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Our Parish

St. Ignatius Loyola Parish is noted for its warmth and hospitality. We come together as a family to serve God, our community and each other with the love of Jesus Christ.

Welcome new parishioners!  To be a registered member of our parish is to have a sense of belonging to a community of faith.  Please introduce yourself/family to the pastor and register as soon as possible.  Registration forms are available in the church office.

 


Location

regional map of Erin MillsSt. Ignatius Loyola Roman Catholic Church is located just west of Toronto in the beautiful city of Mississauga, a suburb of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Specifically, we are in the southwest area of the city, near the intersection of Burnhamthorpe Road West and Erin Mills Parkway.

Our address is:

2300 Burnhamthorpe Rd.W. Mississauga, Ontario, Canada L5L 3T6
Phone: (905) 820-1444
 
 
 
 
 

 
History of Our Parish
 

Our Church is named after St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556), the founder of the Society of Jesus (The Jesuits). His purpose in life was to serve God.

His Eminence, Gerald Emmett Cardinal Carter, signed the Decree of Erection for the Parish, in the Erin Mills area of Mississauga, on January 18th, 1982.

Father Des O'Neil was appointed founding Pastor on March 1st, 1982 and took up residence on that day. We had no Church building at that time and for the first five years we celebrated Mass in the gymnasium of St. Ignatius Loyola High School.

The sod turning ceremony took place on Sunday, August 24th, 1986 and construction began on September 3rd of that same year. We celebrated the first Mass in our new Church on July 25th, 1987.

A solid base for a vibrant community was established from the beginning. We have had many fine Priests through the years tending to our spiritual needs, and we have kept growing in faith through participation.

 

St. Ignatius of LoyolaSt. Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556)

Saint Ignatius of Loyola, born in 1491, died July 31, 1556, was the founder of the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits. He was born into a noble Basque family at the Loyola family castle near San Sebastian in northern Spain. He was educated at the royal court of Castile. While in the service of the viceroy of Navarre, Ignatius received a leg wound in a battle with the French in 1521. Although not very religious, he was forced through boredom to read a life of Christ while convalescing. Reflection on this reading brought about a profound change in his religious attitude.

Once recovered, Ignatius decided to set out on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. First, however, he stopped at the famed Benedictine abbey of Montserrat in Catalonia, where he dedicated himself to God. He then spent nearly a year in a spiritual retreat at nearby Manresa. Here he had the mystical experience that would be later developed into his method of spirituality known as the Spiritual Exercises. He also discovered the orientation of his life's work. He traveled on as a poor man and beggar to Rome, to Venice, and finally to Jerusalem.

After his return to Spain, Ignatius studied Latin at Barcelona (1524-26) and continued his schooling with the study of philosophy at Alcala (1526-27) and at Salamanca (1527). In 1528 he began his theological training at Paris. There he gathered his first associates, six in all (including Saint Francis Xavier), who together took vows of poverty and chastity at Montmartre in 1534. They were ordained in 1537.

The group wished to work in the Holy Land, but Europe's wars with Ottoman Turkey prevented them. As an alternative, they decided to offer their services to the Pope. They were received (1538) by Pope Paul III, and Ignatius drew up the rule of life for a new religious order, which was approved by Paul in 1540. Ignatius became the first general of the Society of Jesus.

By the time of Ignatius's death in 1556, the society had spread widely and had over a thousand members. Ignatius and his order had become a major factor in the Counter-Reformation. Besides his Spiritual Exercises, Ignatius also dictated an autobiography, wrote the Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, and left several thousand letters. His great theme was the service of God and God's greater glory. Ignatius was canonized in 1622 and is the patron of spiritual retreats. His feast day is July 31.