A Condition of Complete Simplicity. Rowan Clare Williams

A Condition of Complete Simplicity - Rowan Clare Williams


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was widespread mockery, and accusations of insanity. The final, decisive break with the past came when Francis went to pray in the dilapidated old church of San Damiano. An old crucifix hung there, and Francis had spent some hours in contemplation before it when he thought he heard Jesus speaking to him from the cross: ‘Francis, go and rebuild my church, which as you see is falling down.’ Typically impetuous, he began to gather stones to rebuild San Damiano, which later became the home of the first Franciscan women, St Clare and her Poor Ladies. Francis then travelled to Foligno, a few kilometres from Assisi, to sell some of his father’s cloth. Instead of returning home with the money, he gave it to the priest at San Damiano, although this ‘gift’ was not accepted. Refusing to return home, Francis hid in the priest’s house, but his father found him and took him before the Bishop of Assisi to demand the return of his money. It was here that Francis made his dramatic gesture of renunciation of everything his father had represented to him. Standing naked before the Bishop, Francis mirrored the poor Christ on trial. No power on earth could deflect him from the course he saw that God wanted him to take. There is no record that he was ever reconciled with his earthly father. Instead, claiming God as his only father,10 Francis found the root of his being in God alone, finding his identity as brother to all the other creatures of God’s world.

      Come, Follow Me

      Francis was an all-or-nothing character in everything he did. He displayed the same singleness of mind and heart in his youthful pursuit of extravagance as in the frugality of his life after his conversion. In fact, an appetite for life in all its variety remains one of the central identifying marks of Franciscan living. Francis’ insistence on a life of poverty and dependence may seem stark and uncompromising. His choice profoundly challenges the values of a materialistic world. Yet the way of Francis should never be allowed to become a sterile renunciation of that world or its people. Still less should it be a withdrawal from the life of the world out of hatred or fear of its reality. Even Franciscan hermits are deeply enmeshed in the concerns of the world through their prayer. Their lives, no less than lives of active service to the poor, are love in action. Franciscan spirituality is rooted in love for all things, and all people, as they are. The search for God in our lives begins with what already is, because everything in existence is already marked by the hand of God the Creator. There are plenty of signposts to the divine presence in our world, if only we have the perception to recognize them.

      So how may Francis aid us in our search for a credible way forward in these times of global insecurity? There should be enough evidence already to show that Francis’ relevance is not merely bound up with his own time or context. His attitude to the life of faith can teach us much about our own journeys and questions. Francis’ love for God and all creation calls us outward from preoccupation with self, into connection and relationship with the world and its people. His devotion to the crucified Christ also calls us inward, to intimate communion with God our Creator, and to respond in passionate self-giving. His call to right relationship challenges us to think creatively about today’s ‘lepers’: those we find it hardest to accept become, through this lens, our beloved brothers and sisters. We have already acknowledged something of the importance of learning to listen – to discern the presence of God at work in our world and in each other, to learn what he has in mind for us. Like Francis, we are called not just to follow Christ in outward observance, but to become Christlike. Further, we are to reflect back the image of Christ already alive in each person, by loving them and encouraging them into becoming the person they were uniquely called to be. The Good News is for all people, without exception. If we are prepared to listen, Francis can speak it with prophetic urgency for our time, as he did in his own.

      Suggested Exercises

      1 What is at the heart of your life? Is there anything about your priorities which you want, or need, to change? How might you go about this?

      2 Are there any elements of Francis’ own story which have particular resonance for you? What have been the memorable turning points or ‘conversion moments’ in your life?

      3 Where are you completely committed (relationships, faith, work)? What holds you back from total commitment?

      Notes

      2. God with Us

      Chiefest of all forms of service that the brothers and sisters can offer must ever be the effort to show others in his beauty and power the Christ who is the inspiration and joy of their own lives.

      (The Principles of the First Order of the Society of Saint Francis, Day 22)

      One of the chief hallmarks of the Franciscan way of life is its down-to-earth quality. The very phrase ‘down-to-earth’ sums up an essential element of Franciscan belief and practice. It is no longer possible to see God as remote, somewhere ‘up there’ out of the way. Since the birth of Jesus Christ, we have become aware that God’s willingness to become incarnate connects him intimately with the life of every creature. God has walked this earth as one of us. This is the heart of the Christian mystery: God, limitless Creator of all things, submits to the limitation of human existence in order to demonstrate the truth of his love for us.

      A Christ who is both truly God and truly human illumines our humanity by showing us what it is possible for a human to become. Saints are made when a human being accepts the challenge to grow beyond what we normally think of as the limits of human possibility. Each of us is called to take seriously our status as creatures made in the image of the Creator. Each of us is called to reflect that image back to the world in which we live. Christians inherit the truth that in Jesus, God did not become flesh to live and die only once in a finite time and place, but for all time. Our flesh too contains the seeds of that mystery. We too can become more nearly like our Creator. We only have to want to. In striving to reflect God more perfectly,


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