Your Excellency:
The Franciscan representation on this list is incomplete. Our holy Father Francis wrote three rules, all of which are still in effect.
- Rule of the Friars Minor: The focus is obedience above all things, then brotherhood, prayer, poverty and ministry. This rule was exclusively for men.
- Rule for Hermits: The focus is obedience, prayer, poverty and silence, then brotherhood and separation from the world.
- Rule of the Brothers and Sisters of Penance: This rule was written for religious and laity. The focus is obedience, penance, brotherhood, prayer, austerity, poverty, care of the poor.
Franciscan men are either mendicants or seculars. Franciscan women are: nuns, sisters or secular. Common to all three rules are obedience, brotherhood and poverty in that order of priority. Canonically, when a man or woman is admitted to the profession of vows in the Franciscan family, he or she is received to obedience. Unlike other communities who owe obedience to their constitutions, Franciscans vow obedience to their brothers. The constitutions simply guide the brothers daily life. But the brothers or sisters guide each other’s spiritual life. Therefore, we owe each other obedience under vow and are bound to obey each other under penalty of grave sin. No other religious family has such a stern interrelationship between obedience and brotherhood. Contrary to popular language, Franciscans do not promote or believe in fraternity. We do believe that other religious families live the fraternal life, but we do not subscribe to it for us. Our focus is on family, thus the focus is on the brothers or the sisters.
Often, the word fraternity is used, because it is easier for the average person to understand. But it does not appear in our rule or our constitution. The term has always been rejected, because it is very collective. Fraternity speaks about a group. Brothers speaks about individuals. In the Franciscan tradition the most important element is the individual brother. We venerate each brother and we live for the purpose of sanctifying each brother.
Ministry, in the Franciscan family, is not an essential component of our lives. Franciscans can be enclosed, hermits or active. But ministry may never replace the common life. No brother or sister is ever allowed to excuse himself from life with the brothers for the sake of service to the laity. Francis had a very different view of the laity. His idea was that the brothers (sisters) served the laity by being present in their community. The laity would learn holiness from observing the holiness of the brothers. The brothers should encourage the laity to embrace their way of life, by either joining the order or imitating the life of the brothers in their circumstances.
The Friars Minor are to evangelize the laity by modeling obedience to each other, being detached from material things, detached from people, detached from places and detached from roles in the community. Therefore, a Friar Minor may be a layman, priest, bishop or pope and still remains a brother to the rest of his brothers and submissive to them. This example should motivate the laity to aspire to the same way of living the Gospel.
The Friar Hermits are to evangelize the laity by becoming saints. Through the grace that they receive through prayer, the laity is blessed through the communion of saints.
The Brothers and Sisters of Penance are to evangelize the laity by doing penance for them, since Francis assumed that the laity could not properly do penance for themselves, for many reasons. Penance involves on-going obedience to the brothers, total submission to the Church without questions or doubts, and changing from focus on self to focus on Christ crucified in the poor. The Brothers and Sisters of Penance are the most active Franciscans among the poor and the largest branch of the Franciscan family.
An FYI, the brown habit is not the dominant Franciscan habit. LOL. It was made very popular by the Friars Minor, because that’s their color. But the original Franciscan habit and dominant color is grey. That’s why we’re called the Grey Friars in England. The brown habit was adopted by the Italians and Spanish Franciscans. Since they were the early Franciscan missionaries to the Americas, it has come to be associated with Franciscans.
Another common element to all three rules of St. Francis is an absolute obedience to Francis. We’re not the only religious family who has a strong devotion to our founder. Many others do to. But we are known for our strong affection for our holy Father. You can hardly find a Franciscan writing that does not mention Francis. There is rarely a conversation about faith and holiness in our houses where the name of Francis is not mentioned. We have a rather interesting attachment to Francis. While many religious speak of becoming more like Christ, Franciscans will express this goal a little differently. We tend to say that to be like Francis is to become like Christ, because Francis is the perfect teacher of Gospel living. In a strange kind of way, Francis has become the model of disciple that his sons and daughters try to imitate in their effort to be perfect disciples of Christ. To use St. Clare’s words, our call is to follow the footsteps of the crucified Christ in the sandals of St. Francis.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF
