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Feast of Feasts

Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany
with St. Francis

Christmas 1 – Love

Humility, simplicity, compassion, peace, love, creation, and joy are so interwoven in the life of Francis and the Franciscan way that they are difficult to untangle. And Franciscan spirituality, in general, is hard to encapsulate.

Franciscan John Quigley, summarizes Franciscan spirituality this way:

“It is not easy to put into a capsule the spirit and gifts of Franciscan thinking. Its hallmarks are simplicity, reverence, fraternity, ecumenism, ecology, interdependence, and dialogue. Its motto and salutation is ‘Peace and All Good!’”

“Francis believed that God was nonviolent,” he writes, “the God of Peace. This belief may be a simple presupposition for us today, but at the time when the Christian church was waging a Holy Crusade against its enemies, the Saracens, Francis’ interpretation of the Gospel life and its demands was revolutionary. Francis saw it from the viewpoint of the poor, especially from the place of the poor, naked, suffering Christ. He had deep devotion to the God who is revealed as nonviolent and poor in the stable of Bethlehem, as abandoned on the cross, and as food in the Eucharist. God’s meekness, humility, and poverty led Francis to… [identify] with the minores, the lower class within his society, and he passionately pointed to the Incarnation as the living proof of God’s love. He frequently cried out in exasperation with the world, ‘Love is not loved!’”

By its very nature, Love wants to be one with its beloved. That is how our salvation has been announced and realized by an Incarnate God. Jesus Christ’s suffering and death confirms for us just how deeply committed God’s love for his Creation was revealed in the Incarnation.

As Franciscan Friar Richard Rohr notes, “Everything, every scripture, every law, every action, history itself is to be interpreted in the light of the primacy of Love and Christ over all.”