A place of prayer, poetry and hopefully peace all in and through the Franciscan tradition
Tuesday, 17 March 2020
St. Patrick, Pandemic, and the Divine Presence of God: Brooke Taylor wit...
An interview with Brooke Taylor for the Feast of St. Patrick covering all things Pandemic too.
May it bring you and yours blessings for the feast and let us all pray that St. Patrick may intercede for a quick cessation to the current viral pandemic.
You can access the interview at this link:
interview on St. Patrick, the pandemic and the Divine Presence
Monday, 16 March 2020
Lockdown - Brother Richard Hendrick
With thanks to Fr. Michael Surufka OFM: A sharing of my poem Lockdown that took place in the US yesterday... How wonderful that we can share our community even in the midst of the difficulties of this time: The text of the poem follows:
Lockdown
Yes there is fear.
Yes there is isolation.
Yes there is panic buying.
Yes there is sickness.
Yes there is even death.
But,
They say that in Wuhan after so many years of noise
You can hear the birds again.
They say that after just a few weeks of quiet
The sky is no longer thick with fumes
But blue and grey and clear.
They say that in the streets of Assisi
People are singing to each other
across the empty squares,
keeping their windows open
so that those who are alone
may hear the sounds of family around them.
They say that a hotel in the West of Ireland
Is offering free meals and delivery to the housebound.
Today a young woman I know
is busy spreading fliers with her number
through the neighbourhood
So that the elders may have someone to call on.
Today Churches, Synagogues, Mosques and Temples
are preparing to welcome
and shelter the homeless, the sick, the weary
All over the world people are slowing down and reflecting
All over the world people are looking at their neighbours in a new way
All over the world people are waking up to a new reality
To how big we really are.
To how little control we really have.
To what really matters.
To Love.
So we pray and we remember that
Yes there is fear.
But there does not have to be hate.
Yes there is isolation.
But there does not have to be loneliness.
Yes there is panic buying.
But there does not have to be meanness.
Yes there is sickness.
But there does not have to be disease of the soul
Yes there is even death.
But there can always be a rebirth of love.
Wake to the choices you make as to how to live now.
Today, breathe.
Listen, behind the factory noises of your panic
The birds are singing again
The sky is clearing,
Spring is coming,
And we are always encompassed by Love.
Open the windows of your soul
And though you may not be able
to touch across the empty square,
Sing.
March 13th 2020
Saturday, 18 May 2019
"Brother Thanks-be-to-God": St. Felix of Cantalice, the first saint of the Capuchins
Today, the eighteenth of May, is the feast of the first canonised saint of the Capuchin friars!
So I would like to share a little of his story with you...
(the following is a collation from various sources)
Felix was born to a family of farmers and so knew hard work from a very early age. He was known for his great physical strength, always an advantage on a farm in those days, and he was even a very good wrestler! From childhood he was known for his piety listening avidly to the stories his parents would tell him of the Desert Fathers, the first Christian Monks, and their deep ascetic mysticism. Wanting to dedicate himself to God he wasnt sure where to go until an Angel appeared to him in a dream and told him to go to the local Capuchin Friary and become a friar! Twice he journeyed to the friary and twice he couldn't find the Guardian and so came home again! The Angels must have been patient as he was told a third time to go and on this occasion he did meet one of the Superiors. He brought him before the Crucifix in the Church and told him to pray while he would go and fetch the Guardian to speak to him. The friar left and promplty forgot all about him until returning to the Church that evening he found Felix lost in prayer in the same position that he had left him in hours before. That was enough for the friars and they accepted him immediately.
Felix had hoped that in the Capuchins he would be sent to one of the mountain hermitages to pursue a life of prayer and contemplation but this was not to be! Instead he was sent to Rome where he became the chief Questor (official beggar) for the friars. He would begin his day at the crack of Dawn in prayer, and meditation and by assisting at Mass and then make his alms route around the city begging for the needs of the poor and the friary. He often laughed at the sense of Hunour that God must have, when asked why he thought this was so he would tell people that on becoming a friar he had renounced even touching bread and wine ever again as a penance, but the first job he was given as a Questor was to beg for bread and wine!
As he travelled around the streets of Rome he became a familiar and much loved figure to two generations of Romans. He was soon nicknamed Fra Deo Gratias, "Brother Thanks be to God" because this was his customary greeting and response to all circumstances. When asked once by a Roman society lady what his philosophy of life was he responded, "Eyes on the Ground, Hand on the Rosary, Heart on God".
He aimed to make every moment a living prayer and to recognise in every person, regardless of their station in life a brother or sister in the Lord. He was friends with St. Philip Neri and St. Charles Borromeo, he advised princes and cardinals, dukes and duchesses and never refused any person who was in need. He would bless bread and fruit to be sent to the sick who would eat it and then recover. Felix always attributed these miracles to the intecession of the Blessed Virgin for whom he had a particular love. He would make up songs and rhymes about her which he then taught the children to sing. On one occasion the Pope, who had been a franciscan before his election, asked for a piece of bread from Brother Felix. He immediately sent him a piece of mouldy black bread as a reminder that he was still a friar and should live like one despite his papal election. At a time when the Capuchins were still a young reform of the Franciscan order it was the holiness and fame of Brother Felix that won for them papal approval.
Nights were times of prayer and meditation for Felix when he would spend hours before the Blessed Sacrament in prayer of adoration and petition. During this time he was gifted with many visions and on one occasion one of the other brothers saw the Blessed Virgin appear and place the Child Jesus in his arms, a sign of his incredible purity of heart and devotion. Eventually worn out after so many years of unrelenting service he became sick, collapsing in front of the brothers to whom he wryly announced, "This little donkey has fallen and won't be getting up again!" At his deathbed he suddenly sat up and a light was seen to shine from his face. One of the brothers asked him, "Felix, what do you see?" "I see the Blessed Virgin surrounded by throngs of Angels!", he replied. Holy Communion was quickly brought to him and as the Host was brought into the room he sang the hymn "O Sacrum Convivium" in a loud voice, then received the Body of the Lord and gave up his spirit. As he passed away the bells in some of the nearby churches rang by themselves and some of the children of Rome ran through the streets shouting, "The saint is dead, the saint is dead" All of Rome turned out for the funeral of the little brother who had laboured amongst them for so long. Canonised as St. Felix of Cantalice he became the first of the Capuchin branch of the Franciscan Order to be canonised and remains in his joyful simplicity and deeply contemplative spirit and model for every Capuchin since.
St. Felix pray for us!
Saturday, 20 April 2019
Homily for the Easter Vigil 2019
Homily for the Easter Vigil 2019
It begins with fire… a spark is struck and an
explosion of light transfigures darkness…
It begins with a flame… courageous, strong,
held aloft and carried into a dark and empty space
It begins with light… a point of luminescence
that is shared and spreads without ever dimming or becoming less…
A light that is the light of all but kindled in
the heart of each and every person…
A light that the darkness now discovers it can
never overcome…
It begins with a cry an invocation of light
called with hope into a darkness that seems to be the death of all things
Lumen Christi we cry and we hold our flame
aloft…
Lumen Christi we cry before the forces of sin,
and darkness and death…
Lumen Christi we cry and we watch in awe as sin
is forgiven, darkness is swallowed by light and death touches life itself and
so becomes no more…
This is our faith and this is why we gather all
over this world on this holiest of nights to vigil from darkness to light, from
dusk to dawn, from death to life
Keeping our watch as a vast flaming tide of
faith catches fire and flows across the face of the earth as the people of God sing
the song of resurrection…
Tonight, we exult with joy over a victory, not
just promised but already given, as we see the ancient enemy thrown down and
the cosmos healed and renewed in the light of the Risen One stepping from His
tomb; his wounded and glorified feet gentle upon the soft grass of the garden
as Mother Earth thrills to know that the seed buried within her not three days
hence held within itself the gift of a new and eternal spring for all creation.
A new beginning for all that was, and all that
is and all that will be…
For from this moment all is new and the One
before whom the first seven days of creation unfolded in power and majesty is
now become the eighth day Himself, the beginning and the ending, the alpha and
the omega the origin and the completion of all things…
Now the great cry of resurrection is heard as
the call of the Good Shepherd to all of creation to come home to the house of
the Father!
The doors and gates of sin that we erected in
our error and pride have been knocked down and the empty Cross stands as the
key that gains us entry into Love for all eternity…
Now the lord Adam and the lady Eve and all
their generations are loosed from the limbo of the ages and hear their Son and
Lord call them home at last…
Now Peter is called from his tears to look into
the eyes of love and become the rock the foundation stone of faith…
Now the Apostles will be woken from their grief
and fear to become sparks of the flame of love that will over run the whole
world…
Now even Judas is looked upon in love if only
he can open his pride sealed eyes…
Now the mourning of the women will become the
joy of the comforted…
Now the faith of the Mother is fulfilled at
last and the Son embraces her in a moment so sacred so profound that even
angels are rendered silent before the sight…
And down the ages the flame comes….
The light born by saints and sinners alike for
only sinners can became saints…
The fire of Easter borne through days of joy
and days of sorrow, through days of peace and days of persecution, through
great and glad gatherings and lonely lives lived in isolation and pain…
In every succeeding age the great of this world
proclaim it quenched, the so called wise proclaim it stifled and lost, and yet
always, always, it rises again, renews itself again, and from the long banked
hearth it flames forth from One who can never die and whose five fiery coals kindle
the Church as the harvest of the world eternally governed not by earthly power
or wisdom but by the weakness and folly of the Cross…
The fire comes to us too who gather here this
night on the holy land of Ards…
It crackles beneath our feet and drums in the
heart of our being, gifted to us by Ancestors who saw their own story assume
meaning in His greater story, who found hope in His fire and love in His light…
It comes to us pure even of those who along the
way corrupted its cry of compassion and peace and hurt so many… and it comes to
us to use us to purify the past by becoming fire ourselves… by becoming places
of resurrection, tombs that become gardens liberating the Christ life to love
through us, with us, and in us the whole of creation and so reach out to the
wounded, the poor, the downtrodden, the abused that they might hear their own
hope sound anew in our Alleluias!
We saw this fire work its wonders this past
week when in a country where so many thought the faith dying if not dead already,
a burning building brought blessing… not in the flames that consumed a mere building
but in the sparks suddenly kindled by that sight that gathered a people and
brought them to their knees before their mother singing the hymns of their
ancestors and resolving to find again the faith that would raise to the Mother
of God such a tribute… The same fiery faith that sent a priest into the burning
nave to rescue the Blessed Sacrament and the ancient relics, remembrances of
His love for us and give a benediction to the city that burned hotter than any
earthly flame…
So do not doubt the power of this resurrection
flame… in every age it has burned and we are still dazzled by the light of
Easter dawn when even Brother Sun
dances with joy!
A Christian fears no doubt, no danger, no
darkness!
For all is aflame with love this night, and fire
dances over our heads as we sing our Alleluias to the Rising Son!
Wednesday, 26 December 2018
My Gran and the Christmas Invitation
My Gran and
the Christmas Invitation:
Today, St.
Stephen’s day is a very sacred one in our family… not just because of the first
Martyr’s witness and passing to the Lord, but because it is also my Gran’s
anniversary.
My Mother’s
mother, she was, (and is), one of the greatest influences in my life growing up.
I have
always regarded Gran as one of my first and best teachers, not only in the ways
of faith but even on the contemplative path within it.
Many, many hours were spent with her, listening to her stories and imbibing her teaching (though she would never have called it that… she simply taught by her very being, as all good elders do). Faith for her was as natural as breathing, and indeed, if you listened as closely as I often did to her whistled breathing as she went about her day, a short prayer to the Sacred Heart or to Our Lady was often just beneath the surface of her breath.
Many, many hours were spent with her, listening to her stories and imbibing her teaching (though she would never have called it that… she simply taught by her very being, as all good elders do). Faith for her was as natural as breathing, and indeed, if you listened as closely as I often did to her whistled breathing as she went about her day, a short prayer to the Sacred Heart or to Our Lady was often just beneath the surface of her breath.
Like her
own Mother and Grandmother before her she was a “sharp woman”, as they used to
say in Dublin,
meaning a wise person and one with a direct line to the Spiritual world.
Her mother was sought out amongst the Dublin flats as she had “the way” of helping difficult births and deaths and was often asked for advice about a “match” between couples as she had a “good eye” for these things.
Gran was no different and there were many times I would go over to her house to find her sitting beside the phone waiting for the call that would tell her so and so had died. She, of course, already knew as she had “the dream” the previous night… the phone call always came to confirm it and I soon learned to be used to it.
On other occasions I would arrive to hear her chatting aloud with someone only to discover her alone by the fire when I entered the room.
Her mother was sought out amongst the Dublin flats as she had “the way” of helping difficult births and deaths and was often asked for advice about a “match” between couples as she had a “good eye” for these things.
Gran was no different and there were many times I would go over to her house to find her sitting beside the phone waiting for the call that would tell her so and so had died. She, of course, already knew as she had “the dream” the previous night… the phone call always came to confirm it and I soon learned to be used to it.
On other occasions I would arrive to hear her chatting aloud with someone only to discover her alone by the fire when I entered the room.
I never
asked.
She never
said.
We didn’t
need to.
She taught me those ways too.
“Look into the fire and tell me what you see” she would say, and then smile when, to my surprise, I saw.
She taught me to look at people’s eyes when they spoke and at the way they stood and moved.
She had tremendous devotion to the Blessed Virgin who had “been through it all” and her prayers to her were not so much novenas or devotions as a constant conversation born of a life long trust. She had great respect for the friars and religious orders much preferring their churches in town where she could attend anonymously, not liking the front seat parish people as she called them.
She reminded me often never to judge anyone and taught me to give to the poor, especially beggars in the street.
“There’s always a story there,” she would say,
“No one is on the street because they want to be.”
Women were on the street or poor because,
“Men put them there.”
Men were on the street or poor because,
“Most men are fools for the bottle or for a story.”
No matter the reason they were to be listened to and helped.
She had been sharp in other ways too. A hard life and losing her husband early on had made her hard in her mid-life and it was only as a Gran that she softened again. In her later years she would often tell me that she was glad she got to be a Gran after everything she had been through.
She often
worried about her death. She was not afraid to die.
"No one dies alone", she would say.
She had seen enough deaths to know that,
“They come to collect you.”
She was, however, afraid that she would die in the house and that I or another grandchild would find her. So for the last few years of her life she prayed everyday the “Thirty day’s prayer” to Our Lady for a happy death and listed the way she wanted to go:
"No one dies alone", she would say.
She had seen enough deaths to know that,
“They come to collect you.”
She was, however, afraid that she would die in the house and that I or another grandchild would find her. So for the last few years of her life she prayed everyday the “Thirty day’s prayer” to Our Lady for a happy death and listed the way she wanted to go:
She wanted to die in her sleep so she could “wake up in Heaven”.
She wanted
to die alone but having said her goodbyes and surrounded by love.
She wanted
to be ready to go.
She talked about it often, not in a morbid way, but in the way you recite your shopping list.
Going and
coming were natural in their very essence and death she had long taught and
lived was nothing to be afraid of for a Christian soul.
That
Christmas she had been very unwell.
Pneumonia
had followed a chest and kidney infection and a stay in hospital was called
for. She did not want to go but acquiesced at my Mum’s request. Feeling a
little better after a few days of antibiotics she was to be released for
Christmas by the Docs even though Mum was not happy that she was ready. She came
home to us. She was weak and a slim figure of her former self though I still
wondered at the muscled arms of her small frame, a result of countless years of
housework when that still meant a physical ordeal. She spent most of the next
couple of day’s in bed sleeping. She smiled a lot and we got to visit with her
and hold her hand and chat.
Christmas Eve came and her children and grandchildren all visited with presents and smiles and the occasional worried whispered conversation with my Mum and Dad as to how she was doing. Christmas Day she was very quiet and slept a lot. As the house was beginning to settle down she called my Mum into the room and very deliberately and unusually for a woman of her time thanked her for all she had done and told her she loved her. My Mum was somewhat taken aback but at that moment Gran asked her who it was that was standing behind her.
There was no one there that Mum could see.
Gran’s eyes focused on the spot behind her and she relaxed.
Christmas Eve came and her children and grandchildren all visited with presents and smiles and the occasional worried whispered conversation with my Mum and Dad as to how she was doing. Christmas Day she was very quiet and slept a lot. As the house was beginning to settle down she called my Mum into the room and very deliberately and unusually for a woman of her time thanked her for all she had done and told her she loved her. My Mum was somewhat taken aback but at that moment Gran asked her who it was that was standing behind her.
There was no one there that Mum could see.
Gran’s eyes focused on the spot behind her and she relaxed.
“It’s
alright,” Gran said, “I know them.”
Mum said
her smile was a beautiful thing at that moment.
She told
Mum, “You can go down to the family now, I’m fine”.
Mum did, though
to the end of her own days she often wondered why she did.
As she went downstairs she could hear Gran talking quietly in the room.
Later Mum checked in on her to find her sleeping deeply and gently.
That night
a Blackbird sang outside the house all night.
I remember
looking out to try and see it.
I could
not.
I should
have known.
Gran had
often taught me to watch out for Blackbirds.
“They are
special to our family,” she would say,
“Your Grandfather loved them and they come to warn us of things.”
“Your Grandfather loved them and they come to warn us of things.”
“Whenever
you see one, say a prayer to your Grandad.”
I still do.
The
following morning, very early, Mum woke suddenly and went straight to check on
her.
Gran had
passed away.
She was
still warm and she was smiling gently.
Mum called for the Priest and the Doctor and then carefully woke us all. I still remember that there were no tears in the house that morning. It all felt very peaceful and quiet. The Priest administered the Last Rites as he felt that she had only just gone before Mum found her.
A little later myself and Mum stood in the room with Gran looking out the window.
On the lawn a hen Blackbird was hopping around.
We smiled at that.
“Well”, I said, “She certainly got the death she had wanted!”
Mum told me then about the things that had happened the previous night and about Gran seeing someone in her room.
Someone who
had made her smile.
“Do you
think it was Grandad?” I asked.
At that moment, right in front of us, a Cock Blackbird, all shiny and bright yellow beaked flew down beside the Hen on the lawn outside. They greeted each other and flew off together.
After that
there was nothing else to say.
Gran had
gotten the death she had asked for and we had received the little signs of her
going.
In Ireland there has always been the custom of the “Cuireadh na Nollaig” the so called “Christmas Invitation” the feeling that a death at this time of the year is especially blessed and that the signs around it are powerful. Today, almost thirty years later I write this so that this story of my Gran’s passing may be remembered and may bring peace and hope to all who read it…
And perhaps
the next time you see a Blackbird you might say a prayer for all your loved
ones gone before you…
(Photo unattributed found on google)
Wednesday, 21 November 2018
Encountering the Crucified One: The Beginnings of Franciscan Christology as seen in three encounters of St. Francis with Jesus as depicted in the Legenda Major of St. Bonaventure
In this
short article it is my intention to indicate the beginning of certain themes that will
influence the future development of Franciscan Christology. We find them present,
though in seed form as it were, in the conversion narrative of St. Francis as
given in Bonaventure’s Legenda Major.
To do this I will look at the three
fundamental encounters with Christ that Francis has en route to his full conversion
and embracing of a life of evangelical mendicancy. The first, his dream of a
house filled with arms and knightly apparel while already on the road to battle; the
second, his encounter with Christ under the guise of a leper; and, thirdly, the
encounter with Christ through the crucifix of San Damiano.
In all
three of these events we will see the seminal beginnings of elements and themes
of an implicit Christology which will inform the life of Francis and the
Franciscan movement through the ages. We will see that each of these events is
characterised by an encounter with a hidden Christ who, when manifested or
recognised through contemplative awareness, is then responded to by action and affective movement on the part of
Francis. Thereby situating from the very beginning of the Franciscan vision the understanding that we must discern an apprehension
of who Christ is, and how we are called into the fullness of life by Him, at
the nexus of both contemplation of, and action on behalf of, the same Christ we
encounter.
The first encounter:
The Knightly Dream:
Bonaventure
situates the first of the acts that we will look into at the very outset of
Francis’ conversion. Post a period of illness that could “enlighten spiritual
awareness” (LM 1:2) he tells us that Francis at this time is still in a state
of ignorance as to both his future and the ability to discern God’s plan for
himself. After charitably clothing a poor knight that he meets in the town he
receives the first part of the knightly dream being shown “a large and splendid
palace with military arms emblazoned with the insignia of Christ’s cross.” ( LM
1:3) The figure of Christ is present through the symbol of the cross. He is at
one and the same time both the centre of the dream in its primary symbol and its
hidden heart, just as surely as the meaning of the dream is hidden from
Francis. Upon waking, Francis, whom Bonaventure tells us is not yet skilled in
interpreting the symbolic schema of dreams, attempts to bring about its
fulfilment by taking up arms. This course of action is summarily stopped by the
second dream of the cycle wherein he is asked,
“Who can do
more for you a Lord or a servant, a rich person or one who is poor?” (LM 1:3)
This time
Francis recognises that the dream is inviting him into mystery. He realises
that he has interpreted his future course incorrectly and asks,
“Lord what
do you want me to do?” (LM 1:3)
When the
Lord answers that he is to return to his town and there await a spiritual
outcome he obeys immediately, the fruit of this actioned obedience being a
spirit of care free joy. This care free joy is seen as the fruit of true
obedience throughout the monastic tradition but is especially a fruit of it in
the Franciscan vision of religious life.
Already in
this encounter with the “hidden Christ” of the dream, aspects of just who
Christ is for Francis, (and later the Franciscan movement), can be seen. He is
firstly the one who calls us to joy. Joy that is revealed and accessed through
conformity of our will to His will in obedience. Just as Christ conformed His
will to that of the Father, so the follower of Christ, (and of Francis), will
have to walk that path of obedience. For Francis setting out on the path of
obedience is both a contemplative act, in the surrendering of the will to the
hidden Christ of the dream, (“Lord what do you want me to do?”), and an
affective action of instant obedience that frees him and brings a state of
spiritual joy.
The second encounter:
The Leper on the road.
Setting the
scene of the second encounter Bonaventure tells us that Francis is still
seeking the discernment of God’s will for himself while slowly separating
himself from the “pressure of public business” (LM 1:4) We already see in
Francis the beginnings of an oscillation between contemplative withdrawal and
the call to the market place of action that will only find its balance in the
later Spirit filled discernment of Sylvester and Clare. Francis is described
now as a man in whom the heavenly flame has been kindled through the practice
of fervent prayer, and it is in this spirit that he will meet the leper on the
road. Recalling the earlier images of knightly aspirations Bonaventure begins
the story by seeing Francis as a Knight intent on the conquering of himself for
Christ and the encounter with the leper as one of the trials of chivalry that
the great heroes of the romances would go through. Francis is even pictured on
his horse, like a spiritual Galahad riding into battle. To begin we are told
that even seeing the Leper in the distance struck him with “not a little
horror” (LM 1:5) but that Francis overcame his feelings of repugnance and humbling
himself by descending from the horse he gives the leper both the alms he seeks
and a kiss. On resuming his seat he finds the Leper vanished, (to all of
Bonaventure’s medieval primary audience this would have at once indicated that
the Leper was either an Angel or even Christ Himself), and so Francis
immediately begins to sing the praises of the Lord.
In this
encounter with the Christ who hides beneath the guise of the poor and the
marginalised, (the Christ of Matthew’s judgement scene), we see another seminal
layer of Franciscan Christology laid down, wherein the contemplative withdrawal
of the follower of Francis should go hand in hand with a growing awareness of
the presence of Christ in all people and especially in the poor and particularly
those exiled to the edges of society. Francis finds a silent Leper Christ. One
who always assumes the lowest place and whose taking on of leprosy as His
“disguise” issues a challenge to find the Lord God in the lowest place. Indeed,
as this event happens while Francis is still trying to discern his own vocation,
we can say that it is only in the letting go of our own privilege and ego,
(dismounting from our horse as it were), that we become open enough to the
revelation of the hidden silent Christ so that our purpose may be revealed to
us. Bonaventure expressly demonstrates this movement as being essential in the
following of Christ as in the very next paragraph he links the encounter with
Christ as Leper to the vision Francis has of the crucified Jesus and the
appropriation that Francis makes to himself, (an appropriation that we are all
called to make), of the Gospel text to deny ourselves, take up our Cross and
follow Christ.
This leads
us beautifully to the third and final encounter we will consider.
The third encounter:
The Christ of San Damiano
We find
this encounter at the beginning of the second chapter of the Legenda. Here
Christ is not hidden anymore, though His purpose and command are at first
misunderstood by Francis. In the crucifix of San Damiano Francis continues his
deepening dialogue with the Lord, “who became humbler even to accepting death.”
He is “led by the Spirit” and enters the church to pray, and there beholds the
crucifix. While the Christus figure of the San Damiano Cross is depicted as alive
and triumphant He still bares the bleeding wounds and the loin cloth of the
moment of crucifixion and death. Like the Fisher King of the Arthurian legends
wounded and yet a healer, (a figure that Francis would probably have been
familiar with), Christ is represented on the Cross both in His eternal divinity
as the Lord of History and the impassable Logos, and at one and the same time,
in His humanity as the suffering servant of Isaiah who silently endures. Here
on the Cross of San Damiano Jesus is the Lamb of revelation, dead yet alive upon
the Altar. In the triune perfection of the call that issues from the Cross
telling him to, “go and repair my house, which as you see, is all being
destroyed.” (LM 2:1) Francis once again moves from contemplation of the
Crucified to action. Action which, though at first is misguided in its literal
interpretation of the command, eventually bears fruit in not just rebuilt
churches, but in the service of a universal Church who, in its chief shepherd,
will recognise him as the one who will help in holding up the sinking edifice
of the faith.
So we may
see the unfolding conversion of Francis characterised by a growing realisation
of just who Christ is. We are the witnesses, through Bonaventure, of the
beginnings of a life lived for God alone. A life which, in its distinctive
character and expression, will set the foundations of a Franciscan Christology
that, arising from these charismatic and contemplative insights of Francis,
will centre the movement on relationship with the Christ who is both near in
the poor and the marginalised, and far above us as the hidden Lord of the
castle of our knightly desires. He is revealed as the One whose sacramental
presence will be venerated beneath the veils of leprosy and isolation just as
truly as beneath those of bread and wine. Above all else, He is the crucified
who calls us to share in His mission of reconciliation and peace, eternally
suffering and dying, rising and reigning. It will be on these foundation stones
that the vast work of Franciscan Christology will be built, always calling us
back to the contemplation of our own moments of encounter with Christ, hidden
or revealed, so as to lead us through Him, with Him and in Him to the building
of the Kingdom within us and then within the world.
Br. Richard Hendrick OFM Cap
(Originally written as an essay for the Franciscan Formation Studies Course in Canterbury 2013)
Picture credits: Pics 1 & 3 Piero Cassentini, Pics 2 & 4 uncredited)
Saturday, 27 October 2018
The Hunter's Moon
The
Hunter’s Moon
Seeking the
graced sight
of the
Hunter’s Moon,
I left the
bright lights
of the
house behind me,
and, bundling
myself
against the
cold,
I took the
wooded path
to the
place
where I
could watch her rise,
fierce and
cold against
the purple
dark sky.
There I blessed
her
for
blessing me in turn
with such
light:
pure and
cold and bright,
gilding the
sea golden beneath her
as she rose;
my silver
sister of the sky above:
the Lady’s
lamp,
a guide for
all who wander
and wonder
in turn.
Finally,
when the cold bit
into my
already aching bones
too much,
leaving
moon to her meditations,
I left for
home.
Trudging
darkly along
the wooded
path
discerning
its grey
pebble skinned
presence
barely a
step or two ahead
I was
gifted
with the sudden
awareness
of unaloneness
and paused
in the
pitch dark
not sure of
what old sense
had been
alerted, nor why.
Then,
carefully kindling
the little lamp
I carried
I sudden
saw twelve sets of eyes
gaze
glowing from off the path
and realized
in front of me,
our holy
herd of deer.
Down from
the rutting hills
they had
come silent as the dusk
that
surrounded us, perhaps,
to pay
their own homage to the lady
high above
us all.
Horse high
and seeming huge they were,
I heard now
their breathing,
their
antlers broad between the branches,
utterly
still they stood and stared
as we
regarded each other,
“Well met
by moonlight”, I thought,
as I,
awestruck in stillness also
bowed
deeply to these
old ones of
the woods,
the first
Lords and Ladies
of these
sainted lands.
Then,
stepping back into the dark
I left them
to their silent vigil
and made
for home,
my heart elated
by that moonlit magic
recalling eden’s evenings
when all
were one
before Him.
Later,
making tea,
I wondered
how often
on our grey
and often seeming
daily darkened
path
we have,
all about us beings
carrying
such, and even
greater
blessings,
but never
notice, shut in
as we are,
behind
our
curtained glass,
sitting lost
before
our
flickering screens,
while they,
keep their
ancient vigil too,
waiting for
us to touch
stillness
long enough,
deep
enough, to discern their
moonlit
presence
and, at
last, know ourselves to be,
with them,
one
before the
One, from whom
the light
and dark
and deer
arise.
Sat Oct 26th
2018
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