2024/11/04
168. Feeling of Incongruity
Christianity, which had taken root in the Roman Empire, protected Rome from the destruction of the Western Roman Empire. Meanwhile, St Francis appeared in a history that took almost 800 years to prepare. His story is still signalling for us 800 years further down the line.
At his last table, Jesus told the Apostles the parable of a woman giving birth to a child, referring to the joy of a human coming into the world. He continued: "I will see you again and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you" (John 16:21), foretelling his resurrection as well as the birth of the Eucharist. Jesus then assured them, saying: "In that day you will ask nothing of me. Truly, truly, I say to you, if you ask anything of the Father, he will give it to you in my name. Hitherto you have asked nothing in my name; ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full" (16:23-24). The Church has responded to these words of Jesus by praying "so that they may become for us the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ", asking for what is the best in this world.
In the Gospel of John, Mary was never called
"mother" by Jesus so that she might become the priesthood itself (cf.
John 2:4, 19:26). Bound to "the mother of Jesus" by Jesus' words on
the cross in a parent-child bond, the Apostle was bound to the priesthood. The
Gospel reads, "And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home"
(19:27). Mary, the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene were also there. San
Damiano Crucifix depicts this very scene. St Francis realised something from
this. Having received the diaconate, he was on the line towards priesthood, as
seen from the fact that he called himself "clerical"1.
However, he never became a priest.
1. c.f. Francis of Assisi, The Testament.
Francis may have had a sense of incongruity, which eventually burdened him as a contradiction, as he was ordained a deacon for love for the Church. In his life with this contradiction, we see the presence of the "vocation of Jesus". The fact that many of his disciples drew back and no longer went about with him speaks for itself (cf. John 6:66). At the same time, his life also reflects that of Christ approaching the Passion, described in the following passage: "This was to fulfil the word which he had spoken, 'Of those whom thou gavest me I lost not one.'" (18:9). The Father's hand prunes the vine branch, which is fully connected to Jesus Christ, so that "it may bear more fruit" (15:2). That hand was upon Francis, and he continued to respond by surrendering himself to that hand and living a life of thorough poverty.
In my opinion, the hand of the Father on Francis was a love that nullified the sacrament of Deaconate he received for his love for the Church and restored to him the "vocation of Jesus" that the Father had bestowed on him from the beginning. He had, after all, received the "vocation of Jesus" in front of San Damiano Crucifix.
To be continued.
Maria K. M.