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Adoration of the Blessed
Sacrament,
the ultimate in Franciscan Spirituality
Francis greatly
"desired that God be honored liturgically through His only Son, Jesus Christ. He
revered the Eucharist as a living reminder of our salvation through the Cross.
The praise of lips along with the angelic choirs was his constant occupation and
joy1."
In his letter to
all the faithful, Saint Francis emphasized the greatest commandment of all. He
requests that we must love God... and our neighbor as ourselves. We,
Franciscans, walk the way of the Cross in imitation of Jesus Christ.
We cannot love God
if we exalt the "self" rather than adore God's Glory. "Francis' special concern
is the Divine Glory and man's refusal to let it shine through his person.
Vanity, arrogance, extravagant self-esteem, jealousy, envy, hatred, wrong
self-assertion, deceitfulness, untruthfulness, exercising excessive control over
others, these are vices that go against the glory of God. Saint Francis, in his
Order and as an example for the world to see, made self-denial an absolute
condition for reflecting the glory of God. In the 21st Century, most people have
lost recognition of the need for self-denial and have even lost the knowledge of
right vs. wrong. "The remedy for sin is to carry the cross of Jesus Christ
instead of crucifying Him by sin. One carries the cross rather than inflects it,
by recognizing the real enemy, the flesh."
Fr. Sergius
continues: "Sin has one root: the inordinate love of self ― that tendency of the
human ego to concentrate all its attention upon its own maintenance and the
furtherance of its own private ends. Jesus did not aim at the elimination of
this self-love but at its complete subordination to the love of God and man."
Saint Francis had a
living faith in the Eucharist, and he regarded this as a special grace. This is
evident from his own words: "We adore you, O Lord Jesus Christ, here and in all
the churches which are in the whole world and we praise you because by your holy
cross you redeemed the world." Saint Francis attended the Lateran Council of
1215 and it was at Francis' insistence that certain rules were established
pertaining to the Blessed Sacrament kept in the Tabernacles in churches, because
until then there were not standards of cleanliness and decoration of the
Sanctuary.
Francis was "keenly
aware of the triple-faceted richness of the Eucharist: 1) as sacrifice, 2) as a
Sacrament, and 3) as Presence. In this writings he describes the "Real
Presence." Francis noted that he "saw a prolongation of the Incarnation and how
the abiding Eucharistic presence makes the Incarnate Word humanly
accessible to believers of all ages."
"Adoration holds an
important place in the spirituality of Saint Francis. God alone deserves
adoration because He alone is good. We should praise the Trinity through the
mediator Christ, that is, through the Eucharistic sacrifice." (cf. Rule of 1221)
In order for us to
praise and adore God through Jesus Christ, it is first necessary to repent and
confess our sins or shortcomings. Then we continue our pilgrimage of the Cross,
to deny the flesh and thus only adore Jesus Christ in the way of Saint Francis.
Change my Heart, O God. My life is for you, Lord. May I adore You and praise You
with my actions, that are possible only with Your Grace, as charity toward
brothers and sisters. As Franciscans, we have been given a clear picture of what
Francis had in mind for us, our Rule, Constitutions and Statutes. For those
reading this, who are not Franciscans... If you wish to follow Jesus Christ as
Roman Catholics, you too have an obligation to suppress the flesh (that takes
sacrifice!) and love God deeply as His Son Jesus did. We all have a spiritual
intercessor in Heaven and that is Mary, the Mother of us all.
F. Schaeffer, SFO
11-19-2003
The Evangelical Counsels and the Secular Franciscan
Order
Fr. Michael J. Higgins, TOR
(Part I)
Introduction
The Gospels stories point out that Jesus touched people in ways that made
them question the direction of their lives. Some refused to listen or turned
away because his challenged seemed to be too hard. Many others were so moved by
his mission and ministry that they were impelled to search for a more perfect
way of living and being. This is exemplified in many Gospel passages like the
one regarding the rich young man: “As he was setting out on a journey, a man ran
up, knelt down before him, and asked him, ‘Good teacher, what must I do to
inherit eternal life?’” (Mk. 10:17) It is also manifested in the Beatitudes in
which Jesus teaches that the poor, those who mourn, the meek, those who hunger
and thirst for righteousness, the merciful, the clean of heart, the peacemakers,
and those persecuted for righteousness will inherit the kingdom of heaven (cf.
Mt. 5:3-10).
The longing for eternal life or the “kingdom of heaven” has often been
described as a desire for perfection. This is one of the motivating factors for
the so-called flight to the desert and the birth of religious life in the early
Church. The early ascetics found models for how to live their lives in the
examples of Abraham, Moses, Elijah, and John the Baptist, and in the temptations
that Jesus faced before and during his public ministry. The message that is
conveyed by these Scriptural stories implies that any serious quest for God
involves a separation from the world, the taming of one’s passions and human
ambitions, and a constant struggle with the forces of evil. In their desire for
spiritual perfection, the ascetics believed that the only sure avenue was an
intensely close following of the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity, and
obedience and a strict following of the example of Christ himself. They accepted
the challenge of total surrender to the Master through the abandonment of all
worldly goods, family relations and future plans.
From the first centuries of the development of religious life the evangelical
counsels became one of its defining elements. The Rule of 1223, which
stills serves as the foundational document for all the branches of the First
Order, states that, “The Rule and Life of the Lesser Brothers is this: to
observe the Holy Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ by living in obedience, without
anything of one’s own, and in chastity” (LR I:1). Similar statements can be
found in the opening chapters of the Form of Life written by St. Clare as
the rule for the Second Order, and the Rule and Life of the Brothers and
Sisters of the Third Order Regular. The Secular Franciscan Order, as a
public association of the faithful in the Church,
[1] is not bound
to the evangelical counsels in the same way that their religious brothers and
sisters in the Franciscan family are. However, the rules and teachings that have
guided the lives of secular Franciscans throughout its long history are replete
with passages urging them to embrace a life that is poor, chaste, and obedient -
lived, that is, according to the lay or secular state. This is particularly true
in the Rule of the Secular Franciscan Order, approved by Pope Paul VI in
1978, and in the General Constitutions approved in 2000.
It is with this in mind that I would like to briefly explore how the
evangelical counsels can be understood and lived within the Secular Franciscan
Order.
Poverty
St. Francis’ embrace of poverty grew out of an all consuming love for Jesus
and an ardent desire to live in conformity to the Gospel. It was not just an
external imitation of Christ, or merely a renunciation of material possessions,
or even an attempt for social action and witness. St. Francis embraced poverty
because Christ embraced it as a driving force behind his ministry and mission.
Poverty, lived as St. Francis lived it, recognizes that one is not
self-sufficient and that everything ultimately comes from God, even life itself.
As Thaddeus Horgan, SA, points out in his reflections on the TOR Rule,
Francis stripped himself not so much to set aside the things of this earth,
but to free himself of all that is not God. Like Christ, Francis perceived the
world as God’s gift to help us on the way to life's fullness... As an
interiorized value then, gospel poverty is an attitude of heart that proclaims
hopefully and joyfully all people's need for God and that the Lord alone is
God. [2]
Poverty allows all of creation to stand on its own merit. Instead of being
seen with functional or avaricious intent people and things are seen and
respected as sacraments of an encounter with God.
The ideal of Franciscan poverty is best expressed as simplicity. Guided by
this virtue one becomes attuned to the presence of the Divine in all things. It
in turn encourages a life lived in loving abandonment to the all good God. Every
event, every person can then be seen as an epiphany of the Divine. This can be
seen in a dramatic way in the life of St. Francis when he embraced the leper and
was able to see him as a child of God and not simply a diseased and frightful
creature.
The key element behind this kind of understanding of poverty is the challenge
to see all things and all people as they truly are - as God sees them - and then
relating to them accordingly. When one lets go of the self as the measure
against which everything must find its worth the world is set free to be itself.
Wise and respectful use of the things of this life is an inevitable result.
In a wonderful way, article 11 of the SFO Rule captures the heart of
the Franciscan understanding of poverty:
Trusting in the Father, Christ chose for himself and his mother a poor and
humble life, even though he valued created things attentively and lovingly.
Let the Secular Franciscans seek a proper spirit of detachment from temporal
goods by simplifying their own material needs. Let them be mindful that
according to the gospel they are stewards of the goods received for the
benefit of God’s children. Thus, in the spirit of “the Beatitudes,” and as
pilgrims and strangers on their way to the home of the Father, they should
strive to purify their hearts from every tendency and yearning for possession
and power.
Article 15 of the General Constitutions presents some of the practical
implications of the “proper spirit of detachment” that the Rule requires.
It starts by stating that,
Secular Franciscans should pledge them-selves to live the spirit of the
Beatitudes and, in a special way, the spirit of poverty. Evangelical poverty
demonstrates confidence in the Father, creates interior freedom, and disposes
them to promote a more just distribution of wealth.
[3]
The following paragraphs of article 15 are extremely challenging. They call
secular Franciscans to “provide for their own families and serve society by
means of their work and material goods, have a particular manner of living
evangelical poverty.”
[4] To do this
they are to “reduce their own personal needs so as to be better able to share
spiritual and material goods with their brothers and sisters, especially those
most in need.” [5]
Further, “they should take a firm position against consumerism and against
ideologies and practices which prefer riches over human and religious values and
which permit the exploitation of the human person.”
[6] In a word,
secular Franciscans are challenged to “see” the world through the filter of the
Gospel and to act accordingly.
2 Horgan,
Thaddeus, Turned to the Lord, Pittsburgh: Franciscan Federation, 1987:
pp. 52-53.
(Part II)
Chastity
Apart from the mention of the vow in the first chapter of the Rule for
the First Order, St. Francis does not mention chastity in his other writings.
Rather, he focuses on the need for the brothers to seek for the kingdom of God
and to have a pure mind and spirit.
In several of his exhortations he stresses that God seeks, or desires, people
who, with pure heart and mind, are willing to serve, love, honor, and adore him.
In the Rule of 1221 he writes:
I beg all my brothers, both the ministers and the others, after overcoming
every impediment and putting aside every care and anxiety, to serve, love,
honor and adore the Lord God with a pure heart and a pure mind in whatever
they are best able to do, for that is what He wants above all things… And let
us adore Him with a pure heart. (ER XXII: 26, 29)
St. Francis repeats this challenge in the Second Letter to the Faithful,
a document addressed to the tertiaries and most likely written during the time
that the Saint was writing the Early Rule for the friars. He states,
Let us love God, therefore, and adore Him with a pure heart and a pure mind,
because He Who seeks this above all things has said: True adorers adore the
Father in Spirit and Truth. (2LtF: 19)
According to Francis, the only appropriate response to God is adoration,
love, and a focusing of one’s attention on the Divine will.
In Admonition XVI, after quoting from Mt 5: 8, “Blessed are the pure of heart
for they shall see God,” he writes:
The truly clean of heart are those who look down upon earthly things, seek
those of heaven, and, with a clean heart and spirit, never cease adoring and
seeing the Lord God living and true. (Adm XVI: 2)
For St. Francis, every relationship should be based on a love and adoration
of God and guided by a pure mind and spirit. This is basis for a life of
chastity, a life that should make one more loving.
Following the Saint’s lead, the Rule of the SFO does not specifically
deal with chastity. It does, however, echo his exhortation to the friars and to
penitents to love and adore God and to allow that love to flow out to others.
Article 12 states,
Witnessing to the good yet to come and obliged to acquire purity of heart
because of the vocation they have embraced, they should set themselves free to
love God and their brothers and sisters.
As Article 17 points out, the first place this love should take root is in
the family. It states that,
In their family they should cultivate the Franciscan spirit of peace,
fidelity, and respect for life, striving to make of it a sign of a world already
renewed in Christ. By living the grace of matrimony, husbands and wives in
particular should bear witness in the world to the love of Christ for his
Church. They should joyfully accompany their children on their human and
spiritual journey by providing a simple and open Christian education and being
attentive to the vocation of each child.
The General Constitutions are even more specific - it points out that
secular Franciscans “should love and practice purity of heart, the source of
true fraternity.” [1]
And, in their families they,
should concern themselves with respect for all life in every situation from
conception until death. Married couples find in the Rule of the SFO an
effective aid in their own journey of Christian life, aware that, in the
sacrament of matrimony, their love shares in the love that Christ has for his
Church. The way spouses love each other and affirm the value of fidelity is a
profound witness for their own family, the Church, and the world.
[2]
Both the Rule and the Constitutions challenge secular
Franciscans to love - love God, love their spouse if they are married, love the
brothers and sisters in their fraternities, love the Church and its ministers,
love all people, and love all creation. This is basically a challenge to love as
God loves, with a pure heart and mind. What a tremendous challenge!
Of course, for the married brothers and sisters of the Order, one of the
distinguishing characteristics of the secular embrace of the Franciscan vocation
is more properly called conjugal chastity. The Catechism of the Catholic
Church points that,
Conjugal love involves a totality, in which all the elements of the person
enter - appeal of the body and instinct, power of feeling and affectivity,
aspiration of the spirit and of will. It aims at a deeply personal unity, a
unity that, beyond union in one flesh, leads to forming one heart and soul; it
demands indissolubility and faithfulness in definitive mutual giving; and it
is open to fertility. In a word it is a question of the normal characteristics
of all natural conjugal love, but with a new significance which not only
purifies and strengthens them, but raises them to the extent of making them
the expression of specifically Christian values.
[3]
The Pontifical Council for the Family put it this way:
Human sexuality is thus a good, part of that created gift which God saw as
being “very good,” when he created the human person in his image and likeness,
and “male and female he created them” (Gen 1:27). Insofar as it is a way of
relating and being open to others, sexuality has love as its intrinsic end,
more precisely, love as donation and acceptance, love as giving and receiving.
The relationship between a man and a woman is essentially a relationship of
love: “Sexuality, oriented, elevated and integrated by love acquires a truly
human quality.” When such love exists in marriage, self-giving expresses,
through the body, the complementarity and totality of the gift. Married love
thus becomes a power which enriches persons and makes them grow and, at the
same time, it contributes to building up the civilization of love.
[4]
The document goes on to state that without this love men and women become
objects and children become a hindrance. It is only through respectful love that
human sexuality can find its fulfillment. For this reason, an active and
mutually respectful sex life can be seen and embraced as an essential element of
conjugal chastity.
Obedience
Through an often difficult and painful conversion experience, St. Francis
discovered that life had meaning only when he listened attentively to the voice
of God and followed his will. This attentive listening desire to follow the will
of God in concrete and practical ways is what Franciscan obedience is all about.
In his Testament St. Francis reflected on the effects this kind of
obedience had in his own life. It is clear that the Saint experienced God as an
active presence and guide that led him beyond his own narrow view of the world
to something newer and greater. He writes that, “The Lord gave me, Brother
Francis, thus to begin doing penance… the Lord Himself led me among them (the
lepers)… the Lord gave me faith in churches… the Lord gave me, and gives me
still, such faith in priests… the Lord gave me some brothers… the Most High
Himself revealed to me that I should live according to the pattern of the Holy
Gospel… the Lord revealed a greeting to me… the Lord has given me to speak and
write the Rule…” St. Francis reports that it was always the Lord who showed him
what to do in the most important and decisive moments of life. The Saint
responded to this Divine action with obedient collaboration.
St. Francis found in the life Jesus the fundamental example of obedience to
God. As the writer of the Letter to the Hebrews points out so well, when
Jesus came into the world he said, “Sacrifice and offering you did not desire,
but a body you prepared for me; holocausts and sin offerings you took no delight
in. Then I said, ‘As is written of me in the scroll, Behold, I come to do your
will, O God” (Heb. 10: 5-7). Every aspect of the life and ministry of Jesus was
shaped by his intense desire to follow the will of the Father. Even when he
faced a painful and humiliating death his obedience, his attentive listening, to
the Divine will gave him resolve and courage: “Abba, Father, all things are
possible to you. Take this cup away from me, but not what I will but what you
will” (Mk. 14: 36).
The foundation of Franciscan obedience goes beyond adherence to our rules of
life or to the constitutions and statutes that guide our Orders. It flows from
an intimate and loving following of Jesus, is empowered by the Holy Spirit, and
leads to an intimate relationship with the Father. It is only with this in mind
that the practical dimensions of obedience can be understood.
For St. Francis, one of the primary places where obedience is lived out is in
the fraternity. The Franciscan fraternity is not just a group of people who have
agreed to live together or share life. It is a reality born out of obedience to
divine inspiration and an attentive listening to the Gospel. It is only then
that it can become the “privileged place for developing a sense of Church and
the Franciscan vocation and for enlivening the apostolic life of its members.”
[5]
It is important to emphasize the profound evangelical character of Franciscan
obedience. Both for individual Franciscans and for the fraternity as a whole, it
requires a constant search for the will of God and a willingness to embrace that
will and follow it - even when it is difficult and requires sacrifice. Obedience
is nothing more than listening attentively and devotedly to the will of God as
it is mediated to us through a variety of channels and a willingness to follow
it. Foremost among these are, of course, the Sacred Scriptures, the tradition
and Magisterium of the Church, the rules and constitutions of our respective
Orders, the ministers of our fraternities, the brothers and sisters in our
fraternities, and the spouses and families for our married brothers and sisters.
Once again, the Rule of the SFO captures the spirit of St. Francis in
its presentation of obedience.
Uniting themselves to the redemptive obedience of Jesus, who placed his will
into the Father's hands, let them faithfully fulfill the duties proper to
their various circumstances of life. Let them also follow the poor and
crucified Christ, witness to him even in difficulties and persecutions.
[6]
This article of the Rule is expanded in a wonderful way in the
General Constitutions:
“Christ, poor and crucified,” victor over death and risen, the greatest
manifestation of the love of God for humanity, is the “book” in which the
brothers and sisters, in imitation of Francis, learn the purpose and the way
of living, loving, and suffering. They discover in Him the value of
contradictions for the sake of justice and the meaning of the difficulties and
the crosses of daily life. With Him they can accept the will of the Father
even under the most difficult circumstances and live the Franciscan spirit of
peace, rejecting every doctrine contrary to human dignity.
[7]
These documents are clear in stating that Jesus, who was always attentive to
the Father’s will, is the exemplar of Franciscan obedience. He is the “book”
that directs and guides the lives of Franciscans, seculars and religious alike.
Conclusion
The evangelical counsels challenge Franciscans to live a life based on the
Gospels and the example of Jesus - who himself lived a poor, chaste, and
obedient life. What better way to go “from gospel to life and life to the
gospel”? [8]
With this in mind, and without simplifying this essential foundation too
much, we can say that poverty, chastity, and obedience are constitutive elements
of a Gospel centered life. They help define our relationship to God and the way
we live our lives in the world.
Even though the way that they are lived out by religious and seculars are
different, the understanding and spirit behind the evangelical counsels are the
same for all Franciscans. Flowing from an intimate relationship with God they
provide wonderful guidance for how to live our lives.
Poverty encourages us to value the world - and every one and every
thing in it - as God does. It leads us to recognize the inherent dignity in all
people and to a loving and respectful use of the world’s goods.
Chastity encourages us to love as God loves, with a purity of heart
and mind, and challenges us to express our sexuality in ways that are consonant
with our vocation and state in life. It leads to right loving.
Obedience encourages us to listen attentively to the will of God and
to have the courage to allow that will to guide and inform every area of our
lives. It leads to right living.
3 Catechism
of the Catholic Church, Section II, Chapter 3, Article 7, Part 5, “The
Goods and Requirements of Conjugal Love.”
4 The Pontifical
Council for the Family, “The Truth and Meaning of Human Sexuality,” December
8, 1995, para. 11.
Added 5/31/2005
from Ciofs
1. All quotations, unless otherwise noted are from The Real Francis by
Fr. Sergius Wroblewski, OFM. 1967 Franciscan Publishers, Pulaski, Wisconsin
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