When Luke Larson and his wife Evie embarked on a 500-mile pilgrimage across northern Spain, their purpose was to experience walking as a way of keeping company with Jesus and his companions, of both earth and heaven, such as Saint Ignatius of Loyola. Keeping Company is filled with personal, luminously candid, and often amusing stories of the couple’s experiences along the Way of Saint James. More than anything, this book invites you to step off the treadmill of self-effort in your quest to experience God more intimately through the spiritual practice of walking, literally, with God.
Larson weaves the story of his journey on the Camino de Santiago de Compostela along side the story of Saint Ignatius and The Spiritual Exercises. He talks about the major events and places in the life of Ignatius while also hitting on major aspects of the exercises. Since I am a person who enjoys hiking, a follower of Jesus, and a participant in a 19th annotation of the exercises, Larson's book was one that I could not resist reading. Although I will probably never make a trip to Spain to walk The Camino, Larson showed me how I could walk with Ignatius regardless of where I live. I enjoyed reading "Keeping Company with Saint Ignatius: Walking the Camino de Santiago de Compostela" and recommend the book.
Luke reports back on a Camino he walked with his wife and how they handled the spiritual aspects of the journey, practices they followed and the theological inspirations that led to the journey itself. As a former seminarian and devotee of St. Ignatius, his spiritual focus is informative and motivating. This is not a chronological report of his camino. Most of the book, in fact, deals with more general questions regarding the use of spiritual practices to enhance one's journeys, whether on a geographic pilgrimage or not. He ends with a discussion of another pilgrimage he made with St. Ignatius as the focus.
Keeping Company.. is a beautifully written book about the pilgrimage of the Camino. The author wrote a descriptive and humorous account of the adventure with his wife and the other pilgrims along the way. I highly recommend this book, especially if you are interested in Ignatian spirituality and simple ways to grow closer to God.
I spent more than a year looking for a book like this. I have found countless travel guides and culture guides for the Camino, but this is the only spiritual guide I’ve found so far. To top it off, Larson explains his experience of and prayerful approach to the Camino in a beautiful and humble way. This book is a blessing for anyone discerning God’s question: “Would you like to take a walk?”
If you have seen the movie The Way, with Martin Sheen, you are familiar with the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. Pilgrims walk one of several routes, ranging from 100 kilometers to almost 500 miles. The author walked with his wife one of the longer routes, taking about two months. I keep thinking this would be great thing to experience, and it keeps coming to my attention; The son of some friends of our made the journey last year. Maybe it's the Holy Spirit's way of nudging me.
This book was really a spiritual journal, filled with the author's reflections on the spirituality of St.. Ignatius and how he felt the presence of St. Ignatius throughout his walk. I wish he had sprinkled in a few more practical items (like how far did they walk in an average day, did they train before hand, etc.), but there are apparently many guides available, so I understand his choosing to leave them out.
Even though this book left me wishing for more depth and more detail, if you are interested the pilgrimage to Compostela, I bet you will enjoy it.
I enjoyed reading about Larson and his wife's pilgrimage trek. To walk in the presence of Jesus and have that wholeness experience is something I desire and often have a sense of and seek to have continuously! Of course the author clearly suggests it can be anywhere, anytime, not only on an "official" pilgrimage.