October 2024-Monthly Spiritual Assistant Greeting

St. Katharine Drexel Regional Fraternity

Regional Spiritual Assistant

St. Francis of Assisi Friary

1901 Prior Road

Wilmington, Delaware 19809

tel: (302) 798-1454      fax: (302) 798-3360      website: skdsfo     email: pppgusa@gmail.com

October 2024

Dear Sisters and Brothers in St. Francis,

The Lord give you His peace!

On September 17th of this year the entire Franciscan Order celebrated the 800th anniversary of our Seraphic Father St. Francis of Assisi receiving the Stigmata of the Passion of Jesus visibly present on his body.  This painful gift, unexpected answer in this form, to a prayer St. Francis prayed for many years, marked him with the visible and painful wounds of the Passion of Jesus. The reception of the Stigmata is not only the third of the first three centenaries, but also, and more so, the “pivotal” experience of his journey into God. What follows in our celebrations for two more years are the Canticle of the Creatures (1225) and the Transitus (Death) of St. Francis (1226).

There seems to be a progression among these celebrations. From Confirmation of the Rule of the Gospel Life of the Franciscan (1223),  to the visible representation of the Birth of Jesus at Greccio.  The spiritual journey begins at the confirmation of a Life to be lived (Gospel Life), based on the Condescension of Compassion (term used by St. Leo the Great concerning the Incarnation of the Divine Word) of God. The Condescension presents visibly the Good News Incarnate (the Divine Word) born at Bethlehem,  Whose presence in time St. Francis re-enacted in tangible form at Greccio. This journey others shared with St. Francis leads to his Spiritual and Physical Conformity to Jesus in the reception of the Stigmata. St. Francis reached the visible heights of conformity to Jesus at La Verna in 1224. As we are told by the Franciscan Sources: What was impressed on his heart at San Damiano was imprinted on his body at La Verna. At La Verna St. Francis received, as it were, the “Seal of Approval” of God for his response to the call at San Damiano and faithfulness to his response.

Physically exhausted and seriously ill, bearing the beauty and the burden of the Stigmata of Jesus, St. Francis “explodes” into a hymn of Joy and Praise in the Canticle of the Creatures (1225). Unable to “do”, St. Francis can truly “be” the Troubadour of the Great King.  Filled with the joy of fulfillment, the Poverello sings the Praises of Creation in and of a God Who becomes one with us that we might share the fullness of God’s life for eternity.  The Canticle Year (2025) celebrates the Franciscan awareness of the Goodness of God and our call to make the whole world aware of the ever–present Goodness of the God of Creation. All the earth and what is in and around and beyond it, called into existence by God, praise and glorify God each according to their own nature.

Inanimate creatures, living things, and human beings form a part of this Hymn of Praise. All have by nature of their being the ability to manifest a joy for being present by the Creator’s Will. Human beings, created in the image and likeness of God, are uniquely mentioned for their ability to be like God in offering the mercy of forgiveness in imitation of God’s merciful love, and the ability to live life fully in view of the fullness of life that we seek in God’s grace. The Canticle of the Creatures celebrates Francis’ immersion into the dignity of life and being. All share in praising the Creator in time until the promise of the New Heaven and New Earth (Revelation 21:1) is fulfilled.

The Canticle of the Creatures celebrates:

-the wonder and beauty of every created being that gives glory to God by just being who/what it is,

-the interaction of all creation that complements the uniqueness of the other,

-the magnificent attributes each shares in its own way with the God Who created everything, directly or indirectly,

-Mary, Mother of Creation, Who allowed God to enter human history as a human being, thus allowing Mary to become Mother God’s children,

-children of God in harmony with creation disarming their hearts to one another, especially to those who seek or need pardon,

-the soul who recognizes the awesomeness of God and the responsibility to live in grace avoiding what leads away from God, our Creator,

-the soul’s immersion into the beauty and wonder of God through the human experience and who accepts the invitation of “Sister Death” to enter the fullness of life in the New Heaven and New Earth promised the faithful children of God.

Words of praise are rather simple. Living sincerely what our “Praises” convey and celebrate can often be a struggle. We desire but often struggle to be what God wills for our good. We trip or fall along the way. We should be at peace. The joy and even serenity is in the hope-filled struggle for the goal.

The Symphony of Life began with the Father’s Let there be (Genesis 1:3).  The Symphony of Redemption at one point sounded a note that soured the great symphony, the Fall of Adam and Eve, Original Sin. They distorted the sound of God’s Masterpiece of Creation. Then, millennia later, through Mary’s “yes”, that sour note became the first note of a new symphony. The Letter to the Hebrews states: For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. (2 Corinthians 5: 21).  Jesus is the note of the Fall that becomes the first harmonious note of the Symphony of Redemption that sets the tone and direction for all that follows. Jesus is the beginning without end, the Alpha and Omega, of the glorious praise of re-creation in grace through His Death and Resurrection. Is there any wonder that St. Francis of Assisi, even as he prepared for Sister Death, could sing in anticipation of the glory that awaited him? Remember his saying: So great is the good I expect that all pain is to me a delight.

From the lens of God’s grace, our Seraphic Father sang the glories of a world in harmony with God. He was conformed now to the Christ he loved and sought to emulate. He went even further by imitating Jesus in a manner he would never have presumed to achieve. Intimacy with God brings the soul to express a holiness that goes beyond the mere external. He desired that his brothers and sisters and all who sought his counsel:

-seek peace in understanding rather than tranquility through aggression, war, destruction, death,

-justice in mercy rather than retribution in violent reprisal,

-availability to all rather than judgmental distancing from those who do not share the same ideas and values as we,

-serenity in life even through the turbulence of occurrences where God’s providence reigns through faith,

-joy of being and great anticipation for the moment of the eternal encounter.

Two years before his death, already very sick and suffering especially from his eyes, (St. Francis ) was living in a cell made of mats near San Damiano. … During his stay … blessed Francis could not bear the light of the sun during the day or the light of the fire at night.  He constantly remained in darkness in his cell … One night, as he was thinking of all the tribulations he was enduring, he felt sorry for himself and prayed interiorly: ‘ Lord help me in my infirmities so that I may have the strength to bear them patiently”… (A voice spoke to him and said): …be glad and joyful in the midst of your infirmities and tribulations; as of now, live in peace as if you were already sharing my kingdom”… The next morning on rising, he said to his companions: … I should be full of joy in my infirmities and tribulations, seek my consolations in the Lord, and give thanks to God the Father, to His Only Son Our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the Holy Spirit … Therefore, for His glory, for my consolation, and the edification of my neighbor, I wish to compose a new “Praises of the Lord,” for His creatures … He called these “Praises of the Lord” which opened with the words: “Most high all-powerful, and good Lord, the “Canticle of the Sun”… He often intoned this canticle and had his companions take it up; in that way he forgot the intensity of his sufferings and pains by considering the glory of the Lord.  He did this until the day of his death.  (Legend of Perugia, 42-43)

The Poverello of Assisi was one of the wealthiest persons to ever live. His wealth went far beyond the treasures that human beings consider desirable.  The power he wielded over thousands of his day and millions over the centuries make him also one of the most influential and effective individuals to ever live.

-He was simple, surely not what the authoritative and commanding seek.

-He was poorly dressed, surely not what attracts the people of this world.

-He was not much to look at, surely not a figure that imposed himself by physical stature.

-He had a basic education for his times, surely not an ‘intellectual giant’ to dialogue with the ‘learned’ and prominent of his day.

-He had no bands of armed guards and militant forces, surely not what the dominant forces sought out.

What he had was a ‘treasure’ that far surpasses all others: He was a man in love with God, and God’s presence in all creation. He was passionately in love with life.  His spirit was contagious.  Many originally considered him out of his mind, most believed him to be eccentric, but all eventually recognized the uniqueness of a soul in love with God, life, and all people. Our Seraphic Father, St. Francis of Assisi, is a constant reminder and image of a life in love with Life.

In the beginning … God looked at everything He had made, and He found it very good. (Genesis 1: 1-30) The Lord God formed man out of the clay of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and so man became a living being. (Genesis 2:7) Life is the first gift of God’s Eternal Love. Goodness, of its very nature, cannot be contained. Goodness overflows its own limits and reaches out in all directions.  Eternal Goodness offers the greatest gift of Himself: the gift of being. During a lifetime conditioned and limited by time, we who share the ‘breath of God’, His Holy Spirit, enter a journey that leads us from living in the mystery on earth to living its fulfillment in eternity.  In Christ Jesus we recognize Him Who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life (John 14:6). What seemingly begins as a merely natural process is now transformed into a ‘Journey of Faith’ that places us in a relationship with our Creator and eternal Life-giving Father, Who continues to ‘breathe’ His Holy Spirit into our hearts, because of the Redemptive Life-Death-Resurrection of His Incarnate Son, Jesus, Who made the Father ‘real’ for us by showing us the merciful and loving Face of God.

Men and women are on a journey of discovery which is humanly unstoppable – a search for the truth and a search for a person to whom they might entrust themselves.  Christian faith comes to meet them, offering the concrete possibility of reaching the goal which they seek. (Pope John Paul II – Relationship Between Faith and Reason, Encyclical of September 14, 1998). Life is that period of time we have been allotted to know, love, and serve our God both in Himself and in each other.  We follow Jesus Who invites us to walk this journey of faith as ‘pilgrims and strangers’.

St. Francis of Assisi’s ‘Canticle of the Creatures’ is his prayer of praise to God Who can be seen in all creation, and at every moment of life’s journey. Many ‘cradle Catholics’ often take their Christianity too much for granted.  There is a tendency to forget that external religious practices, to be authentic, must be an expression of the greater gift of Faith infused at Baptism and to which they are called to be convinced and committed.

Faith is not a list of dogmas to believe, but a Person to accept and follow.  Faith, strengthened through Scripture, Tradition and the Magisterium of the Church, accompanies and encourages life in the midst of a world that hears the words of Jesus but often closes its heart to the message that must be personally accepted and lived to be effective and fruitful. Although we are all called to be saved, there is no such thing as ‘global salvation’.  Jesus died for all humanity and His redemption is once-for-all; it is ‘global’ in that sense.  However, it is the personal responsibility of each individual to cooperate with the graces he/she receives from the Redemptive Sacrificial Blood of Jesus poured out for us all, if that person hopes to be ‘saved’ and share in Eternal Life.

St. Francis’ desire to live the Gospel ‘without gloss’ is his way of reminding us that Jesus’ words must be taken to heart and lived.  Faith of itself, if it does not have works, is dead. Demonstrate your faith to me without works, and I will demonstrate my faith to you from my works. (James 2: 17-18)  Our journey of faith begins in the accounts of the Old Testament Scriptures with the call of Abraham, when he responded in faith to God’s urging to leave Ur of the Chaldeans. Abraham may not have completely understood his unique relationship with God and the role he was called to fulfill, nonetheless he had all the necessary elements for faith.  He promptly responded ‘yes’ to God’s call, a divine call that more often than not turned Abraham’s own plans upside down. Faith reaches its fulfillment in the New Testament in the Son of God Who manifested Himself and proclaimed the kingdom of God. This proclamation of God’s will and invitation to believe requires the same response as that of Abraham, our ‘Father in Faith’.

Faith becomes victory over the isolation we create in our lives when we close ourselves to the ‘Other’. Faith helps us to gratefully accept life as a marvelous experience. Filled with challenges that may try us to the limit of our strength, life is supported, nourished, and ennobled by a faith that trusts in an ever-loving and all-providing God. From the very beginning of our existence, God calls each one of us from the nothingness of ‘not being’ to an existence that bursts into time and is ultimately transformed into the immortal gift of unending Life for all. Isn’t the Canticle of Creatures an act of joy-filled faith in an unseen presence pervading everything, everyone, everywhere? Faith flourishing in the joy of the unseen seen in the depths of the heart energizes life’s journey and opens the spiritually blinded eyes to the brightness of an eternal goodness that envelopes all willing to see.

One of the greatest Gospel witnesses we can offer the family of St. Francis of Assisi flows from living in the Presence of God. Convinced of this, tranquility and peace overtake us because God is in control. Together we focus on the Lord Who calls us to share Life in our Eternal Homeland after having sought to Restore all things in Christ (Ephesians 1: 10).  Life’s journey for all Christians, even more for Franciscans, should be a “Canticle of Praise” to the Lord for every facet of life. Each step we take is a step forward surrendering ourselves unconditionally to the ever-loving providence of God, Who never leaves His children unaided.

Faith and life walk hand-in-hand.  It is our Faith that strengthens our spirit and nourishes our life. Jesus reminds us: It is the spirit that gives life … The words I have spoken to you are spirit and life. (John 6:63) When we allow the Spirit of Faith to fill our minds and hearts, when we accept the words of Jesus in truth, when we live today where God and we encounter one another, we live in hope, free from fear, trusting in divine providence that clears all intimidating imaginings from our minds and hearts.  Peace, joy, and serenity become a reality. And, they become ‘contagious’ for those whom we encounter.

Spiritual Children of St. Francis of Assisi live every moment of life fully!  The spirit of prayer that enveloped our Seraphic Father who ‘became prayer’ encourages us to pass through whatever crucible of life we encounter.  Thus we become one with the Suffering Servant Who became One with us. Let us be grateful to God for the life He has called us to live, and make our prayer You are my God…I trust in You…be my refuge…I fear nothing…(for I seek to be in You as You are within me).

May God bless you; my Our Lady and good St. Joseph guide, guard, and protect you; and may our Seraphic Father St. Francis of Assisi and our holy Mother St. Clare, look upon each one of us, and our loved ones, with loving care.

Peace and Blessings

Fr. Francis A. Sariego, O.F.M. Cap.

Regional Spiritual Assistant

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