Third dot:
Let’s go to the last, but not least important dot. This is the dot that sustains poverty and fraternity. This dot is called contemplation. Francis observes the Blessed Mother very carefully. Again, many non-Franciscans miss this, because most biographers either skip over it or mention it in passing. However, when we look to the prayers that Francis wrote, his prayers to the Blessed Mother reveal his entire ecclesiology. He is the first theologian to refer to Mary as “The Virgin Made Church”.
How does he get here? From childhood, he had been taught to love and venerate Mary. You must remember that Marian cult was much bigger among Eastern Catholics and Orthodox than among Roman Catholics. During the Middle Ages, Marian cult takes off like a rocket thanks to the work of St. Bernard of Clairvaux and the Dominican Friars. Francis was aware of their preaching and teaching on Mary.
Francis looks to Mary to learn how to contemplate God and how to listen to God. The closer that he gets to Mary, the more contemplative he becomes. The more contemplative he becomes, the more prayerful he becomes. The more prayerful he becomes, the better Catholic he becomes.
His contemplation of Mary leads him to see something that no one had ever seen before. If they had, they had not mentioned it, not even the Eastern Fathers. He not only acknowledges Mary as the Theotokos, but he also sees her as the virgin made Church. Christ builds his Church on the faith of Peter. But Peter’s most faithful subject is Mary. This is very hard for us to understand.
In order to understand the product of Francis’ contemplation, one must understand the early Church. Peter was the rock. Mary was among the believers. She is the perfect woman of faith. She was not above the early Church. She was not outside of the early Church. She was not exempt from membership in the Church. She was part of the Church. She was the perfect member of the Church. The Virgin Mother encompassed everything that a faithful Christian should be. Therefore, she was the Virgin made Church.
It is important to understand that Francis arrives at this profound understanding of our relationship with Mary and our relationship with the Church, as well as the relationship between the Church and Mary, through contemplation. Fraternity and poverty remain horizontal unless the Christian lives a contemplative life. The contemplative life allows us to see the vertical. The horizontal and vertical make up the cross.
So when we say that Francis is a man of the cross, it has nothing to do with crucifixes. It’s all about relationships between man and man, man and Church, and man and God. Observe that there are three parts to Francis’ cross. Why? Because he is the Trinitarian Disciple. Hence, after his death, the Church gives him the title of Seraphic Father. Like the seraphs, his love for God burns like fire. His nearness to God in the hierarchy of saints is superseded only by Mary. In 2009, Pope Benedict compared him to Paul. He said that in the hierarchy of saints, Francis was on the same level with Paul. Not because of their achievements, but because of their love. We know that the other Apostles are at the level in the Communion of Saints.
We can live the same mission as Francis. To do so, we have to embrace his vision of detachment, family and contemplation. These three qualities are found to perfection only in the Trinity. To live as Francis did, one has to become a disciple of the Trinity.
Cast the net into the deep, beyond the more shallow images that we have of Francis, the little poor man, the humble man, the penitential man, the chaste man, the stigmatist, the rejected son, and so forth. He was all of this, but this is only the outer skin of the man named Francis of Assisi.
The essence of Francis of Assisi is much deeper and yet much simpler.
- Detach from everything that is not God and does not lead to God.
- Like Christ, be an obedient son of the Father and brother to all men.
- Like Mary, let God speak first and love the Church.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV
