Let’s deal with the obvious first. We all think and we all have opinions about things. It’s impossible not to do so. That being said, it does not mean that everything that we think and every opinion that we have has to be shared.
This is one of those areas that is actually expressed in Canon Law. I can’t recall the exact number, but somewhere in the 200 section there is a canon about the laity’s right to communicate its needs and concerns to the bishop and the Church. However, if one reads the statement very slowly, it says something that we often fail to do.
We’re pretty good at jumping on the wagon and saying, “I have a right to express my opinion, the Constitution gives me that right or Canon Law gives me that right.” However, we are not too attentive to the other part of that law. It speaks of communicating with due reverence.
We don’ t have the right to run our mouths. My communication with others, especially with the Church’s authorities is always about our common good, not about what I believe or what I would like to see.
This is another level of voluntary poverty for the sake of the Kingdom. I speak up and about what is for the benefit of God’s people. All too often, we say that we’re speaking for God’s people, but we’re really mouthing off for our benefit. We like to hear ourselves talk and we like to impose our beliefs on the whole. It becomes very obvious when we’re obnoxioius in our communication. The canon got it right. If you’re truly interested in the common good, you factor in that the person in authority is part of the community. He is not your enemy. Therefore, you speak to him with great reverence. This means that you have to set aside your feelings for him or your opinion of him.
I’m not trying to know more than God or be more Catholic than the pope. I’m hoping for the common good. If I can’t speak for the common good, then I simply remain quiet. I accept that I don’t really have anything to say. In that regard, I am poor, because I have nothing to offer.
If I have something to say I do so with reverence. Again I am poor, because I put the other person first as a servant would his master.
This is where I have a personal problem with many blogs and videos on the Internet. They are often about the blogger or the personality on the video. He or she spills out all of his or her rhetoric without regard for the person to whom he’s speaking or the person about whom he’s speaking. This kind of communication is what St. Francis condemned as prideful the demeanor one who wants to impress that he’s right, even if he has to offend to do so and then he takes the high road by saying things like, “People are offended by truth.”
Francis often said that people are rarely offended by truth. People are usually offended by those who want to bully others into accepting their perception of the truth. He always taught us that the truth is gentle. He alwasy pointed to the Gospels and showed us that while Christ often gave the people a scolding, he quickly turned around and did something for them that showed how much he loved them. He did not drop the stink bomb in the middle of the room and leave. That is not the behavior of the poor man from Nazareth. That is the behavior of the arrrogant tyrrant.
The Stigmata of Our Holy Father Francis is intimately connected to the Feast of the Exultation of the Holy Cross. I always makes me want to say, “Be careful what you pray for.” Francis was on retreat during the feast fo the Exultation of the Cross and he asked the Lord to grant him the grace to suffer in his body what Christ suffered out of love for us.
A few days later, his body was imprinted with the wounds of Christ, nails and all. It is the first known stigmata. He actually had nails, which no other stigmatist had had.
The miracle is not the important part. God performed the miracle. The important part for us is the love. Francis followed St. Paul’s advice to the letter; “Be conformed to Christ in all things.” He wanted to be like Christ, not only in his charity and his virtue, but also in his redemptive suffering.
When Francis looked at the cross he saw two bars, one for love and the other for obedience. Christ obeyed because he loved and he showed his love by obeying even unto death.
Francis teaches us that such love is possible. It is truly possible for an ordinary person to imitate Christ and slowly be transformed into a reflection of Christ. Francis was not created an angel. He was a young man like any other young man. He had dreams for the future. He has memories, joyful and sad ones. He has his fears like everyone else. He had sins and human flaws. What we learn from him is that despite all of this, we can chip away at our lives and gradually become mirros of perfection, if we truly obey and love.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF