When images of Saint Ignatius depict him carrying a book, the motto is often inscribed within—representative of the
religious writings of the saint. This phrase is the motto of many Jesuit educational institutions, including eight of the twenty-eight members of the
Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, and many high schools worldwide, including, St. George's College in Jamaica. In
Georgetown University's Gaston Hall, the phrase is followed by
inque hominum salutem, producing a longer phrase: "For the greater glory of God and the salvation of humanity." Typical of the buildings of many Jesuit institutions, the cornerstones of those on
Fordham University's campus bear the inscribed abbreviation “AMDG”, and the school's University Church hosts the 2,776-pipe “Maior Dei Gloria” organ, which derives its name from the motto. It once was common for students at Jesuit schools and universities to write the initials at the tops of their pages, to remind them that even their schoolwork ought to be dedicated to the glory of God. The abbreviation was frequently included in the signatures of
Pope John Paul II. The motto of the Catholic fraternity
Alpha Delta Gamma is
Ad Dei Gloriam, which translates to "For the Glory of God." This motto is the origin of fraternity's name, as the Roman initials "ADG" are rendered in Greek with the letters alpha, delta, and gamma. In
High Church Anglican contexts the phrase is also used, and it appears in initials (A.M.D.G.) on official church memorials to the soldiers of
Great Britain and Ireland who fell in
France and
Belgium during the
First World War. It is repeatedly quoted by the Jesuit character in
Flann O'Brien's book
The Hard Life. Anglo-Catholic modern composer Sir
Edward Elgar used it as the dedication of his setting of
Cardinal Newman's poem
The Dream of Gerontius. In 1939,
Benjamin Britten wrote a choral piece
A.M.D.G. (Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam) of seven settings of
Gerard Manley Hopkins. In 2014, American
liturgical composer,
Dan Schutte wrote the piece
Ad Maiorem Dei Gloriam for worship hymnals and missals.
Ad majorem Dei gloriam appears in the credits of
Martin Scorsese's movie about Jesuits in Japan,
Silence. The 2000 novel
La carta esférica by
Arturo Pérez-Reverte and
its 2007 film version deal with the wreck of the
Dei Gloria, a fictional ship freighted by the Jesuits. The Grand Inquisitor in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov uses the motto via the character Ivan. ==See also==