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iloveangels
Guest
I think it’s true that the order was more diluted before the new rule of 1978 when we reported to friars. SFOs were treated like a sodality or a pious society before. We are still just coming out of that now in actuality.Actually the biggest complaint I have been hearing is that during the time before they were combined it was to diluted. Without a common authority most members of SFO had poor training. Many were treated as second-hand citizens (i.e. servants of the other Orders).
Many see this as a big revival and an opportunity where the Holy Spirit is guiding the Order to regain its original intent. Similar to the way the Brothers and Sisters of Penance were founded in the first place. Are there going to be growing pains and problems during the process? Yes it will happen with any human run organization, but with the help of St. Francis, St. Clare and other patron Saints those issues have been worked out and are still being worked out. Each SFO fraternity can still have its own feel and outreaches, but now there is better training, more communial feel and more support then ever before.
Instead of looking at the perceived “problems” of the past, look to how to embrace the future.
However, I think we do have some growing pains to get through. There’s a tendency, and I’ve seen it written as well as vocalized even at fairly high levels, to look back at the era in the 13th/14th centuries when the secular Franciscans were responsible for a lot of social change, rather unwittingly maybe–and expect that we will be mostly “social change agents.” THAT is a complete misunderstanding of the vocation and purpose of the third order. It’s a consequence, and if God wills it then so be it. But it’s not our main purpose for acting.
Honestly, I think we somehow have to get past the popular politics of the present moment which is a confusion for many people.
The rule itself says, in so many words, that we are instead to join ourselves to St. Francis in being completely faithful to the Holy Catholic Church and Scripture, wherever that takes us. And we are to be as faithful to Franciscan tradition as the OFMs and Poor Clares, but in our own way and in our own houses and neighborhoods and families, which means prayer and simplicity and faith that God is in charge no matter what. And that everything in creation gives Him praise, if for no other reason, than merely by the fact that it exists. And to recognize that strife for the sake of strife is futile since we all have the same Father. This is my little explanation of the charism, for what it’s worth.
Am I worried. Nope. God will get us through this too. Always has, always will. It was believed by St. Francis himself that the Franciscan order would be with the church til the end of time. I’m not sure how that would ever change. Don’t think it would.