St. Francis of Assisi
The patron saint of Italy, Francis of
Assisi, was an inspirational because he took the gospel
literally,—not in a narrow fundamentalist sense, but by actually
following all that Jesus said and did, joyfully, without limit, and
without a sense of self-importance.
Experiencing serious illness as a youth
has helped him to see the emptiness of his frolicking life.
While in prayer, he heard the words of Jesus saying: “Francis!
Everything you have loved and desired in the flesh it is your duty to
despise and hate, if you wish to know my will. And when you have
begun this, all that now seems sweet and lovely to you will become
intolerable and bitter, but all that you used to avoid will turn
itself to great sweetness and exceeding joy.”
From the cross in the neglected
field-chapel of San Damiano, Christ told him, “Francis, go out and
build up my house, for it is nearly falling down.” Francis became
the totally poor and humble workman.
He must have suspected a deeper meaning
to “build up my house.” But he would have been content to be for
the rest of his life the poor “nothing” man actually putting
brick on brick in abandoned chapels. He gave up all his possessions,
piling even his clothes before his earthly father—who was demanding
restitution for Francis’ “gifts” to the poor—so that he would
be totally free to say, “Our Father in heaven.” He was, for a
time, considered to be a religious fanatic, begging from door to door
when he could not get money for his work, evoking sadness or disgust
to the hearts of his former friends, ridicule from the unthinking.
But genuineness will tell. A few people
began to realize that this man was actually trying to be Christian.
He really believed what Jesus said: “Announce the kingdom! Possess
no gold or silver or copper in your purses, no traveling bag, no
sandals, no staff” (Luke 9:1-3).
Francis’ first rule for his followers
was a collection of texts from the Gospels. He had no intention of
founding an order, but once it began he protected it and accepted all
the legal structures needed to support it. His devotion and loyalty
to the Church were absolute and highly exemplary at a time when
various movements of reform tended to break the Church’s unity.
Francis was torn between a life devoted
entirely to prayer and a life of active preaching of the Good News.
He decided in favor of the latter, but always returned to solitude
when he could. He wanted to be a missionary in Syria or in Africa,
but was prevented by shipwreck and illness in both cases. He did try
to convert the sultan of Egypt during the Fifth Crusade.
During the last years of his relatively
short life, he died at 44, Francis was half blind and seriously ill.
Two years before his death he received the stigmata, the real and
painful wounds of Christ in his hands, feet and side.
On his deathbed, Francis said over and
over again the last addition to his Canticle of the Sun, “Be
praised, O Lord, for our Sister Death.” He sang Psalm 141, and at
the end asked his superior’s permission to have his clothes removed
when the last hour came in order that he could expire lying naked on
the earth, in imitation of his Lord.
Francis of Assisi was poor only that he
might be Christ-like. He recognized creation as another manifestation
of the beauty of God. In 1979, he was named patron of ecology. He did
great penance—apologizing to “Brother Body” later in life—that
he might be totally disciplined for the will of God. Francis’
poverty had a sister, Humility, by which he meant total dependence on
the good God. But all this was, as it were, preliminary to the heart
of his spirituality: living the gospel life, summed up in the charity
of Jesus and perfectly expressed in the Eucharist.
A prayer of St. Francis of Assisi:
"Lord, make me an instrument of
your peace; where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is
injury, pardon; where there is discord, union; where there is doubt,
faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
"O Divine Master, grant that I may
not so much seek to be consoled, as to console; to be understood, as
to understand; to be loved, as to love; for it is in giving that we
receive, it is in pardoning that we are pardoned, and it is in dying
that we are born to eternal life." Amen.
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