Obedience Can Kill You

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I’ve been thinking, what can I say or write in preparation for the Solemnity of St. Francis of Assisi (October 4th) that would speak to others and would come from my heart rather than san franciscomy head. Then it occurred to me to share the Lord has taught us through St. Francis. Every teaching has been a blessing.

I have to say that the most visible blessing that God has given to the world is the Franciscan family. I don’t think that anyone really knows how many sons and daughters St. Francis has. If I were to compare Francis to a biblical personality, it would be Abraham, the father of many. I think the first quality of St. Francis that I respond to is fatherhood.

This is interesting, because Francis always identified himself as our little brother. But this little brother has commanded the attention of millions of men and women around the world, not all of them Catholic. He has certainly had the obedience of thousands of men and women during the last 800 years. What makes Francis such a special man and a father figure is not that he was authoritarian or controlling. What makes him a special figure and a father is that he was respectable. Francis is credible. Credible people are respectable. He set out to live his life according to the Gospel. To everyone who came to him, he offered the Gospel. He did not impose himself on anyone. On the contrary, he was the father who guided his sons and daughters into the future.

Today, we have too many people who want to make the world right by dictating to others, including correcting the Church. There is such a thing as fraternal correction, which Francis used quite often. But let’s look at his style. Look at the admonitions. He speaks about faults that are to be avoided and how they are to be rectified if they are committed. He is a brother, not a policeman. He didn’t even police his own brothers.

A brother corrects while being very careful not to cross the line and assume authority that he does not have. A brother who is faithful to the Gospel corrects without making a judgment about the state of the other person’s soul.

I want to draw attention to an aspect of him that is rarely addressed, obedience. Francis’ poverty is well known. But very little is said about Francis’ obedience and what he taught the brothers concerning obedience.

Francis demanded that his sons and daughters obey. Above all, we are to obey God. We know when God speaks to us, because the Church confirms it for us. We can’t jump a rung on the hierarchical ladder. We seek to know the will of God in order to fulfill it. It is the Church who tells us if we’re on the right track. We can’t simply say that the will of God is X and the entire college of bishops is wrong and I’m right. It doesn’t work that way and Francis knew it. He reminds us in his Testament that the rule was of divine inspiration, not human influence. He quickly adds that he knows this because the Lord Pope confirmed it for him.

Francis taught us there is only one question that we need to ask. “Is this a sin?” If I’m being commanded to sin, I have a duty to disobey. However, if I’m being commanded to do something that is not a sin, even if I believe it is not the best decision made by legitimate authority, I am bound to obey. God is pleased by obedience more than by the thing that we do or not do.

Obedience can be deadly. John lost his head. Jesus was crucified. We cannot be obedient without dying. This death is not symbolic, metaphoric or allegory. It’s very real. We die to ourselves and to many things around us.

Francis teaches us what he learned from Christ, “obedience, even unto death,” without murmuring and without second thoughts, obedience given, rather than compliance demanded.

Despite everything that Francis said and wrote about Lady Poverty, he begins his most important piece of writing with the words, “The Rule . . . is to observe the Holy Gospel in obedience.”

Christ is the Master and Francis is his hired teacher sent to us, through the Church, by the Holy Spirit. He teaches us that obedience is an absolute requirement in order to be like Christ, even when obedience is deadly (in the eyes of the world).

Happy Feast of St. Francis
 
Thank you. Many prayers for you and the children, and your the Brothers.
Clare
 
WORKS OF THE SERAPHIC FATHER SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI

Translated by the Order
Code:
                                              LETTER IX
To the beloved Brethren in Christ, the Provincial Ministers of the Order of the Friars Minor.

In your government I beseech you to be careful of two things: first, that you be not respecters of persons; and secondly, that you be not free in commanding of virtue of holy Obedience, for this is unsheathing the sword, which should not be done except after mature deliberation and on great occasions. Be moderate in your commands, merciful to sinners, easy in pardoning, spare in food, poor in dress, mild in words, and faithful to God and your office. Preach by your works, if you wish your subjects to listen to your words and obey your precepts, and what you command by your mouth, fulfill in your actions.

Farewell in the Lord
 
Brother Jay, do you find obedience hard? Do you find it hard to submit your intellect to a higher authority?
 
Brother Jay, do you find obedience hard? Do you find it hard to submit your intellect to a higher authority?
Yes, obedience is difficult. For this reason, our formation program dedicates seven years to annulling all personal desires, personal opinion, personal wishes and teaching us how to shut out anything that comes to mind that is not what the Church or our superiors think. In simple words, the greatest challenge of obedience is sentire cum ecclesiam.

I would say that the difficulty is not really in obeying. The real challenge is silencing the temptation to have an opinion when you have not been asked for one. Another challenge of obedience is responding to what the Pope, bishop and superior ask, not out of compliance, but out of true love for Christ and for them through whom Christ speaks.
 
Yes, obedience is difficult. For this reason, our formation program dedicates seven years to annulling all personal desires, personal opinion, personal wishes and teaching us how to shut out anything that comes to mind that is not what the Church or our superiors think. In simple words, the greatest challenge of obedience is sentire cum ecclesiam.

I would say that the difficulty is not really in obeying. The real challenge is silencing the temptation to have an opinion when you have not been asked for one. Another challenge of obedience is responding to what the Pope, bishop and superior ask, not out of compliance, but out of true love for Christ and for them through whom Christ speaks.
Thank you, Brother, and God bless you.

Happy Feast of St. Francis to you and your sons! May St. Francis obtain for each and every one of us a true spirit of obedience and the grace to think with the Church.
 
I remember as a postulant trying to rake up leaves in a heavy wind, because I had been asked by the house superior to do that. 🙂
 
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