When did these orders esp. Francis’s, get so fancy?
I’m not sure if I would call getting an education getting fancy. But the Friars Minor were getting very heavy education even during Francis’ lifetime. Francis himself gave permission for it. When Anthony of Padua joined the Order he wrote Francis a letter and asked for permission to educate the friars at the univesity. Francis approved provided that studies did not extinguish the spirit of prayer.
Well, priests need to be educated a lot to be ordained, but they could just get ordained apart from them and then join, thereby the order being free to be poor, right?
You don’t have to be a religious to be a priest. So the answer is yes. A man can become a priest and later become a religious. That being said, having resources to send religious to school does not make an order rich. The cost of the education is either negotiated with the school to bring it down to a minimum or is gathered through begging in some shape or form. The order is still poor. Sometimes there are trade-offs. The order will give the university friars as professors in exchange for education of other friars.
Anyway, I see religious life as being like at your personal judgment in that you are stripped of pretensions and excuses, not having your adult toys (I mean, high-def. tvs, computer stuff, PMPs, etc.) and** “yes men/women” buddies, **
I’m sorry. I don’t understand the bold part. The bold is mine.
A monastery might be best, but some have interpersonal talents.
If a person does not have good people skills an enclosed monastery is the worse place in the world to be. Monastics have to live with each other under the same roof for life. There are no transfers between monasteries, if there are problems. You have to solve them yourself.
Actually, the Carthusians and others who put themselves away in a cell probably have that best (as they have much more time and less distractions from facing themselves),
There are many distractions in solitude. Don’t kid yourself. Ask any monastic.
but St. Francis and some others who do active things pulled it off.
Francis was not as active as we think. The problem is that when his biographies are written they speak about his activity, because there is nothing remarkable to say about his cotemplative, silent and solitary life. Whatever happened during those periods of silence and solitude he rarely shared except with Brother Leo and Brother Leo rarely wrote them down.
The entire Franciscan order is much more contemplative than people think. Our daily schedule and life has more periods of silence, solitude and prayer than periods of activity.
One of the reasons why there are less Franciscan friars in parishes or Secular Franciscans involved in ministry is because parishes and diocesan ministries have become too demanding of people’s time. They are usually very big and busy operations. It is not fair to the Franciscan to ask him or her to sacrifiece silence, community, prayer and solitude for parish ministry. Because parish ministry is not what the Order was founded to do. Parishes, schools, hospitals and other organized ministries were taken on by the friars and secular Franciscans because there was a desperate need. It was not part of the Franciscan identity.
It is not fair to the laity to have Franciscans in a parish, if the Franciscans are not available 24/7 because they have community obligations that take priority over ministry. That’s why the new community of the Primitive Observance do not want to engage in organized ministries. They don’t want to be totally absorbed by them as has happened to the other friars over the years.
The laity can be very demanding and rarely forgiving. If a friar says that he cannot attend a parish function because he has to be present for community recreation people get upset. They don’t see the value of community recreation, because they’re focussing on the word *recreation *and not on
community.
Gradually, younger Franciscans who are friars or Secular Franciscans are saying that they want to live according to the primitive spirit of the Order and are not taking on obligations that are in conflict with the life of prayer, community, poverty, and freedom. The early Franciscans, both the friars and the seculars were very free. They came and went where they were needed, because they were not tied down by institutions.
They took on institutions and lost their freedom. Now the tendency is to shy away from institutions. That being said, there is also a clause in the rule of the friars and the rule of the Secular Franciscans where Francis says that we must support the local bishop. It’s a tough juggling act, supporting the local bishop and trying to keep up with the original spirit of the Franciscans of the 1200s.
I mention the friars and the Secular Franciscans, because those are the two orders that are not cloistered. The Poor Clares, though they are also Franciscan, were never caught in this situation between a simple life and ministry.
There are many Franciscan Friars and Secular Franciscans who do corporal works of mercy as their ministry. But many are involved in more organized ministries, to help the diocese. They do not do so because they were founded to run big ministries as were the Vincentians, the Jesuits, the Salesians, the Christian Brothers and many others.
This whole concept of the Primitive Observance raises many interesting conversations. It was addressed at the General Chapter of the Secular Franciscans in November 2008 when representatives from around the world gathered to discuss the life and rule of the Order. The biggest concern was returning to the primitive observance and how it would help or hurt the local dioceses.
Fraternally,
JR
