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St. Francis of Assisi
In 1182, Pietro Bernadone returned from a trip to
France to find out his wife had given birth to a
son. Far from being excited or apologetic because
he'd been gone, Pietro was furious because she'd had
his new son baptized Giovanni after John the
Baptist. The last thing Pietro wanted in his son was
a man of God -- he wanted a man of business, a cloth
merchant like he was, and he especially wanted a son
who would reflect his infatuation with France. So he
renamed his son Francesco -- which is the equivalent
of calling him Frenchman.
Francis enjoyed a very rich easy life growing up
because of his father's wealth and the
permissiveness of the times. From the beginning
everyone -- and I mean everyone -- loved Francis. He
was constantly happy, charming, and a born leader.
If he was picky, people excused him. If he was ill,
people took care of him. If he was so much of a
dreamer he did poorly in school, no one minded. In
many ways he was too easy to like for his own good.
No one tried to control him or teach him.
As he grew up, Francis became the leader of a crowd
of young people who spent their nights in wild
parties. Thomas of Celano, his biographer who knew
him well, said, "In other respects an exquisite
youth, he attracted to himself a whole retinue of
young people addicted to evil and accustomed to
vice." Francis himself said, "I lived in sin" during
that time.
Francis fulfilled every hope of Pietro's -- even
falling in love with France. He loved the songs of
France, the romance of France, and especially the
free adventurous troubadours of France who wandered
through Europe. And despite his dreaming, Francis
was also good at business. But Francis wanted
more..more than wealth. But not holiness! Francis
wanted to be a noble, a knight. Battle was the best
place to win the glory and prestige he longed for.
He got his first chance when Assisi declared war on
their longtime enemy, the nearby town of Perugia.
Most of the troops from Assisi were butchered in the
fight. Only those wealthy enough to expect to be
ransomed were taken prisoner. At last Francis was
among the nobility like he always wanted to be...but
chained in a harsh, dark dungeon. All accounts say
that he never lost his happy manner in that horrible
place. Finally, after a year in the dungeon, he was
ransomed. Strangely, the experience didn't seem to
change him. He gave himself to partying with as much
joy and abandon as he had before the battle.
The experience didn't change what he wanted from
life either: Glory. Finally a call for knights for
the Fourth Crusade gave him a chance for his dream.
But before he left Francis had to have a suit of
armor and a horse -- no problem for the son of a
wealthy father. And not just any suit of armor would
do but one decorated with gold with a magnificent
cloak. Any relief we feel in hearing that Francis
gave the cloak to a poor knight will be destroyed by
the boasts that Francis left behind that he would
return a prince.
But Francis never got farther than one day's ride
from Assisi. There he had a dream in which God told
him he had it all wrong and told him to return home.
And return home he did. What must it have been like
to return without ever making it to battle -- the
boy who wanted nothing more than to be liked was
humiliated, laughed at, called a coward by the
village and raged at by his father for the money
wasted on armor.
Francis' conversion did not happen over night. God
had waited for him for twenty-five years and now it
was Francis' turn to wait. Francis started to spend
more time in prayer. He went off to a cave and wept
for his sins. Sometimes God's grace overwhelmed him
with joy. But life couldn't just stop for God. There
was a business to run, customers to wait on.
One day while riding through the countryside,
Francis, the man who loved beauty, who was so picky
about food, who hated deformity, came face to face
with a leper. Repelled by the appearance and the
smell of the leper, Francis nevertheless jumped down
from his horse and kissed the hand of the leper.
When his kiss of peace was returned, Francis was
filled with joy. As he rode off, he turned around
for a last wave, and saw that the leper had
disappeared. He always looked upon it as a test from
God...that he had passed.
His search for conversion led him to the ancient
church at San Damiano. While he was praying there,
he heard Christ on the crucifix speak to him,
"Francis, repair my church." Francis assumed this
meant church with a small c -- the crumbling
building he was in. Acting again in his impetuous
way, he took fabric from his father's shop and sold
it to get money to repair the church. His father saw
this as an act of theft -- and put together with
Francis' cowardice, waste of money, and his growing
disinterest in money made Francis seem more like a
madman than his son. Pietro dragged Francis before
the bishop and in front of the whole town demanded
that Francis return the money and renounce all
rights as his heir.
The bishop was very kind to Francis; he told him to
return the money and said God would provide. That
was all Francis needed to hear. He not only gave
back the money but stripped off all his clothes --
the clothes his father had given him -- until he was
wearing only a hair shirt. In front of the crowd
that had gathered he said, "Pietro Bernadone is no
longer my father. From now on I can say with
complete freedom, 'Our Father who art in heaven.'"
Wearing nothing but castoff rags, he went off into
the freezing woods -- singing. And when robbers beat
him later and took his clothes, he climbed out of
the ditch and went off singing again. From then on
Francis had nothing...and everything.
Francis went back to what he considered God's call.
He begged for stones and rebuilt the San Damiano
church with his own hands, not realizing that it was
the Church with a capital C that God wanted
repaired. Scandal and avarice were working on the
Church from the inside while outside heresies
flourished by appealing to those longing for
something different or adventurous.
Soon Francis started to preach. (He was never a
priest, though he was later ordained a deacon under
his protest.) Francis was not a reformer; he
preached about returning to God and obedience to the
Church. Francis must have known about the decay in
the Church, but he always showed the Church and its
people his utmost respect. When someone told him of
a priest living openly with a woman and asked him if
that meant the Mass was polluted, Francis went to
the priest, knelt before him, and kissed his hands
-- because those hands had held God.
Slowly companions came to Francis, people who wanted
to follow his life of sleeping in the open, begging
for garbage to eat...and loving God. With
companions, Francis knew he now had to have some
kind of direction to this life so he opened the
Bible in three places. He read the command to the
rich young man to sell all his good and give to the
poor, the order to the apostles to take nothing on
their journey, and the demand to take up the cross
daily. "Here is our rule," Francis said -- as
simple, and as seemingly impossible, as that. He was
going to do what no one thought possible any more --
live by the Gospel. Francis took these commands so
literally that he made one brother run after the
thief who stole his hood and offer him his robe!
Francis never wanted to found a religious order --
this former knight thought that sounded too
military. He thought of what he was doing as
expressing God's brotherhood. His companions came
from all walks of life, from fields and towns,
nobility and common people, universities, the
Church, and the merchant class. Francis practiced
true equality by showing honor, respect, and love to
every person whether they were beggar or pope.
Francis' brotherhood included all of God's creation.
Much has been written about Francis' love of nature
but his relationship was deeper than that. We call
someone a lover of nature if they spend their free
time in the woods or admire its beauty. But Francis
really felt that nature, all God's creations, were
part of his brotherhood. The sparrow was as much his
brother as the pope.
In one famous story, Francis preached to hundreds of
birds about being thankful to God for their
wonderful clothes, for their independence, and for
God's care. The story tells us the birds stood still
as he walked among him, only flying off when he said
they could leave.
Another famous story involves a wolf that had been
eating human beings. Francis intervened when the
town wanted to kill the wolf and talked the wolf
into never killing again. The wolf became a pet of
the townspeople who made sure that he always had
plenty to eat.
Following the Gospel literally, Francis and his
companions went out to preach two by two. At first,
listeners were understandably hostile to these men
in rags trying to talk about God's love. People even
ran from them for fear they'd catch this strange
madness! And they were right. Because soon these
same people noticed that these barefoot beggars
wearing sacks seemed filled with constant joy. They
celebrated life. And people had to ask themselves:
Could one own nothing and be happy? Soon those who
had met them with mud and rocks, greeted them with
bells and smiles.
Francis did not try to abolish poverty, he tried to
make it holy. When his friars met someone poorer
than they, they would eagerly rip off the sleeve of
their habit to give to the person. They worked for
all necessities and only begged if they had to. But
Francis would not let them accept any money. He told
them to treat coins as if they were pebbles in the
road. When the bishop showed horror at the friars'
hard life, Francis said, "If we had any possessions
we should need weapons and laws to defend them."
Possessing something was the death of love for
Francis. Also, Francis reasoned, what could you do
to a man who owns nothing? You can't starve a
fasting man, you can't steal from someone who has no
money, you can't ruin someone who hates prestige.
They were truly free.
Francis was a man of action. His simplicity of life
extended to ideas and deeds. If there was a simple
way, no matter how impossible it seemed, Francis
would take it. So when Francis wanted approval for
his brotherhood, he went straight to Rome to see
Pope Innocent III. You can imagine what the pope
thought when this beggar approached him! As a matter
of fact he threw Francis out. But when he had a
dream that this tiny man in rags held up the tilting
Lateran basilica, he quickly called Francis back and
gave him permission to preach.
Sometimes this direct approach led to mistakes that
he corrected with the same spontaneity that he made
them. Once he ordered a brother who hesitated to
speak because he stuttered to go preach half-naked.
When Francis realized how he had hurt someone he
loved he ran to town, stopped the brother, took off
his own clothes, and preached instead.
Francis acted quickly because he acted from the
heart; he didn't have time to put on a role. Once he
was so sick and exhausted, his companions borrowed a
mule for him to ride. When the man who owned the
mule recognized Francis he said, "Try to be as
virtuous as everyone thinks you are because many
have a lot of confidence in you." Francis dropped
off the mule and knelt before the man to thank him
for his advice.
Another example of his directness came when he
decided to go to Syria to convert the Moslems while
the Fifth Crusade was being fought. In the middle of
a battle, Francis decided to do the simplest thing
and go straight to the sultan to make peace. When he
and his companion were captured, the real miracle
was that they weren't killed. Instead Francis was
taken to the sultan who was charmed by Francis and
his preaching. He told Francis, "I would convert to
your religion which is a beautiful one -- but both
of us would be murdered."
Francis did find persecution and martyrdom of a kind
-- not among the Moslems, but among his own
brothers. When he returned to Italy, he came back to
a brotherhood that had grown to 5000 in ten years.
Pressure came from outside to control this great
movement, to make them conform to the standards of
others. His dream of radical poverty was too harsh,
people said. Francis responded, "Lord, didn't I tell
you they wouldn't trust you?"
He finally gave up authority in his order -- but he
probably wasn't too upset about it. Now he was just
another brother, like he'd always wanted.
Francis' final years were filled with suffering as
well as humiliation. Praying to share in Christ's
passion he had a vision received the stigmata, the
marks of the nails and the lance wound that Christ
suffered, in his own body.
Years of poverty and wandering had made Francis ill.
When he began to go blind, the pope ordered that his
eyes be operated on. This meant cauterizing his face
with a hot iron. Francis spoke to "Brother Fire":
"Brother Fire, the Most High has made you strong and
beautiful and useful. Be courteous to me now in this
hour, for I have always loved you, and temper your
heat so that I can endure it." And Francis reported
that Brother Fire had been so kind that he felt
nothing at all.
How did Francis respond to blindness and suffering?
That was when he wrote his beautiful Canticle of the
Sun that expresses his brotherhood with creation in
praising God.
Francis never recovered from this illness. He died
on October 4, 1226 at the age of 45 and was
canonized in 1228 by Pope Gregorio IX. Francis is
considered the founder of all Franciscan orders and
the patron saint of ecologists and merchants.
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