Readings & Reflections: Friday of the Twenty-sixth Week in Ordinary Time & St. Francis of Assisi, October 4,2019

Francis was born in 1182 A.D. in Assisi, Italy. Widespread heresy, scandals among the clergy, and a decline in attendance threatened the Church of Francis’ day. The son of a rich cloth merchant, Francis converted to a life of prayer in his early twenties. In a dream, God told him, “Go and repair my church, which, as you can see, is in ruins,” Francis began rebuilding the crumbling structure of San Damiano. But his great work of renewal was the new form of life he embraced in 1208 A.D. in which Christ sends his disciples forth, telling them to take “no sack for the journey, or a second tunic, or sandals, or walking stick” (Mt 10:10). Immediately, Francis went out to preach on the streets of Assisi as Christ instructed. His radical poverty and passionate preaching drew five thousand men to the Friars Minor in the next twelve years. A young Clare of Assisi came to him, too; she became the superior of the contemplative Poor Clares. At he end of his life, Francis received the stigmata, a sign of intimate union with the Savior. Francis died in 1226 A.D. in Assisi, and was canonized just two years later.
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Opening Prayer
May your light shine through me that others may see your truth and love and find hope and peace in you.” Amen.
Reading 1 BAR 1:15-22
During the Babylonian captivity, the exiles prayed:
“Justice is with the Lord, our God;
and we today are flushed with shame,
we men of Judah and citizens of Jerusalem,
that we, with our kings and rulers
and priests and prophets, and with our ancestors,
have sinned in the Lord’s sight and disobeyed him.
We have neither heeded the voice of the Lord, our God,
nor followed the precepts which the Lord set before us.
From the time the Lord led our ancestors out of the land of Egypt
until the present day,
we have been disobedient to the Lord, our God,
and only too ready to disregard his voice.
And the evils and the curse that the Lord enjoined upon Moses, his servant,
at the time he led our ancestors forth from the land of Egypt
to give us the land flowing with milk and honey,
cling to us even today.
For we did not heed the voice of the Lord, our God,
in all the words of the prophets whom he sent us,
but each one of us went off
after the devices of his own wicked heart,
served other gods,
and did evil in the sight of the Lord, our God.”
The word of the Lord.
Responsorial Psalm PS 79:1B-2, 3-5, 8, 9
(9) For the glory of your name, O Lord, deliver us.
O God, the nations have come into your inheritance;
they have defiled your holy temple,
they have laid Jerusalem in ruins.
They have given the corpses of your servants
as food to the birds of heaven,
the flesh of your faithful ones to the beasts of the earth.
R. For the glory of your name, O Lord, deliver us.
They have poured out their blood like water
round about Jerusalem,
and there is no one to bury them.
We have become the reproach of our neighbors,
the scorn and derision of those around us.
O LORD, how long? Will you be angry forever?
Will your jealousy burn like fire?
R. For the glory of your name, O Lord, deliver us.
Remember not against us the iniquities of the past;
may your compassion quickly come to us,
for we are brought very low.
R. For the glory of your name, O Lord, deliver us.
Help us, O God our savior,
because of the glory of your name;
Deliver us and pardon our sins
for your name’s sake.
R. For the glory of your name, O Lord, deliver us.
Gospel
Lk 10:13-16
Jesus said to them,
“Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida!
For if the mighty deeds done in your midst
had been done in Tyre and Sidon,
they would long ago have repented,
sitting in sackcloth and ashes.
But it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon
at the judgment than for you.
And as for you, Capernaum, ‘Will you be exalted to heaven?
You will go down to the netherworld.’
Whoever listens to you listens to me.
Whoever rejects you rejects me.
And whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.”
The Gospel of the Lord.
Reflection 1 – Woe to you Chorazin and Bethsaida
The cities of Chorazin and Bethsaida lay near Capernaum on the northern border of the Sea of Galilee. Jesus spent most of His time teaching and healing the people in these areas. His ministry was focused on these key cities and I consider it a great privilege for their people to be directly ministered and taught by Jesus.
But this privilege was accompanied by a greater responsibility which they were not able to live up to. They failed to respond to God ‘s Word. Their hard and stubborn hearts could not comprehend Who Jesus was. The arrogance in their hearts led them not only to reject Him but to persecute Him and in time, crucify Him on the Cross. Certainly, God’s very own could not act on His Word much more share it with the rest of the world.
This is then a reminder to all that being privileged entails a lot of responsibilities. Being with the Lord means living for God and sharing Him with everyone and much more. Being a leader in community is being the least, the last of all and the servant of all! The privilege of being a Christian leader entails not only leading, directing, managing and empowering God’s people but loving, sharing and caring for them- being Christ to them.
Today we may all be considered very privileged in lot of ways. Despite the gloom and doom of our present day economy, vast industry cutbacks, rising unemployment and the rising terrorism worldwide and an atmosphere of grim pessimism from all over, we may still be considered the most blessed among all generations. Amidst the outpouring of God ‘s grace upon us, have we really acted upon God and His call the way He wants us to?
Many of us pay more attention to the bad news on television than to the Good News of Jesus. We are all better students of world politics, public polls and Wall Street than we are of God ‘s Word. We have forgotten that it is still God Who is in charge and it is God ‘s sovereign hand which will prevail and His prophetic plan which we should closely look into.
Let us then look into our hearts and check how faithful we have been to God and His call. Let us be reminded of the words of Jesus Himself: “It will go ill with you, Chorazin! And just as ill with you, Bethsaida! If the miracles worked in your midst had occurred in Tyre and Sidon, they would long ago have reformed in sackcloth and ashes. It will go easier on the day of judgment for Tyre and Sidon than for you. And as for you, Capernaum, ‘ Are you to be exalted to the skies? You shall be hurled down to the realm of death! ‘ ”
Feeling like being exalted to the skies… beware for the realm of death may be upon all of us! Complacency can cause us to believe what is not true and reject God and His Word especially amidst the heights of success of God ‘s own creation!
Have we as faithful believers heard God’s Word and acted on it… have we received our Lord’s call to repentance with hearts that are open to the transforming grace of our Lord?
Have we as a community responded upon what the larger Church has envisioned in the last several years to be our role in our Lord’s vineyard?
As we lead God’s people, let us not abuse the authority and power vested upon us. Let us be reminded always of our Lord’s words: “Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the mighty deeds done in your midst had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would long ago have repented, sitting in sackcloth and ashes. But it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the judgment than for you.
Direction
To hear God ‘s Word means to act respond to His call.
Prayer
Heavenly Father, give us the grace to respond to your call and abide by your will. In Jesus we pray Amen.
Reflection 2 – Behold, I am of little account
The Book of Job deals with the theme of God’s Providence; it shows, according to Saint Thomas Aquinas, that human affairs are ruled by divine providence. One of the difficulties that the book has to address is an argument against divine providence: the fact that just men seem to be afflicted with evil without cause.
Job’s three friends, Eliphaz, Bildad and Zophar all tried to figure out why Job, a just and virtuous man has suffered so many grave afflictions. Eliphaz, for example, holds that Job’s suffering has to be a punishment from God on account of Job’s sins (4:7,17). He asked rhetorically: Has anyone who was innocent perished? Can moral man be righteous before God? Happy, he says, is the man whom God reproves. Therefore Job should not despise the chastening of God the Almighty. God will deliver Job from his troubles. Job answers that he does not understand where he has erred or what wrong he spoke (6:24,30). He maintains his integrity throughout the conversation.
After Job’s three friends finish, a fourth person, a young man named Elihu speaks. He was angry at Job because he justified himself rather than God; he was angry at the three friends because they found no answer to the problem and declared that Job was in the wrong (32:2-3). Elihu argues that God speaks to man in order to turn man aside from evil deeds and to cut off pride from man. He does this to keep man from falling into the Pit and losing his life. When chastened by pain, man turns to God in prayer and enters into God’s presence with joy and recounts to men his salvation (33:26). God is just and Job is wrong to proclaim his self-righteousness.
After Elihu speaks to Job, God himself addresses Job. He answers out of the whirlwind. First, God proclaims his power, manifested in his creation. This power greatly surpasses Job, who was not there when God laid the foundation of the world, who did not set the limits of the sea, who does not have power over day and night, and who has limited knowledge of the animals of the earth.
Job can only respond: “Behold, I am of small account; what shall I answer you?”. Job remains in silence and awaits God’s word. This time, God asks Job why he has challenged Him, why he has condemned Him so that he can be justified. Job can only respond to God with humility and repentance. He says: “I have uttered what I did not understand; I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes”. The Lord accepts Job’s repentance, rebukes Job’s three friends and restores Job’s fortunes twofold.
The Book of Job, then, does not come to a definitive answer about the problem of why good men and women suffer. However, it does affirm two basic truths: on the one hand, it affirms God’s power, justice and wisdom. All things are in God’s hands, he acts with justice and guides all things. He created them and governs them. On the other hand, man should not be self-righteous or think he understands all things. Contemplating God’s creation and the fact that man himself is one of God’s creatures should lead to humility of heart and filial trust in God.
With the coming of Jesus Christ and his Passion and death, a more complete understanding of the problem of suffering is possible. Because of his sin, man is in need of redemption. Jesus is the innocent one, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world and forges a New Covenant that can never be broken. The New Covenant includes the forgiveness of sins, the food for Eternal Life, and the purifying Blood of Christ.
This is the Good News that Jesus brought and preached. Today, in Luke’s Gospel, Jesus condemns the cities that reject him and the message preached by the seventy disciples. Tyre and Sidon were Phoenician cities which were often the object of judgment by the prophets of old. However, neither city was privileged to witness the mighty works that the towns of Galilee – Chorazin, Bethsaida and Capernaum – saw. Had the Phoenician cities seen the mighty works of Jesus and his disciples, they would have repented. The three cities of Galilee, however, refused to believe. They heard the Word, but did not understand it, and, instead of welcoming the Word, they rejected it.
Today’s Liturgy of the Word is both a warning and an invitation. It warns us about the danger of a prideful heart that justifies itself and a hardened heart that refuses to believe. The invitation, then, is to become like a child, who is simple of heart and to welcome the Word of God in faith and love. – Read the source: http://www.zenit.org/en/articles/daily-homily-behold-i-am-of-little-account
Reflection 3 – He who hears you hears me
If Jesus were to visit your community today, what would he say? Would he issue a warning like the one he gave to Chorazin and Bethsaida? And how would you respond? Wherever Jesus went he did mighty works to show the people how much God had for them. Chorazin and Bethsaida had been blessed with the visitation of God. They heard the good news and experienced the wonderful works which Jesus did for them. Why was Jesus upset with these communities? The word woe is also translated as alas. It is as much as an expression of sorrowful pity as it is of anger.
Jesus calls us to walk in the way of truth and freedom – justice and holiness
Why does Jesus lament and issue a stern warning? The people who heard the gospel here very likely responded with indifference. Jesus upbraids them for doing nothing! Repentance demands change – a change of heart and way of life. God’s word is life-giving and it saves us from destruction – the destruction of soul as well as body. Jesus’ anger is directed toward sin and everything which hinders us from doing the will of God and receiving his blessing. In love he calls us to walk in his way of truth and freedom, grace and mercy, justice and holiness. Do you receive his word with faith and submission or with doubt and indifference?
“Lord Jesus, give me the child-like simplicity and purity of faith to gaze upon your face with joy and confidence in your all-merciful love. Remove every doubt, fear, and proud thought which would hinder me from receiving your word with trust and humble submission.” – Read the source: http://dailyscripture.servantsoftheword.org/readings/2019/oct4.htm
Reflection 4 – Can you hear God’s voice in the storm?
In today’s first reading, we hear God speaking to Job “out of the storm.” Think of a storm that’s raging in your life right now. Have you been able to hear Gods voice in it? Today’s scriptures are that voice. What is he saying to you?
He told Job, “What are you worried about? I AM still in charge of your life.” Job had been thinking that God was letting things get out of control. We often feel that way, too, don’t we? We say by our actions and by our words: “God, You’re late! This problem should be fixed by now. I’d better explain to You what You should do, so that we can get this finished in a more timely manner.”
And God replies, “Tell me, if you know all: Which is the way to the dwelling place of light, and where is the abode of darkness? Do you really know how to obtain good instead of bad?” And then God gets a little sarcastic: “Oh yeah, of course you do – you were born before I created light and dark, you’re so old!”
Job, humbled by the reminder of his inadequacies compared to the greatness of God, speaks for all of us as he says, “All right, I’ll shut up! I’ll even put my hand over my mouth … oops, I spoke again. I won’t do that again. Oops, I just did.”
(You didn’t know there was humor in that book of the Bible, did you?!)
To hear God speak in the storm, we have to repent of our prideful assumption that we know the right way to end our troubles. We must acknowledge that God truly is in charge, even if it doesn’t seem so, and that his timing is always perfect, even when we think he’s late.
Today’s responsorial Psalm reminds us that God can be trusted because of one big reason: He knows us better than we know ourselves. Therefore, his guidance and his timing are much better than our own. We can be certain that he cares about us, because he formed our innermost being (our souls) and our bodies (which he knit in our mother’s wombs). He loved us even before we were born. He made us wonderfully.
Did you hear that? He made you to be one of his wonderful works. Do you think he’d ruin one of his masterpieces?
The Gospel reading is God’s voice in the storm saying, “Don’t forget how I’ve helped you before! Of course I’ll help you again.” If we look only at our problems and neglect to spend time recollecting what he’s done for us in the past, it’s easy to distrust him. This kind of faith is no faith and it leads to destruction, just like what happened to Capernaum.
Capernaum was an important, busy town when Jesus taught the Good News there. Today, the little towns of Bethlehem and Nazareth continue to thrive, but Capernaum has been lost to the “realm of death.” (Click here to see what it looks like today: HolyLand/capern3.jpg. See more by looking at a couple of pages from my Virtual Pilgrimage: holyland.gnm.org/page057).
God is taking very good care of you! Listen for his voice. – Read the source: http://gnm.org/good-news-reflections/?useDrDate=2016-09-30
Reflection 5 – “Whoever listens to you…”
Kierkegaard, a philosopher who loved Jesus very much, affirmed that God has created two categories of people: heroes and poets. The hero is the one who accomplishes great deeds and even does battle with death. The poet does not do impressive deeds, but he sings about the hero and is enthusiastic about the hero; he is as happy as if he were the hero himself, because his own genius can be expressed in sheer admiration and devotion. When he has found his hero, the poet goes from city to city and tells people that they too should admire the hero.
For us, Jesus is our hero, and we should be his poets. I do not mean in the sense that we should write poems about him but in the sense that we are in love with Jesus. The poets speak through their songs and succeed not only in convincing, but in taking others along with them.
Our evangelization should be Pentecostal: It should cause heartstrings to vibrate. In the place where the towers of Babel were first erected and people wanted to make a name for themselves, those towers are demolished and every one’s name is forgotten. Let us, therefore, lift up the name that is above all names and proclaim Paul’s words, “If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Rom 10:9). – Source: Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa, O.F.M. CAP, Magnificat, Vol. 16, No. 8 October 2014, pp. 57-58.
Reflection 6 – As God’s prophet, you are not alone
Every time we open our mouths to speak, we need to remember that we have a ministry of words. Always. Nothing that is vocalized can be deleted from the air before penetrating the minds of those who hear us. Even our tone of voice conveys a message. So, too, the silent words of emails and blogs.
Are our words always holy? Is there any valid reason why our words shouldn’t always be holy?
Jesus is our example of words and tones that reflect the kingdom of God.
He says to us in our Gospel reading today, “Anyone who listens to you is listening to me, and anyone who rejects you is rejecting both me and the Father who sent me.” See how important our words are? Do others hear Jesus every time we open our mouths? Well, shouldn’t they be able to? Did Jesus ever take a break from speaking the words of his Father?
As Christians, we serve as God’s prophets. When we were baptized, we were joined to the ministry of Christ’s priesthood, kingship, and mouth. We are Christ in the flesh for our contemporary world. Anyone who knows that we claim to be Christian gets either a good idea or a wrong idea about who Jesus is and what he is really like, based on what they hear from us.
Being a prophet is often a very sad ministry, because too many people fail to see Jesus in us. Sometimes it’s our fault, but sometimes, no matter how holy our words and no matter how purely we speak with love, the people who hear us have the same problem as the Israelites did in today’s first reading; they are “only too ready to disregard God’s voice.”
For many varied reasons, ranging from a faulty upbringing to freely made choices, they refuse to “heed the voice of the Lord in the words of the prophets he sends.” However, Jesus isn’t finished talking to them yet.
It’s been said that a person has to hear the truth from seven different people before it begins to change them. That number won’t always be literally accurate, but it is true that multiple prophets are needed. When it’s our turn, we don’t know if we’re the first, in the middle, or the last prophet whom God puts in their path.
When they refuse to listen to us, it’s important that we forgive them so that we convert our frustration into sadness instead of resentment. Then we can use our sorrow for prayer power. With yearning, ask God to soften their hearts through the circumstances and people who come their way. Remember, it is not you who’s being rejected; it’s Jesus, so don’t take it personally. Let the rejection go through you to him where it belongs. He’s the one who will figure out what to do next, not us.
We are not alone in this. God will indeed send other prophets. In him, there is always reason to hope. We are in partnership with Jesus and with the entire earthly Body of Christ. – Read the source: http://gnm.org/good-news-reflections/?useDrDate=2017-10-06
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Reflection 7 – St. Francis of Assisi (1182-1226 A.D.)
Francis of Assisi was a poor little man who astounded and inspired the Church by taking 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.
Serious illness brought the young Francis to see the emptiness of his frolicking life as leader of Assisi’s youth. Prayer—lengthy and difficult—led him to a self-emptying like that of Christ, climaxed by embracing a leper he met on the road. It symbolized his complete obedience to what he had heard in prayer: “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 idea 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.
He 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), he 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, he 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 to have his clothes removed when the last hour came and for permission to expire lying naked on the earth, in imitation of his Lord.
Comment:
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. His 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.
Quote:
“We adore you and we bless you, Lord Jesus Christ, here and in all the churches which are in the whole world, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world” (St. Francis).
Patron Saint of: Animals, Ecology, Italy, Merchants
Related Article:
SPOTLIGHT ON ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI: Saint of joyful love http://www.pagadiandiocese.org/2019/10/04/spotlight-on-st-francis-of-assisi-saint-of-joyful-love/
Related St. Anthony Messenger article(s)
Teenagers Following Francis, by Jan Dunlap
Francis of Assisi’s Song of Praise, by Patti Normile
In Pursuit of Saints Francis and Clare, by Christopher Heffron
Francis of Assisi: Saint for a New Millennium, by Pat McCloskey, OFM
St. Francis and the Millennials: Kindred Spirits, by Dan Horan, OFM
Francis of Assisi: Why’s He’s the Patron of Ecology, photo story by Jack Wintz, OFM
Franciscans and Muslims: Eight Centuries of Seeking God, by Jack Wintz, OFM and Pat McCloskey, OFM
Read the source: http://www.americancatholic.org/features/saints/saint.aspx?id=1158
SAINT OF THE DAY
Catholic saints are holy people and human people who lived extraordinary lives. Each saint the Church honors responded to God’s invitation to use his or her unique gifts. God calls each one of us to be a saint.
| SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI, O.F.M. CO-PATRON OF ITALY, FOUNDER OF THE SERAPHIC ORDER |
|
|---|---|
The Stigmata of Saint Francis
by Bartolomeo della Gatta, tempera on wood circa 1487 |
|
| RELIGIOUS, DEACON, CONFESSOR STIGMATIST AND RELIGIOUS FOUNDER |
|
| BORN | Giovanni di Bernardone 1181 or 1182 Assisi, Duchy of Spoleto, Holy Roman Empire |
| DIED | 3 October 1226 (aged 44) Assisi, Umbria, Papal States[1] |
| VENERATED IN | Roman Catholic Church Anglican Communion Lutheran Church Old Catholic Church |
| CANONIZED | 16 July 1228, Assisi, Italy byPope Gregory IX |
| MAJOR SHRINE | Basilica of San Francesco d’Assisi |
| FEAST | 4 October |
| ATTRIBUTES | Tau cross, dove, birds, animals, wolf at feet, Pax et Bonum, Poor Franciscan habit, stigmata |
| PATRONAGE | animals; the environment; Italy;merchants; stowaways;[2] Cub Scouts; San Francisco, California, Naga City, Cebu,tapestry workers[3] |
Saint Francis of Assisi (Italian: San Francesco d’Assisi), born Giovanni di Pietro di Bernardone, informally named asFrancesco(1181/1182 – 3 October 1226),[1][4] was an Italian Roman Catholicfriar and preacher. He founded the men’sOrder of Friars Minor, the women’s Order of Saint Clare, the Third Order of Saint Francis and the Custody of the Holy Land.[1] Francis is one of the most venerated religious figures in history.[1]
Pope Gregory IX canonised Francis on 16 July 1228. Along with Saint Catherine of Siena, he was designated Patron saint of Italy. He later became associated with patronage of animals and the natural environment, and it became customary for Catholicand Anglican churches to hold ceremonies blessing animals on his feast day of 4 October.[5]
In 1219, he went to Egypt in an attempt to convert the Sultan to put an end to the conflict of the Crusades.[6] By this point, the Franciscan Order had grown to such an extent that its primitive organizational structure was no longer sufficient. He returned to Italy to organize the Order. Once his community was authorized by the Pope, he withdrew increasingly from external affairs. Francis is also known for his love of the Eucharist.[7] In 1223, Francis arranged for the first Christmas livenativity scene.[8][9][10] According to Christian tradition, in 1224 he received the stigmata during the apparition of Seraphicangels in a religious ecstasy [8] making him the first recorded person in Christian history to bear the wounds of Christ’s Passion.[11] He died during the evening hours of 3 October 1226, while listening to a reading he had requested of Psalm 142 (141).
Contents
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Early life[edit]
Francis of Assisi by Cimabue
Francis considered his stigmatapart of the Imitation of Christ.[12][13]Cigoli, 1699
The Pope approving the statutes of the Order of the Franciscans, byGiotto, 1295–1300
Francis of Assisi’s last resting place at Assisi
Legend of St. Francis, Sermon to the Birds, upper Basilica of San Francesco d’Assisi
Habit of Francis of Assisi
Life of Francis of Assisi by José Benlliure y Gil
Francis of Assisi Francisco de Zurbarán. Saint Francis’ feast day is observed on October 4. TheEvangelical Church in Germany, however, commemorates St. Francis’ feast day on his death day, October 3.
Francis of Assisi was one of seven children born in late 1181 or early 1182 to Pietro di Bernardone, a prosperous silk merchant, and his wife Pica de Bourlemont, about whom little is known except that she was a noblewoman originally from Provence.[15]Pietro was in France on business when Francis was born in Assisi, and Pica had him baptized as Giovanni.[5][16] Upon his return to Assisi, Pietro took to calling his son Francesco (“the Frenchman”), possibly in honor of his commercial success and enthusiasm for all things French.[17] Since the child was renamed in infancy, the change can hardly have had anything to do with his aptitude for learning French, as some have thought.[4]
While going off to war in 1202, Francis had a vision that directed him back to Assisi, where he lost his taste for his worldly life.[8]In 1205, Francis left for Apulia to enlist in the army of Walter III, Count of Brienne.
Francis lived the high-spirited life typical of a wealthy young man, even fighting as a soldier for Assisi.[8] In 1201, he joined a military expedition against Perugia and was taken as a prisoner at Collestrada, spending a year as a captive.[18] It is possible that his spiritual conversion was a gradual process rooted in this experience. Upon his return to Assisi in 1203, Francis returned to his carefree life. In 1204, a serious illness led him to a spiritual crisis.
A strange vision made him return to Assisi, deepening his ecclesiastical awakening.[4] On a pilgrimage to Rome, he joined the poor in begging at St. Peter’s Basilica,[8] an experience that moved him to live in poverty.[8] Francis returned home, began preaching on the streets, and soon gathered followers. His Order was authorized by Pope Innocent III in 1210. He then founded the Order of Poor Clares, which became an enclosed religious order for women, as well as the Order of Brothers and Sisters of Penance (commonly called the Third Order). As a youth, Francesco became a devotee of troubadours and was fascinated with all things Transalpine.[4][17] Although many hagiographers remark about his bright clothing, rich friends, and love of pleasures,[15] his displays of disillusionment toward the world that surrounded him came fairly early in his life, as is shown in the “story of the beggar”. In this account, he was selling cloth and velvet in the marketplace on behalf of his father when a beggar came to him and asked for alms. At the conclusion of his business deal, Francis abandoned his wares and ran after the beggar. When he found him, Francis gave the man everything he had in his pockets. His friends quickly chided and mocked him for his act of charity. When he got home, his father scolded him in rage.[19]
According to the hagiographic legend, thereafter he began to avoid the sports and the feasts of his former companions. In response, they asked him laughingly whether he was thinking of marrying, to which he answered, “Yes, a fairer bride than any of you have ever seen”, meaning his “Lady Poverty”. He spent much time in lonely places, asking God for spiritual enlightenment. By degrees he took to nursing lepers, the most repulsive victims in the lazar houses near Assisi. After a pilgrimage to Rome, where he joined the poor in begging at the doors of the churches, he said he had a mystical vision of Jesus Christ in the country chapel of San Damiano, just outside Assisi, in which the Icon of Christ Crucified said to him, “Francis, Francis, go and repair My house which, as you can see, is falling into ruins.” He took this to mean the ruined church in which he was presently praying, and so he sold some cloth from his father’s store to assist the priest there for this purpose.[4][20]
His father, Pietro, highly indignant, attempted to change his mind, first with threats and then with beatings. In the midst of legal proceedings before the Bishop of Assisi, Francis renounced his father and his patrimony, laying aside even the garments he had received from him in front of the public. For the next couple of months he lived as a beggar in the region of Assisi. Returning to the countryside around the town for two years, he embraced the life of a penitent, during which he restored several ruined chapels in the countryside around Assisi, among them the Porziuncola, the little chapel of St. Mary of the Angelsjust outside the town, which later became his favorite abode.[20]
Founding of the Franciscan Orders[edit]
The Friars minor[edit]
At the end of this period (on February 24, 1209, according to Jordan of Giano), Francis heard a sermon that changed his life forever. The sermon was about Matthew 10:9, in which Christ tells his followers they should go forth and proclaim that theKingdom of Heaven was upon them, that they should take no money with them, nor even a walking stick or shoes for the road. Francis was inspired to devote himself to a life of poverty.[4]
Clad in a rough garment, barefoot, and, after the Gospel precept, without staff or scrip, he began to preach repentance.[4] He was soon joined by his first follower, a prominent fellow townsman, the jurist Bernardo di Quintavalle, who contributed all that he had to the work. Within a year Francis had eleven followers. Francis chose never to be ordained a priest, and the community lived as “lesser brothers”, fratres minores in Latin.[4] The brothers lived a simple life in the deserted lazar house of Rivo Torto near Assisi; but they spent much of their time wandering through the mountainous districts of Umbria, always cheerful and full of songs, yet making a deep impression upon their hearers by their earnest exhortations.[4]
Francis’ preaching to ordinary people was unusual since he had no license to do so.[1] In 1209 he composed a simple rule for his followers (“friars”), the Regula primitiva or “Primitive Rule”, which came from verses in the Bible.
The rule was “To follow the teachings of our Lord Jesus Christ and to walk in his footsteps”. In 1209, Francis led his first eleven followers to Rome to seek permission from Pope Innocent III to found a new religious Order.[21] Upon entry to Rome, the brothers encountered Bishop Guido of Assisi, who had in his company Giovanni di San Paolo, the Cardinal Bishop of Sabina. The Cardinal, who was the confessor of Pope Innocent III, was immediately sympathetic to Francis and agreed to represent Francis to the pope. Reluctantly, Pope Innocent agreed to meet with Francis and the brothers the next day. After several days, the pope agreed to admit the group informally, adding that when God increased the group in grace and number, they could return for an official admittance. The group was tonsured.[22] This was important in part because it recognized Church authority and prevented his following from possible accusations of heresy, as had happened to the Waldensians decades earlier. Though Pope Innocent initially had his doubts, following a dream in which he saw Francis holding up the Basilica of St. John Lateran(the cathedral of Rome, thus the ‘home church’ of all Christendom), he decided to endorse Francis’ Order. This occurred, according to tradition, on April 16, 1210, and constituted the official founding of the Franciscan Order.[1] The group, then the “Lesser Brothers” (Order of Friars Minor also known as the Franciscan Order), preached on the streets and had no possessions. They were centered in the Porziuncola and preached first in Umbria, before expanding throughout Italy.[1]
The Poor Clares and the Third Order[edit]
From then on, the new Order grew quickly with new vocations.[23]Hearing Francis preaching in the church of San Rufino in Assisi in 1211, the young noblewoman Clare of Assisi became deeply touched by his message and realized her calling.[23] Her cousin Rufino, the only male member of the family in their generation, was also attracted to the new Order (which he joined). On the night of Palm Sunday, March 28, 1212, Clare clandestinely left her family’s palace. Francis received her at the Porziuncola and thereby established the Order of Poor Ladies, later called Poor Clares.[23] This was an Order for women, and he gave Clare a religious habit, or garment, similar to his own, before lodging her and a few female companions in a nearby monastery of Benedictine nuns. Later he transferred them to San Damiano.[1] There they were joined by many other women of Assisi. For those who could not leave their homes, he later formed the Third Order of Brothers and Sisters of Penance, a fraternity composed of either laity or clergy whose members neither withdrew from the world nor took religious vows. Instead, they observed the principles of Franciscan life in their daily lives.[1] Before long, this Third Order grew beyond Italy.
Travels[edit]
Determined to bring the Gospel to all God’s creatures, Francis sought on several occasions to take his message out of Italy. In the late spring of 1212, he set out for Jerusalem, but he was shipwrecked by a storm on the Dalmatian coast, forcing him to return to Italy. On May 8, 1213, he was given the use of the mountain of La Verna (Alverna) as a gift from Count Orlando di Chiusi, who described it as “eminently suitable for whoever wishes to do penance in a place remote from mankind”.[24][25] The mountain would become one of his favourite retreats for prayer.[25]
In the same year, Francis sailed for Morocco, but this time an illness forced him to break off his journey in Spain. Back in Assisi, several noblemen (among them Tommaso da Celano, who would later write the biography of St. Francis) and some well-educated men joined his Order. In 1215, Francis went again to Rome for the Fourth Lateran Council. During this time, he probably met a canon, Dominic de Guzman[2] (later to be Saint Dominic, the founder of the Friars Preachers, another Catholic religious order). In 1217, he offered to go to France. Cardinal Ugolino of Segni (the future Pope Gregory IX), an early and important supporter of Francis, advised him against this and said that he was still needed in Italy.
In 1219, accompanied by another friar and hoping to convert the Sultan of Egypt or win martyrdom in the attempt, Francis went to Egypt during the Fifth Crusade where a Crusader army had been encamped for over a year besieging the walled city ofDamietta two miles (3.2 km) upstream from the mouth of one of the main channels of the Nile. The Sultan, al-Kamil, a nephew of Saladin, had succeeded his father as Sultan of Egypt in 1218 and was encamped upstream of Damietta, unable to relieve it. A bloody and futile attack on the city was launched by the Christians on August 29, 1219, following which both sides agreed to a ceasefire which lasted four weeks.[26] It was most probably during this interlude that Francis and his companion crossed the Saracen lines and were brought before the Sultan, remaining in his camp for a few days.[27] The visit is reported in contemporary Crusader sources and in the earliest biographies of Francis, but they give no information about what transpired during the encounter beyond noting that the Sultan received Francis graciously and that Francis preached to the Saracens without effect, returning unharmed to the Crusader camp.[28] No contemporary Arab source mentions the visit.[29] One detail, added by Bonaventure in the official life of Francis (written forty years after the event), has Francis offering to challenge the Sultan’s “priests” to trial-by-fire in order to prove the veracity of the Christian Gospel.
Such an incident is alluded to in a scene in the late 13th-century fresco cycle, attributed to Giotto, in the upper basilica at Assisi (see accompanying illustration).[30] It has been suggested that the winged figures atop the columns piercing the roof of the building on the left of the scene are not idols (as Erwin Panofsky had proposed) but are part of the secular iconography of the sultan, affirming his worldly power which, as the scene demonstrates, is limited even as regards his own “priests” who shun the challenge.[31][32] Although Bonaventure asserts that the sultan refused to permit the challenge, subsequent biographies went further, claiming that a fire was actually kindled which Francis unhesitatingly entered without suffering burns. The scene in the fresco adopts a position midway between the two extremes.
According to some late sources, the Sultan gave Francis permission to visit the sacred places in the Holy Land and even to preach there. All that can safely be asserted is that Francis and his companion left the Crusader camp for Acre, from where they embarked for Italy in the latter half of 1220. Drawing on a 1267 sermon by Bonaventure, later sources report that the Sultan secretly converted or accepted a death-bed baptism as a result of the encounter with Francis.[33] The Franciscan Order has been present in the Holy Land almost uninterruptedly since 1217 when Brother Elias arrived at Acre. It received concessions from the Mameluke Sultan in 1333 with regard to certain Holy Places in Jerusalem and Bethlehem, and (so far as concerns the Catholic Church) jurisdictional privileges from Pope Clement VI in 1342.[34]
Reorganization of the Franciscan Order and death[edit]
By this time, the growing Order of friars was divided into provincesand groups were sent to France, Germany, Hungary, and Spain and to the East. Upon receiving a report of the martyrdom of five brothers in Morocco, Francis returned to Italy viaVenice.[35] Cardinal Ugolino di Conti was then nominated by the Pope as the protector of the Order. Another reason for Francis’ return to Italy was that the friars in Italy were causing problems. The Franciscan Order had grown at an unprecedented rate compared to prior religious orders, but its organizational sophistication had not kept up with this growth and had little more to govern it than Francis’ example and simple rule.[1] To address this problem, Francis prepared a new and more detailed Rule, the “First Rule” or “Rule Without a Papal Bull” (Regula prima, Regula non bullata), which again asserted devotion to poverty and the apostolic life. However, it also introduced greater institutional structure though this was never officially endorsed by the pope.[1]
On September 29, 1220, Francis handed over the governance of the Order to Brother Peter Catani at the Porziuncola, but Brother Peter died only five months later, on March 10, 1221, and was buried there. When numerous miracles were attributed to the deceased brother, people started to flock to the Porziuncola, disturbing the daily life of the Franciscans. Francis then prayed, asking Peter to stop the miracles and to obey in death as he had obeyed during his life.
The reports of miracles ceased. Brother Peter was succeeded by Brother Elias as Vicar of Francis. Two years later, Francis modified the “First Rule”, creating the “Second Rule” or “Rule With a Bull”, which was approved by Pope Honorius III on November 29, 1223.[1]As the official Rule of the Order, it called on the friars “to observe the Holy Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, living in obedience without anything of our own and in chastity”. In addition, it set regulations for discipline, preaching, and entry into the Order.[1] Once the Rule was endorsed by the Pope, Francis withdrew increasingly from external affairs.[1]During 1221 and 1222, Francis crossed Italy, first as far south as Catania in Sicily and afterwards as far north as Bologna.
While he was praying on the mountain of Verna, during a forty-day fast in preparation for Michaelmas (September 29), Francis is said to have had a vision on or about September 14, 1224, the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross, as a result of which he received the stigmata.[36] Brother Leo, who had been with Francis at the time, left a clear and simple account of the event, the first definite account of the phenomenon of stigmata.[4][36] “Suddenly he saw a vision of a seraph, a six-winged angel on a cross. This angel gave him the gift of the five wounds of Christ.”[36] Suffering from these stigmata and from trachoma, Francis received care in several cities (Siena, Cortona, Nocera) to no avail. In the end, he was brought back to a hut next to the Porziuncola. Here, in the place where it all began, feeling the end approaching, he spent the last days of his life dictating his spiritual Testament. He died on the evening of Saturday, October 3, 1226, singing Psalm 142 (141), “Voce mea ad Dominum”. On July 16, 1228, he was pronounced a saint by Pope Gregory IX (the former cardinal Ugolino di Conti, friend of St. Francis and Cardinal Protector of the Order). The next day, the Pope laid the foundation stone for the Basilica of Saint Francis in Assisi. Francis was buried on May 25, 1230, under the Lower Basilica, but his tomb was soon hidden on orders of Brother Elias to protect it from Saracen invaders. His exact burial place remained unknown until it was re-discovered in 1818. Pasquale Belli then constructed for the remains a crypt in neo-classical style in the Lower Basilica. It was refashioned between 1927 and 1930 into its present form by Ugo Tarchi, stripping the wall of its marble decorations. In 1978, the remains of St. Francis were examined and confirmed by a commission of scholars appointed by Pope Paul VI, and put into a glass urn in the ancient stone tomb.
Character and legacy[edit]
It has been argued that no one else in history was as dedicated as Francis to imitate the life, and carry out the work of Christ, in Christ’s own way.[1] This is important in understanding Francis’ character and his affinity for the Eucharist and respect for the priests who carried out the sacrament.[1]
He and his followers celebrated and even venerated poverty. Poverty was so central to his character that in his last written work, the Testament, he said that absolute personal and corporate poverty was the essential lifestyle for the members of his Order.[1]
He believed that nature itself was the mirror of God. He called all creatures his “brothers” and “sisters”, and even preached to the birds[37][38] and supposedly persuaded a wolf to stop attacking some locals if they agreed to feed the wolf. In his “Canticle of the Creatures” (“Praises of Creatures” or “Canticle of the Sun”), he mentioned the “Brother Sun” and “Sister Moon”, the wind and water, and “Sister Death”. He referred to his chronic illnesses as his “sisters”. His deep sense of brotherhood under God embraced others, and he declared that “he considered himself no friend of Christ if he did not cherish those for whom Christ died”.[1]
Francis’ visit to Egypt and attempted rapprochement with the Muslim world had far-reaching consequences, long past his own death, since after the fall of the Crusader Kingdom, it would be the Franciscans, of all Catholics, who would be allowed to stay on in the Holy Land and be recognized as “Custodians of the Holy Land” on behalf of the Catholic Church.
At Greccio near Assisi, around 1220, Francis celebrated Christmas by setting up the first known presepio or crèche (Nativity scene).[39]His nativity imagery reflected the scene in traditional paintings. He used real animals to create a living scene so that the worshipers could contemplate the birth of the child Jesus in a direct way, making use of the senses, especially sight.[39] Thomas of Celano, a biographer of Francis and Saint Bonaventure both, tell how he used only a straw-filled manger (feeding trough) set between a real ox and donkey.[39] According to Thomas, it was beautiful in its simplicity, with the manger acting as the altar for the Christmas Mass.
Nature and the environment[edit]
Francis preached the teaching of the Catholic Church, that the world was created good and beautiful by God but suffers a need for redemption because of the primordial sin of man. He preached to man and beast the universal ability and duty of all creatures to praise God (a common theme in the Psalms) and the duty of men to protect and enjoy nature as both the stewards of God’s creation and as creatures ourselves.[37] On November 29, 1979, Pope John Paul II declared St. Francis the Patron Saint of Ecology.[40] Many of the stories that surround the life of St. Francis say that he had a great love for animals and the environment.[37]
Perhaps the most famous incident that illustrates the Saint’s humility towards nature is recounted in the “Fioretti” (“Little Flowers”), a collection of legends and folklore that sprang up after the Saint’s death. It is said that, one day, while Francis was travelling with some companions, they happened upon a place in the road where birds filled the trees on either side. Francis told his companions to “wait for me while I go to preach to my sisters the birds.”[37] The birds surrounded him, intrigued by the power of his voice, and not one of them flew away. He is often portrayed with a bird, typically in his hand.
Another legend from the Fioretti tells that in the city of Gubbio, where Francis lived for some time, was a wolf “terrifying and ferocious, who devoured men as well as animals”. Francis had compassion upon the townsfolk, and so he went up into the hills to find the wolf. Soon, fear of the animal had caused all his companions to flee, though the saint pressed on. When he found the wolf, he made the sign of the cross and commanded the wolf to come to him and hurt no one. Miraculously the wolf closed his jaws and lay down at the feet of St. Francis.
“Brother Wolf, you do much harm in these parts and you have done great evil”, said Francis. “All these people accuse you and curse you … But brother wolf, I would like to make peace between you and the people.” Then Francis led the wolf into the town, and surrounded by startled citizens made a pact between them and the wolf. Because the wolf had “done evil out of hunger, the townsfolk were to feed the wolf regularly. In return, the wolf would no longer prey upon them or their flocks. In this mannerGubbio was freed from the menace of the predator. Francis even made a pact on behalf of the town dogs, that they would not bother the wolf again. Finally, to show the townspeople that they would not be harmed, Francis blessed the wolf.
Then during the World Environment Day 1982, John Paul II said that St. Francis’ love and care for creation was a challenge for contemporary Catholics and a reminder “not to behave like dissident predators where nature is concerned, but to assume responsibility for it, taking all care so that everything stays healthy and integrated, so as to offer a welcoming and friendly environment even to those who succeed us.” The same Pope wrote on the occasion of the World Day of Peace, January 1, 1990, the saint of Assisi “offers Christians an example of genuine and deep respect for the integrity of creation …” He went on to make the point that: “As a friend of the poor who was loved by God’s creatures, Saint Francis invited all of creation – animals, plants, natural forces, even Brother Sun and Sister Moon – to give honor and praise to the Lord. The poor man of Assisi gives us striking witness that when we are at peace with God we are better able to devote ourselves to building up that peace with all creation which is inseparable from peace among all peoples.”[41]
Pope John Paul II concluded that section of the document with these words, “It is my hope that the inspiration of Saint Francis will help us to keep ever alive a sense of ‘fraternity’ with all those good and beautiful things which Almighty God has created.”
Feast day[edit]
A relic of Francis of Assisi
Saint Francis’ feast day is observed on October 4. A secondary feast in honor of the stigmata received by St. Francis, celebrated on September 17, was inserted in the General Roman Calendar in 1585 (later than the Tridentine Calendar) and suppressed in 1604, but was restored in 1615. In the New Roman Missal of 1969, it was removed again from the General Calendar, as something of a duplication of the main feast on October 4, and left to the calendars of certain localities and of the Franciscan Order.[42] Wherever the traditional Roman Missal is used, however, the feast of the Stigmata remains in the General Calendar.
On June 18, 1939, Pope Pius XII named Francis a joint Patron Saintof Italy along with Saint Catherine of Siena with the apostolic letter “Licet Commissa”.[43] Pope Pius also mentioned the two saints in the laudative discourse he pronounced on May 5, 1949, in the Church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva.
St. Francis is honored in the Church of England, the Anglican Church of Canada, the Episcopal Church USA, the Old Catholic Churches, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and other churches and religious communities on October 4. TheEvangelical Church in Germany, however, commemorates St. Francis’ feast day on his death day, October 3.[citation needed]
Papal name[edit]
On 13 March 2013, upon his election as Pope, Archbishop and Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina chose Francis as his papal name in honor of Saint Francis of Assisi, becoming Pope Francis.[44]
At his first audience on 16 March 2013, Pope Francis told journalists that he had chosen the name in honor of Saint Francis of Assisi, and had done so because he was especially concerned for the well-being of the poor.[45][46][47] He explained that, as it was becoming clear during the conclave voting that he would be elected the new bishop of Rome, the Brazilian CardinalCláudio Hummes had embraced him and whispered, “Don’t forget the poor”, which had made Bergoglio think of the saint.[48][49]Bergoglio had previously expressed his admiration for St. Francis, explaining that “He brought to Christianity an idea of poverty against the luxury, pride, vanity of the civil and ecclesiastical powers of the time. He changed history.”[50] Bergoglio’s selection of his papal name is the first time that a pope has been named Francis.[a]
Protestantism[edit]
Even in Protestantism, the name and legacy of Saint Francis have endured.
Main writings[edit]
- Canticum Fratris Solis or Laudes Creaturarum; Canticle of the Sun.
- Prayer before the Crucifix, 1205 (extant in the original Umbrian dialect as well as in a contemporary Latin translation);
- Regula non bullata, the Earlier Rule, 1221;
- Regula bullata, the Later Rule, 1223;
- Testament, 1226;
- Admonitions.
For a complete list, see The Franciscan Experience.[52]
Saint Francis is considered the first Italian poet by literary critics.[53]He believed commoners should be able to pray to God in their own language, and he wrote often in the dialect of Umbria instead of Latin. His writings are considered to have great literary and religious value.[54]
The anonymous 20th-century prayer “Make Me an Instrument of Your Peace” is widely but erroneously attributed to St. Francis.[55][56]
In art[edit]
The Franciscan Order promoted devotion to the life of Saint Francis from his canonization onwards, and commissioned large numbers of works for Franciscan churches, either showing St Francis with sacred figures, or episodes from his life. There are large early frescocycles in the Basilica of San Francesco d’Assisi, parts of which are shown above.
- Francis of Assisi in art
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Saint Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata, Jan van Eyck, c. 1430–32. 29.3 cm × 33.4 cm (11.5 in × 13.1 in), Turin version
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The Stigmatization of St Francis by Domenico Veneziano, (1445)
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Saint Francis with the Blood of Christ Carlo Crivelli, c. 1500
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El Greco – Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata, 1585 until 1590
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Francisco Ribalta,Francis of Assisi with angel music, c. 1620
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Saint Francis in Meditation, oil painting byFrancisco de Zurbarán(1639)
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Francis of Assisi visiting his convent while far away, in a chariot of fire byJosé Benlliure y Gil, (1855–1937)
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The Ecstasy of St. Francis,Stefano di Giovanni (1392–1450) 1444
Media[edit]
St. Francis Abbey, Kilkenny
Statue of St. Francis in front of the Catholic church of Chania.
Films[edit]
- The Flowers of St. Francis, a 1950 film directed by Roberto Rossellini and co-written by Federico Fellini[57]
- Francis of Assisi, a 1961 film directed by Michael Curtiz, based on the novel The Joyful Beggar by Louis de Wohl[57]
- Francis of Assisi, a 1966 film directed by Liliana Cavani[57]
- Uccellacci e uccellini (The Hawks and the Sparrows), a 1966 film directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini[57]
- Brother Sun, Sister Moon, a 1972 film by Franco Zeffirelli[57]
- Francesco, a 1989 film by Liliana Cavani, contemplatively paced, follows Francis of Assisi’s evolution from rich man’s son to religious humanitarian, and eventually to full-fledged self-tortured saint. Saint Francis is played by Mickey Rourke, and the woman who later became Saint Clare, is played by Helena Bonham Carter[57]
- St. Francis, a 2002 film directed by Michele Soavi, starring Raoul Bova and Amélie Daure[57]
- Clare and Francis, a 2007 film directed by Fabrizio Costa, starring Mary Petruolo and Ettore Bassi[57]
- Pranchiyettan and the Saint, a 2010 satirical Indian Malayalam film[57]
- Finding Saint Francis, a 2014 film directed by Paul Alexander, starring Peter Stickney
Music[edit]
- Franz Liszt:
- Cantico del sol di Francesco d’Assisi, S.4 (sacred choral work, 1862, 1880–81; versions of the Prelude for piano, S. 498c, 499, 499a; version of the Prelude for organ, S. 665, 760; version of the Hosannah for organ and bass trombone, S.677)
- St. François d’Assise: La Prédication aux oiseaux, No. 1 of Deux Légendes, S.175 (piano, 1862–63)
- William Henry Draper: All Creatures of Our God and King (hymn paraphrase of Canticle of the Sun, published 1919)
- Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Fioretti (voice and orchestra, 1920)
- Gian Francesco Malipiero: San Francesco d’Assisi (soloists, chorus and orchestra, 1920–21)
- Amy Beach: Canticle of the Sun (soloists, chorus and orchestra, 1928)
- Paul Hindemith: Nobilissima Visione (ballet 1938)
- Leo Sowerby: Canticle of the Sun (cantata for mixed voices with accompaniment for piano or orchestra, 1944)
- Francis Poulenc: Quatre petites prières de Saint François d’Assise(men’s chorus, 1948)
- Seth Bingham: The Canticle of the Sun (cantata for chorus of mixed voices with soli ad lib. and accompaniment for organ or orchestra, 1949)
- William Walton: Cantico del sol (chorus, 1973–74)
- Olivier Messiaen: Saint François d’Assise (opera, 1975–83)
- Juliusz Łuciuk: Święty Franciszek z Asyżu (oratorio for soprano, tenor, baritone, mixed chorus and orchestra, 1976)
- Michele Paulicelli: Forza Venite Gente (musical theater, 1981)
- Karlheinz Stockhausen: Luzifers Abschied (1982), scene 4 of the opera Samstag aus Licht
- Libby Larsen: I Will Sing and Raise a Psalm (SATB chorus and organ, 1995)
- Sofia Gubaidulina: Sonnengesang (solo cello, chamber choir and percussion, 1997)
- Juventude Franciscana (JUFRA): Balada de Francisco (voices accompanied by guitar, 1999)
- Lewis Nielson: St. Francis Preaches to the Birds (chamber concerto for violin, 2005)
Books[edit]
- Francis of Assisi, The Little Flowers (fioretti), London, 2012. limovia.net ISBN 978-1-78336-013-0
- Saint Francis of Assisi, written and illustrated by Demi, Wisdom Tales, 2012, ISBN 978-1-937786-04-5
- Francis of Assisi: A New Biography, by Augustine Thompson, O.P., Cornell University Press, 2012, ISBN 978-080145-070-9
- Francis of Assisi in the Sources and Writings, by Robert Rusconi and translated by Nancy Celaschi, Franciscan Institute Publications, 2008. ISBN 978-1-57659-152-9
- The Stigmata of Francis of Assisi, Franciscan Institute Publications, 2006. ISBN 978-1-57659-140-6
- Francis of Assisi – The Message in His Writings, by Thaddee Matura, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-1-57659-127-7
- Saint Francis of Assisi, by John R. H. Moorman, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1987. ISBN 978-0-8199-0904-6
- First Encounter with Francis of Assisi, by Damien Vorreux and translated by Paul LaChance, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1979. ISBN 978-0-8199-0698-4
- St. Francis of Assisi, by Raoul Manselli, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1985. ISBN 978-0-8199-0880-3
- Saint Francis of Assisi, by Thomas of Celano and translated by Placid Hermann, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1988. ISBN 978-0-8199-0554-3
- Francis the Incomparable Saint, by Joseph Lortz, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1986, ISBN 978-1-57659-067-6
- Respectfully Yours: Signed and Sealed, Francis of Assisi, by Edith van den Goorbergh and Theodore Zweerman, Franciscan Institute Publications, 2001. ISBN 978-1-57659-178-9
- The Admonitions of St. Francis: Sources and Meanings, by Robert J. Karris, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1999. ISBN 978-1-57659-166-6
- We Saw Brother Francis, by Francis de Beer, Franciscan Institute Publications, 1983. ISBN 978-0-8199-0803-2
- Sant Francesc (Saint Francis, 1895), a book of forty-three Saint Francis poems by Catalan poet-priest Jacint Verdaguer, three of which are included in English translation in Selected Poems of Jacint Verdaguer: A Bilingual Edition, edited and translated by Ronald Puppo, with an introduction by Ramon Pinyol i Torrents (University of Chicago, 2007). The three poems are “The Turtledoves”, “Preaching to Birds” and “The Pilgrim”.
- Saint Francis of Assisi (1923), a book by G. K. Chesterton
- Blessed Are The Meek (1944). a book by Zofia Kossak
- Saint Francis of Assisi a Doubleday Image Book translated by T. O’Conor Sloane, Ph.D., LL.D. in 1955 from the Danish original researched and written by Johannes Jorgensen and published in 1912 by Longmans, Green and Company, Inc.
- Saint Francis of Assisi (God’s Pauper) (1962), a novel by Nikos Kazantzakis
- Scripta Leonis, Rufini Et Angeli Sociorum S. Francisci: The Writings of Leo, Rufino and Angelo Companions of St. Francis (1970), edited by Rosalind B. Brooke, in Latin and English, containing testimony recorded by intimate, long-time companions of St. Francis
- Saint Francis and His Four Ladies (1970), a book by Joan Mowat Erikson
- The Life and Words of St. Francis of Assisi (1973), by Ira Peck
- The Life of Saint Francis of Assisi (1996), a book by Patricia Stewart
- Reluctant Saint: The Life of Francis of Assisi (2002), a book by Donald Spoto
- Flowers for St. Francis (2005), a book by Raj Arumugam
- Chasing Francis, 2006, a book by Ian Cron
- John Tolan, St. Francis and the Sultan: The Curious History of a Christian-Muslim Encounter. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.
- Vita di un uomo: Francesco d’Assisi (1995) a book by Chiara Frugoni, preface by Jacques Le Goff, Torino: Einaudi.
- Francis, Brother of the Universe (1982), a 48-page comic book by Marvel Comics on the life of Saint Francis of Assisi written by Father Roy Gasnik O.F.M. andMary Jo Duffy, artwork by John Buscema and Marie Severin, lettering by Jim Novak and edited by Jim Shooter.
Other[edit]
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- In Rubén Darío‘s poem Los Motivos Del Lobo (The Reasons Of The Wolf) St. Francis tames a terrible wolf only to discover that the human heart harbors darker desires than those of the beast.
- In Fyodor Dostoyevsky‘s The Brothers Karamazov, Ivan Karamazov invokes the name of ‘Pater Seraphicus,’ an epithet applied to St. Francis, to describe Alyosha’s spiritual guide Zosima. The reference is found in Goethe’s “Faust”, Part 2, Act 5, lines 11918–25. [1]
- Rich Mullins co-wrote Canticle of the Plains, a musical, with Mitch McVicker. Released in 1997, it was based on the life of St. Francis of Assisi, but told as a western story.
- Bernard Malamud‘s novel The Assistant (1957) features a protagonist, Frank Alpine, who exemplifies the life of St. Francis in mid-20th-century Brooklyn, New York City.
See also[edit]
- Pardon of Assisi
- Fraticelli
- Society of Saint Francis
- Saint Juniper, one of Francis’ original followers
- St. Benedict’s Cave, which contains a portrait of Francis made during his lifetime
- Saint-François d’Assise, an opera by Olivier Messiaen
- Saint-François (disambiguation) (places named after Francis of Assisi in French-speaking countries)
- List of places named after Saint Francis
- Prayers
- Canticle of the Sun, a prayer by St. Francis
- Prayer of Saint Francis, a prayer not by St. Francis
Notes[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Brady, Ignatius Charles. “Saint Francis of Assisi.”Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Chesterton (1924), p.126
- Jump up^ House & Garden – Volume 158 – Page 86, 1986
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j
Paschal Robinson (1913). “St. Francis of Assisi“. In Herbermann, Charles. Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. - ^ Jump up to:a b “Blessing All Creatures, Great and Small”. Duke Magazine. November 2006. Retrieved 2007-07-30.
- Jump up^ Tolan, John (2009). St. Francis and the Sultan: The Curious History of a Christian-Muslim Encounter. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199239726.
- Jump up^ “St. Francis of Assisi – Franciscan Friars of the Renewal”. Franciscanfriars.com. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Cross, F. L., ed. (2005). “Francis of Assisi”. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199566712.
- Jump up^ The Christmas scenes made by Saint Francis at the time were not inanimate objects, but live ones, later commercialised into inanimate representations of the Blessed Lord and His parents.
- Jump up^ “CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Christmas”.
- Jump up^ Cross, F. L., ed. (2005). “Stigmatization”. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press.ISBN 0199566712.
- Jump up^ Saint Francis of Assisi by Jacques Le Goff 2003 ISBN 0-415-28473-2 page 44
- Jump up^ The Word made flesh: a history of Christian thought by Margaret Ruth mi 2004ISBN 978-1-4051-0846-1 pages 160–161
- Jump up^ “Italy/Subiaco”. www.paradoxplace.com.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Englebert, Omer (1951). The Lives of the Saints. New York: Barnes & Noble. p. 529. ISBN 978-1-56619-516-4.
- Jump up^ Robinson, P. (2009). St. Francis of Assisi. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 2011-10-17 from New Advent.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Chesterton, Gilbert Keith (1924). “St. Francis of Assisi” (14 ed.). Garden City, New York: Image Books: 158.
- Jump up^ Chesterton (1924), pp. 40–41
- ^ Jump up to:a b Chesterton (1924), pp. 54–56
- Jump up^ Chesterton (1924), pp. 107–108
- Jump up^ Galli(2002), pp. 74–80
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Chesterton (1924), pp. 110–111
- Jump up^ Fioretti quoted in: St. Francis, The Little Flowers, Legends, and Lauds, trans. N. Wydenbruck, ed. Otto Karrer (London: Sheed and Ward, 1979) 244.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Chesterton (1924), p.130
- Jump up^ Steven Runciman, History of the Crusades, vol. 3: The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades, Cambridge University Press (1951, paperback 1987), pp. 151–161.
- Jump up^ Tolan, pp. 4f.
- Jump up^ e.g., Jacques de Vitry, Letter 6 of February or March 1220 and Historia orientalis(c. 1223–1225) cap. XXII; Tommaso da Celano, Vita prima (1228), §57: the relevant passages are quoted in an English translation in Tolan, pp. 19f. and 54 respectively.
- Jump up^ Tolan, p.5
- Jump up^ e.g., Chesterton, Saint Francis, Hodder & Stoughton (1924) chapter 8. Tolan (p.126) discusses the incident as recounted by Bonaventure which does not extend to a fire actually being lit.
- Jump up^ Péter Bokody, “Idolatry or Power: St. Francis in Front of the Sultan”, in:Promoting the Saints: Cults and Their Contexts from Late Antiquity until the Early Modern Period, ed. Ottó Gecser and others (Budapest: CEU Press, 2010), 69-81, esp. at pp. 74 and 76-78. The views of Panofsky (idols: see Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art, New York 1972, p.148, n.3) and Tolan (undecided: p.143) are cited at p.73.
- Jump up^ Bonaventure, Legenda major (1260–1263), cap. IX §7–9, criticized by, e.g., Sabatier, La Vie de St. François d’Assise (1894), chapter 13, and Paul Moses, The Saint and the Sultan: The Crusades, Islam, and Francis of Assisi’s Mission of Peace, Doubleday Religion (2009) excerpted in a restricted-view article in Commonwealthmagazine, September 25, 2009 “Mission improbable: St. Francis & the Sultan”, accessed 4 April 2015
- Jump up^ For grants of various permissions and privileges to Francis as attributed by later sources, see, e.g., Tolan, pp. 258–263. The first mention of the Sultan’s conversion occurs in a sermon delivered by Bonaventure on October 4, 1267. See Tolan, pp. 168
- Jump up^ Bulla Gratias agimus, commemorated by Pope John Paul II in a Letter dated November 30, 1992. See also Tolan, p.258. On the Franciscan presence, including an historical overview, see, generally the official website at Custodia andCustodian of the Holy Land
- Jump up^ Bonaventure (1867), p. 162
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Chesterton (1924), p.131
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Bonaventure (1867), pp. 78–85
- Jump up^ Ugolino Brunforte (Brother Ugolino). The Little Flowers of St. Francis of Assisi.Calvin College: CCEL. ISBN 978-1-61025212-6.
Quote.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Bonaventure (1867), p. 178
- Jump up^ Pope John Paul II (November 29, 1979). “Inter Sanctos (Apostolic Letter AAS 71)” (PDF). Retrieved August 7, 2014.
- Jump up^ Pope John Paul II (December 8, 1989). “World Day of Peace 1990”. RetrievedOctober 24, 2012.
- Jump up^ Calendarium Romanum (Libreria Editrice Vaticana), p. 139
- Jump up^ Pope Pius XII (June 18, 1939). “Licet Commissa” (Apostolic Letter AAS 31, pp. 256–257)
- Jump up^ Pope Francis (March 16, 2013). “Audience to Representatives of the Communications Media”. Retrieved August 9, 2014.
- Jump up^ “Pope Francis explains decision to take St Francis of Assisi’s name”. London: The Guardian. 16 March 2013. Archived from the original on 16 March 2013.
- ^ Jump up to:a b “New Pope Fra[n]cis visits St. Mary Major, collects suitcases and pays bill at hotel”. NEWS.VA. 14 March 2013. Archived from the original on 16 March 2013.
- Jump up^ Michael Martinez, CNN Vatican analyst: Pope Francis’ name choice ‘precedent shattering’, CNN (13 March 2013). Retrieved 13 March 2013.
- Jump up^ Laura Smith-Spark et al. : Pope Francis explains name, calls for church ‘for the poor’ CNN,16 March 2013
- Jump up^ “Pope Francis wants ‘poor Church for the poor’”. BBC News. BBC. 16 March 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
- Jump up^ Bethune, Brian, “Pope Francis: How the first New World pontiff could save the church”, macleans.ca, 26 March 2013, Retrieved 27 March 2013
- Jump up^ Alpert, Emily (13 March 2013). “Vatican: It’s Pope Francis, not Pope Francis I”.Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 16 March 2013.
- Jump up^ “Writings of St. Francis – Part 2”.
- Jump up^ Brand, Peter; Pertile, Lino, eds. (1999). “2 – Poetry. Francis of Assisi (pp. 5ff.)”.The Cambridge History of Italian Literature. Cambridge University Press.ISBN 978-0-52166622-0. Retrieved 2015-12-31.
- Jump up^ Chesterton, G.K. (1987). St. Francis. Image. pp. 160 p.ISBN 0-385-02900-4.http://wayback.archive.org/web/20151117034706/http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/stf01010.htm
- Jump up^ Renoux, Christian (2001). La prière pour la paix attribuée à saint François: une énigme à résoudre. Paris: Editions franciscaines.ISBN 2-85020-096-4.
- Jump up^ Renoux, Christian. “The Origin of the Peace Prayer of St. Francis”. RetrievedAugust 9, 2014.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i See Francis of Assisi at the Internet Movie Database.
Bibliography[edit]
- Scripta Leonis, Rufini et Angeli Sociorum S. Francisci: The Writings of Leo, Rufino and Angelo Companions of St. Francis, original manuscript, 1246, compiled by Brother Leo and other companions (1970, 1990, reprinted with corrections), Oxford, Oxford University Press, edited by Rosalind B. Brooke, in Latin and English,ISBN 0-19-822214-9, containing testimony recorded by intimate, long-time companions of St. Francis