St. Francis and the Message of Christmas

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Throughout his life, St. Francis was consumed by a desire to give his life for Christ.  This desire burst into an unquenchable flame when he received news that six of his brothers had been martyred preaching to the Moslems in Morocco. Taking Peter Cattani, Brother Illuminato, and several others he set out without delay for the Holy Land to visit the place where Christ was born, lived, preached, and then died for us. Would it not be a supreme grace to suffer a martyr’s death where Christ gave his all for us? Francis arrived at Acre early in 1220. His stay was short but eventful. With Brother Illuminato as his companion, he managed to speak before Melek-el-Kamel, the Sultan of Egypt after the siege of Damietta, but St. Francis so impressed him that the crown of martyrdom had to be postponed, permanently.

 St. Francis before the Sultan

When the Sultan asked where they came from, Francis told him they were sent to him by God, so that he could preach the Gospel to his people. Not surprisingly the Sultan was impressed with Francis and invited him to stay with him for a time. It was during his stay that Francis offered to walk into fire with the Sultan’s own priests to prove whose faith was the more authentic, but his priests did not seem too keen on the idea, nor did the Sultan when Francis offered to go it alone. What if he succeeded? The Sultan could not possibly become a Christian, no matter what miracles Francis performed, for he knew very well that to embrace the religion of his enemies was to sign his own death warrant. Francis refused the gifts that were offered to him, but it is generally believed that safe passage to visit the Holy Land was one that he accepted.

From Bethlehem to Greccio

It is believed that he was so moved by what he saw at Bethlehem, that on his return to Italy he had an idea which was to stain the memories and the imaginations of everyone with the mystery of the Incarnation. As Christmas drew near he approached John Vellita who owned land in the vicinity of Greccio and asked him for permission to use a cave on his property to re-enact the birth of Brother Jesus at Bethlehem. There were an ass and an ox in the cave and a manger with a statue of the Christ-child lying in the straw. Francis was a deacon at the Mass and spoke with such love and tenderness that many believed that the statue came alive as he cradled it in his arms. Whether this was true or not, one thing was for sure, Francis had brought back to life the humanity of Jesus Christ in the minds and in the imaginations of his contemporaries. This achievement was graphically symbolized by this event that took place at Greccio in the Christmas of 1224 and in its aftermath. Henceforth the practice of making cribs at Christmas spread all over the world and all down the centuries to the present day, to remind all, of the world-shaking truth that is at the heart of Christian Spirituality.

The Meaning of the Immaculate Conception

When you gaze upon the crib each Christmas you are not just looking at a world-shaking event that happened in Bethlehem two thousand years ago, you are looking at the flesh and blood embodiment of an idea conceived in the mind of God from all eternity, to share the ecstatic bliss in which he lived, with others. To the understandable question why, oh why should God want to do this, I can only answer by telling you a story.

When I was studying in London in the fifties I stood for hours to get a ticket to see Maria Callas singing at Covent Garden. She was then in her prime and everyone was talking about her stunning performance as Norma. By chance, I managed to get a seat in the front row. The whole experience was the closest thing that I ever experienced to heaven on earth. But would you believe it, I still was not totally happy. I felt that I would only be fully happy if I could share my happiness with others who I loved. I wanted my mother and father to be with me, my brothers and my dearest friends, only then would my cup be overflowing.

 What I am trying to say is that just as I would love to have shared my little human ecstasy with others, God must have loved to share his divine ecstasy with others too.  That is what the great Franciscan Theologian Blessed John Duns Scotus meant when he said that love and only love impelled God to create us. To do this he would create a world for us of matter and form, of land and sea, of flora and fauna, of men and women. We would all be created within his other self, his only Son. In this way, he could love them all. Then he would crown this new creation with his presence within it, through his own  Son who would be born into this world and rule over it as Christ the King. But a son needs a mother, and the Son of God would need a mother too,  not just any mother, but an immaculate mother. This would be necessary to guarantee his growth into his spiritual kingship without being in any way hindered by the sins and weaknesses that inevitably infect even the best of mothers, who despite their best intentions, are passed on to her children by nature and nurture. That is why Mary, the immaculate mother of Jesus, is an essential part of God’s plan that must have been conceived from all eternity.

Scotus and the Immaculate Conception

Scotus argued that the very moment God freely decided that the Word would be made flesh, that very decision included a human mother. How else would he be made flesh?  As Scotus put it – “If God wills an end, he must will the means”. She would be totally free from the sin contracted later by human sin. When sin did eventually stain humankind, God made sure that the human mother of his human Son remained exactly as he had originally conceived her, otherwise his plan would be in jeopardy. It was inconceivable for a woman warped by sin and selfishness to give birth to and bring up a perfect man destined to be the King that he claimed to be before Pilot.

It was for these reasons amongst others, that at the beginning of the fourteenth century, Scotus was the greatest champion of the Immaculate Conception. To a modern Catholic, this might seem surprising but in those days only a comparatively few believed in the Immaculate Conception as we do. When he preached this doctrine, Scotus was in the minority, sometimes of one as he defended this doctrine against all comers, most particularly against the Thomists.

 Sister Bernadette and the Immaculate Conception

The Thomists argued that all the descendants of Adam were infected by his sin and that included Mary. Many bitter battles were fought over this doctrine until it was finally defined ‘de fide’ by the Church in 1854. Four years later Our Lady herself confirmed the truth that theologians had argued about for centuries to a young peasant girl who would later be known as  St Bernadette. Bernadette did not understand what Our Lady was saying to her and had to repeat these strange words to herself over and over in her Gascon dialect – “Que soi era Immaculada Concepcion,” all the way back to the parish priest, Fr. Dominique Peyramale, for fear of forgetting them! Only later was the meaning explained to her, and she realised that her ‘Lady’ was indeed The Virgin Mary, Mother of God.

Sister St. Catherine Labouré and the Immaculate Conception

However, it is often forgotten that Our Lady also announced her Immaculate Conception to Sister St. Catherine Labouré during the apparitions at the Rue du Bac in Paris in  1830. I was privileged to see the incorrupt bodies of both these saints, Sister Bernadette at Nevers and  Sister St. Catherine Labouré a few years ago whilst visiting France. Both these incorrupt bodies testify to the Immaculate Conception. It was  Our Lady herself, who   taught Sister Catherine the following prayer:

O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to Thee.

Our Lady gave Sister Catherine the miraculous medal, first called ‘the medal of Mary of The Immaculate Conception’, and was told to spread the devotion. You might not all be able to see these incorrupt bodies for yourselves, but as we gaze upon the Crib each Christmas we will always be reminded of God’s plan for us, of Mary’s Immaculate Conception and the ecstatic and eternal loving that awaits us with her and her Son Jesus, in the heaven that God has prepared for us since the beginning of time.

If you would like to read more about these themes over Christmas, they are contained in Wisdom from Franciscan Italy. This book has been acclaimed as the best, most readable, and most accurate book ever written about St Francis and Franciscan Spirituality. No reviews have ever given it less than five stars. A perfect present for Christmas!

David’s book, How to Pray, a Practical Guide to the Spiritual Life will be published in January 2021 by Our Sunday Visitor Publications.

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3 thoughts on “St. Francis and the Message of Christmas”

  1. Pingback: TVESDAY EDITION – Big Pulpit

  2. Saint Francis: Mission accomplished

    By God’s will, „rebuilding the Church” was the life mission of Saint Poverello of Assisi. The Lord called him to this work in 1205 in the ruined church of Saint Damian. This is about Damian from Syria, a doctor and martyr. Evidently, the title of this temple lacked (and is missing) his twin brother Cosmas, as well as he was a doctor and martyr. The lack of Cosmas, or half of the twin pair, indicates the ruin of the earthly Mystical Body, the Church which is Christ’s spouse, that is, His half. The Lord Jesus himself played the role of the absent Cosmas as King of the Universe, or the Cosmos. If the Lord Jesus is the Cosmos (= Cosmas), who does the ruined Damian represent in this scene? His name means ‘Introducing Order’, so it’s about someone who will restore order in the Church on earth. Who is this? Today, when the militant Church turns into ruin before our eyes, this is a burning question. To find the answer, let’s see what Poverello did next.
    Francis took this call literally, from a material perspective, and began to rebuild this small church of Saint Damian. However, Providence made sure that he accomplished the mission that was clearly beyond his imagination. He wandered a few years in Umbria as a beggar, sometimes stayed in a hermitage, until in 1209 he came to the town of Greccio, in Lazio. The lord of this land, John Velita, already knowing the sanctity of the poor Wanderer, urged him to settle down anywhere in his estate. And so, discussing at the gate of Greccio, Francis gave the four-year-old boy a burning stick so that he would throw it with all his might. A miracle happened: the ember flew like lightning and landed a mile further, setting fire to the scrub over the rocky cliff. There, the Poverello arranged a hermitage and over time a monastery** was built nearby for his spiritual sons.
    Francis often returned to Greccio and thanks to him the town went down in history as New Bethlehem: on Christmas Eve* AD1223 in the local church he arranged the first manger with the Child laid on a rock at the altar with the assistance of an ox and ass. Why a crib, if the Savior, King of the Universe (‘Cosmas’) Jesus Christ was born in Palestine over a thousand years earlier?! Because it is a ‘praesepe’ for some ‘Damian’, the one known as ‘Introducing Order’, which will renew the ruined Church on earth. Jesus himself confessed that He had come to cast fire upon earth. The place of the fall of this ember (or fire) in Greccio is commemorated by Roccia del Tizzo, or the Rock of the Ember. This fire has literally fallen from heaven here and is the symbol of ‘Damian’ hidden in the Scriptures under the title of the Paraclete: [John 16:13] „But when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will teach you all truth. For he shall not speak of himself; but what things soever he shall hear, he shall speak; and the things that are to come, he shall shew you.” He is the same as the Son-Man of the Apocalyptic Woman who gives birth to him as our Mother the Holy Church. That is why Saint Francis placed the crib for him directly under the Lord’s altar, because the Paraclete is the fruit of the Eucharist, he is born within the Church. He is the twin brother of Jesus Christ. The Savior was born in Galilee of the Gentiles, or Greeks, so, as befits a twin, Paraclete the Restorator must have also an indirect relationship with Greece: that’s why the choice fell on Greccio founded by Greek colonists. The custom of arranging the Crib for Christmas, thanks to the Franciscans, spread throughout the Catholic world. Why on this occasion children are given gifts, it will be fully explained after the revelation of the Paraclete – then we will learn in depth the value of the Eucharist and the meaning of the life mission of Poverello from Assisi.

    October 4, 2019, feast of Saint Francis of Assisi

    * In the starry sky, Luna (= symbol of the Divine Mother) entered the constellation Capricorn (= The Prodigal Son) on Dec. 24 (AD1223) and left it on Dec. 26, i.e. the second day of Christmas, because She, as our Mother Holy Church, will give birth to the Paraclete, the second Comforter.

    ** Other famous Franciscans also resided here for years: Saints Bonaventure and Bernardine of Sienna. Blessed John of Parma (+March 19, 1289) spent over 30 years in Greccio, fascinated with the theology of Cistercian Joachim of Fiore (+March 30, 1202) and his conception of the age of the Holy Spirit (Kingdom of God) following the epochs of the Son (New Testament) and the Father (Old Testament). It is only in this context that the enormity of Saint Francis’ life mission is revealed, which he has perfectly fulfilled.

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