I thank thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou
hast hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to
babes.
I certainly have not read every book that has been
written about St. Francis; I doubt that anyone has. But I think the best book
about him remains G.K. Chesterton’s. Not
that the book is easy going, at least for me. Paradox upon paradox upon
paradox. Reading Chesterton gives me a headache. But Chesterton himself is a paradox. It takes
one to know one. The strange thing about his book on St. Francis, like the one
on St. Thomas Aquinas, is that despite the fact that there are plenty of other books
about St. Francis that will provide you with many more historical details,
Chesterton seems to have penetrated to the essential and indispensable truth
about Francis: "It is the highest and holiest of the paradoxes that the
man who really knows he cannot pay his debt will be forever paying it."
The fact that St. Francis has often been
misunderstood is nothing but testimony to his determination as he said in the
First Rule of the Friars Minor ‘to follow the doctrine and footsteps of our
Lord Jesus Christ.’ Everyone has their own Jesus so everyone will have their
own Francis. But it is that ‘holiest and highest paradox’ which leads us to the
real Francis: ‘the man who really knows
he cannot pay his debt will be forever paying it’.
I suppose the first thing that most people like about
St. Francis is his love of animals and then maybe they imagine that he was a
kind of 12th Century version of Green Peace. He in fact did not love
animals; what he loved was creatures. Along with furry, winged, creeping things he loved Brother Sun and Sister Moon and most
extraordinary of all Sister Death. Why? Because all these created things
pointed him to the Creator of all things.
St. Francis has been deemed the patron saint of
Ecology but he also was once considered the patron saint of Italian Fascism. It is
probably better not to think of Francis in terms of a patron saint. In any case he knew as well, if not better, than any 12th
century scholastic philosopher that nothing created is permanent: it comes into
being and goes out of being. Strictly speaking only God is: unchanging, without beginning or end, unmoved
all motion’s source. Which is precisely
why he could embrace Lady Poverty. Created things are to be loved as what they
are: breadcrumbs leading us back to their Creator. They are gifts from God but
don’t try to stand on them because they won’t hold the weight and before you
know it the wind will blow them away. His fellow friars observed that the constant
prayer of Francis, what he always seemed to be muttering to himself, was Deus
meus et omnia – ‘My God and My All’.
Another really strange idea that modern folks
have about St. Francis is that he was constantly at odds with the Church. But
the Church was also a gift. Another
gift, another debt. In fact the century in which St. Francis lived was a
century of ecclesiastical reform headed not by someone nailing an ultimatum on a
Church door but by Pope Innocent III himself. What the Pope effected through
reform of canon law St. Francis effected through his life. St. Francis did
nothing without papal approval. The Office and Mass that he insisted his friars
use was that of the Roman Curia. It surprises me that they even allow Anglican
churches to be named after him. Francis had what one is bound to say is an embarrassing reverence for priests, not because he
refused to recognize clerical misbehavior but because he believed what the
Church believed about priests: He said to priests: ‘Look at your dignity, you
brothers who are priests, and be holy since He is holy. And ‘God gave me such faith and continues to give me such faith that
even if priests were to persecute me I would have recourse to them.’ ‘If it should
happen that I would meet at the same time some saint from heaven and any poor
priest, I would first show honor to the priest and quickly go to kiss his
hands’. One more gift and more mounting
debt.
In line with this was St. Francis’ love of the
Blessed Sacrament and his promotion of Eucharistic devotion: In a letter he
writes to the friars throughout the world: “Let the whole world tremble; let
heaven exult when Christ, the Son of the Living God, is on the altar in the
hands of the priest. O admirable height and stupendous condescension! O humble
sublimity! that the Lord of the universe, God and the Son
of God, so humbles Himself that for our salvation He hides Himself under a
morsel of bread.”
But, finally what most discredits the
imaginary Francis is his love of the Cross. Francis, when asked what is the greatest joy, replied to be rejected by your brothers, for them to say "we don't know you, go away". This sounds like madness until we remember that this is exactly what happened to Jesus. Jesus said in the same breath "I must go to Jerusalem' and "So must you."
The reason I think that Jesus granted to Francis the stigmata, the marks of the Lord’s passion on his hands and feet and side, is that he knew that this saint would run the danger of being to folks just a warm and cuddly kind of guy. Maybe not so much with oozing wounds. But for St. Francis like St. Paul, who also says that in his body he bears the marks of Jesus Christ: the greatest debt that we owe God is the death of his Son. ‘Far be from me to glory except in the Cross of Lord Jesus Christ’. That is the debt that we cannot pay but must be forever paying.
The reason I think that Jesus granted to Francis the stigmata, the marks of the Lord’s passion on his hands and feet and side, is that he knew that this saint would run the danger of being to folks just a warm and cuddly kind of guy. Maybe not so much with oozing wounds. But for St. Francis like St. Paul, who also says that in his body he bears the marks of Jesus Christ: the greatest debt that we owe God is the death of his Son. ‘Far be from me to glory except in the Cross of Lord Jesus Christ’. That is the debt that we cannot pay but must be forever paying.
So how do we do that -- paying forever the debt that cannot be paid. Just like St. Francis did, as he said on his deathbed : "Let
us begin, brothers, to serve the Lord God, for up until now we have done little
or nothing.” Always be ready to begin again.
I thank thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou
hast hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to
babes.
I think the first Franciscans to arrive in England were arrested as tramps, curiously.
ReplyDeleteA little Chesterton goes a long way.