12th March 1622.
In 1540 Saint Ignatius and Saint Francis Xavier said goodbye in Rome, they never saw each other again, but their love for each other remained strong.
Xavier once wrote this to Ignatius:
“God our Lord knows how much my soul was consoled on receiving news of your life and health, which I cherish so highly…Your Holy Charity has written to me that you have a great desire to see me before you leave this life. God knows what an impression these words of great love made upon my soul, and how many tears they have cost me whenever I recall them; and it seems to me that I shall have this consolation since nothing is impossible to holy obedience”.
A little-known day of Jesuit thanksgiving was celebrated on March 12 to mark the canonizations of two of the most famous Jesuits: St. Ignatius of Loyola and St. Francis Xavier. Every year on that date, each Jesuit offers a special prayer or Mass of Thanksgiving for the gift of the saints’ canonizations, which occurred on March 12, 1622 — 66 years after the death of Ignatius and 70 years after the death of Xavier. The founder of the Society of Jesus, Ignatius lived as a pilgrim for many years but the most of his priestly life in a small room in Rome, directing the newly founded Society. Francis Xavier, one of the Society’s most well-known missionaries, lived most of his Jesuit life traveling around Asia, preaching and baptizing. Pope Gregory XV was responsible for canonizing the two Jesuits, and he held religious orders in high esteem. The pope was educated by the Jesuits at the “Collegio Romano,” the university founded by Ignatius in Rome that is now known as the Gregorian University. On the same day Ignatius and Francis Xavier were canonized, Pope Gregory XV also canonized Teresa of Avila, reformer of the Carmelites; Philip Neri, founder of the Oratorian Fathers; and Isidore of Madrid, a simple but devout farmer, now patron of farmers, peasants, day laborers and rural communities. The grouping of these five dissimilar saints took some by surprise and illustrated that there is no mold for being holy or even for becoming a canonized saint. Pope Gregory XV was never canonized, but he did keep his connection to the Jesuit saints. The pope was buried in the Church of Saint Ignatius in Rome when he died in 1623.
More info:
The Visionary (St. Ignatius of Loyola) and the Missionary (St. Francis Xavier)
http://www.ncregister.com/blog/dicamillo/the-visionary-st.-ignatius-of-loyola-and-the-missionary-st.-francis-xavier
Read Saint Francis letters to Saint Ignatius
https://catholicismpure.wordpress.com/2012/12/03/st-francis-xavier-letter-from-india-to-the-society-of-jesus-at-rome1543/
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