making forays into the spiritual life. (June) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.