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Simple Samples from our Franciscan Heritage
Sr Patricia Treacy mfic
Simplicity – Getting
our Priorities Right
We often say that Francis lived a “simple” life. It
was simple in terms of material things, houses and clothing, but there
was also an interior quality of simplicity that Francis saw as a virtue,
a virtue which
“being
content with its God, considers everything else as of little value
… It seeks not the bark but the pith,
not the shell but the kernel.” (2 Celano 189)
As people got to know Francis, that very simple man, how did they see
him and what did they expect?
They expected his life to match his preaching. There could
be no inconsistency between the message he proclaimed and the values
he lived.
They expected Francis to be down to earth, in touch with reality,
at home with God, with himself, with those around him. They didn’t
want pretence, they wanted sincerity and truth. And they wanted
him to be dependable and approachable, not giving himself airs of importance.
They expected Francis to see life in right perspective, and not to
exaggerate less important things above more important things. Francis
had his priorities right! And he had the wisdom to go to the
heart of things.
These qualities are all part of what we recognise as simplicity. Perhaps
this is what Francis meant when he called his followers to
“strive
as best they can to serve, love, honour and adore the Lord God with
singleheartedness and purity of intention.” (Francis’ First
Rule; also Admonition XVI)
Like most virtues, simplicity can be seen as a state of balance, sometimes
of tension, between two extremes. The extremes to be avoided here
are an unthinking naivety on the one hand, and on the other, the sophisticated
intellectualism which closes the heart.
In his “Praises of the Virtues” Francis referred to simplicity
as the “sister of wisdom”. As we seek the simplicity
that belongs to our Franciscan way of life, we pray that true wisdom
will be ours also.
Next: Stigmata – Mystery
of Franciscan Life
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Samples page
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