J
JReducation
Guest
The bold is mine. I really like your last question. I believe that the soil is fertile for our Secular Franciscan brothers and sisters to become a very powerful presence among Catholics. Everytime I revisit Franciscan history, especially the lives of our Holy Father Francis and our Secular Franciscan saints, there is one thing that jumps out at me. There was always a strong sense of mission to evangelize those who did not know the Gospel. However, the greatest emphasis was always placed on evangelizing Catholics and it was the Secular Franciscans who responded to this dimension of the Franciscan Missionary Vocation.I am well on my way to becoming a Secular Franciscan. A bit of the above seems to apply to my fraternity and ones like it in this region… and also applies to myself of course. You don’t hear about any of us in the news relating to issues listed above or any of us being heavily involved in service to the poor, the sick, the dying etc. Perhaps part of it is due to that most of us really are very ordinary people and the fraternities are ageing… a lot.
About half of our local fraternity is a year off or less to making the final decision to become Secular Franciscans (if accepted) - so that does show recent growth. We do meet once per month and that’'s about it except for the ‘homework’ and finding our way to becoming a Franciscan in our personal and working lives. I feel it’s not enough to leave it just at that but I really don’t know how to develop things a little in the direction of what our Br JR is suggesting above.
Personally I believe I have a calling to help the aged, those with dementia and the dying but this would not be something that my fraternity would be suited towards (considering age and training). We did send off a letter, as a group, to a leading politician protesting about abortion at election times. A few in the group are involved in general parish activites, and one in general charities. We are a loving and I think devout group but is that enough these days?
Because most Secular Franciscans are either married or are deacons and priests attached to dioceses, they did not have the freedom of movement to go to the foreign missions. Nonetheless, they were true missionaries at home. They evangelized the Catholic laity and secular clergy around them. Men like Thomas More did battle with a dissenting king and the clergy who supported him. Women like Elizabeth of Hungary were the predecessors to today’s Mother Teresa, impressing upon the people of her time the dignity of the poor, the sick and the dying. Louis King of France set the standard for moral government. In fact, the Franciscan Sisters did not come from the Poor Clare Nuns. They came from the Secular Franciscans. Most were Secular Franciscan women who joined forces to combat the ills of illiteracy, child abuse, and the hopelessness of poverty and illness. They were eventually separated from the Third Order Secular and incorporated into the Third Order Regular. That’s how we came to have the millions of Franciscan Sisters who have faithfully served the Church since the 17th century.
The Secular Franciscan Order has always planted a seed of the Gospel among Catholics who were lost, confused, hopeless, poor, abandoned, oppressed, and in a state of error. As we can see, Jesus statement to Judas is still applicable today. “The poor shall always be with you.”
Today, the poorest of the poor are many of our Catholic brothers and sisters who dissent on critical issues such as abortion, contraception, euthanasia, infanticide, illegal immigration, the death penalty. These are truly poor. As I think about it, they are poorer than those who are materially poor, because though they belong to a Church where the fulness of truth subsists, they are not aware of it or they believe that they can pick and choose what to believe and what to obey.
Let us remember the words of profession made by the entire Franciscan family. "I promise to obey . . . " If we are to be obedient, then should we not obey God’s call to evangelize our Catholic brothers and sisters?
What would our Holy Father Francis expect of us?
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF