THE TRIPLE CROWN
OR TIARA
THE POPE'S OFFICIAN HEADDRESS

Venerable Brothers,
Greetings and Apostolic Benediction:
To the great Jubilee which was celebrated in Rome and is now extended to the whole world for the period of this year, which served to purify souls and called so many to a more perfect way of life, is now to be added, as a fulfilment of the fruits received from the Holy Year, the Solemn Commenoration which Catholics everywhere are preparing to celebrate, the Seventh Centenary of the blessed passage of St. Francis of Assisi from his exile on earth to his heavenly home. Since Our Immediate Predecessor has assigned this Saint, who was sent by Divine Providence for the reformation not only of the turbulent age in which he lived but of Christian society of all times, to Catholic Organizations engaged in social activities as their Patron, it is only right that Our children who later in this field according to Our commands should in union with the numerous Franciscan Brotherhood, call to mind and praise the works, the virtues, and the spirit of the Seraphic Patriarch. While doing this, they must reject that purely imaginary figure of the Saint conjured up by the defenders of modern error or by the followers of luxury and worldy comforts, and seek to bring Christians to the faithful imitation of the ideal of Sanctity which he exemplified in himself and which he learned from the purity and simplicity of the Doctrines of the Gospels.
True Evangelical Example
It is Our desire that the Religious and civic festivals
to be held during this Centenary, as well as the Lectures and Sermons to
be given, should aim at Celebrating this Anniversary with expressions of
true Devotion, without making the Serpahic Patriarch either totally different
from other men or unlike the Historical Figure he actually was, but showing
him a man gifted by nature and Grace which assisted him admirably in reaching
and in rendering easy for his neighbors the highest possible perfection.
If others dare to compare one with another the Heavenly Heroes of Sanctity
destined by the Holy Ghost each to his own special Mission amongst men
-- these comparisons, the fruit for the most part of party passions, are
valueless and are at the same time an insult to God, the Author of Sanctity
-- it seems necessary for Us to affirm that there has never been any one
in whom the Image of Jesus Christ and the Evangelical Manner of life-like
and strikingly, than in St. Francis. He who called himself the "Herald
of the Great King" was also rightly spoken of as "another Jesus Christ,"
appearing to his contemporaries and to future generations almost as if
he were the Risen Christ. He has always lived as such in the eyes
of men and so will continue to live for all future time. Nor is it
marvelous that his early biographers, contemporaries of the Saint, in their
accounts of his life and works, judged him to be of a nobility almost superior
to human nature itself. Our Predecessors who dealt personally with
Francis did not hesitate to recognize in him a providential help sent by
God Himself for the welfare of Christian peoples and of the Church.
Notwithstanding the long time that has elapsed since
the death of the Seraphic Father, the admiration for him, not only of Catholics
but even of non-Catholics, continues to increase amazingly for the reason
that his greatness appears to the minds of men with no less splendor today
than it did long ago. We, too, most ardently Pray for the strength
of his Virtues which have been so powerful, even at the present hour, in
remedying the ills of society. In fact, his work of reform has permeated
so deeply Christian peoples that besides reestablishing purity of Faith
and Morals it has resulted in this, that even the Laws of Justice and of
Evangelical Charity now inspire more profoundly and guide social life itself.
Necessity of Franciscan Spirit
The nearness of so great and happy an evennt as
this Centenary carries with it the Counsel that We avail Ourselves of your
services, Venerable Brothers, as the Messengers and Interpreters of Our
words in order to arouse in Christian peoples that Franciscan Spirit which
differs no wise from Evangelical Ideals and practices, to help in recalling
to memory on such a timely occasion the teachings and example of the life
of the Patriarch of Assisi. It is a pleasure for Us to compete, as
it were, in devotion towards the Saint with Our Predecessors, who never
permitted any Centenary of the Principal Events of his life to pass by
without exhorting the faithful to Celebrate it, confirming their exhortations
by the teaching Authority of the Apostles which they possessed.
In this regard We recall with pleasure -- and many
others who are now well on in years will remember the same facts -- that
love for St. Francis and his work which was begotten amongst the faithful,
and throughout the whole world by the Encyclical Auspicato written
by Leo XIII forty-four years ago, on the recurrence of the Seventh Centenary
of the Saint's birth; and how, at that time, the love thus born was manifested
in a multitude of demonstrations of piety and in a happy renaissance of
the spiritual life. We do not see why the selfsame results should
not crown the coming Celebrations which are equally as important as the
preceding ones. The present condition of the Christian peoples should
give us much more hope that such will be the case. On the one hand,
no one is ignorant of the fact that today Spiritual Values are much better
appreciated by the masses than formerly; also that the people, taught by
the experience of the past not to expect peace and security if they do
not return to God, look to the Catholic Church as the one source of salvation.
On the other hand, the extension to the whole world of the Jubilee Indulgences
happily coincides with this Centennial Commemoration which itself cannot
be separated from the spirit of Penance and Love.
Social Conditions in Time of St. Francis
The terrible conditions existing in the times when
St. Francis lived are well known to you, Venerable Brothers. It is
quite true that then the faith was more deeply rooted in the people, as
is proved by the holy enthusiasm with which not only professional soldiers
but even citizens of every class bore arms in Palestine to free the Holy
Sepulcher. However, heresies gradually arose and grew in the Vineyard
of the Lord, propagated either by open heretics or by sly deceivers
whom because they professed a certain austerity of life and gave a false
appearance of Virtue and Piety, easily led weak and simple souls astray.
They went about, too, amongst the multitudes spreading the destructive
flames of rebellion. And if some of these, in their pride, believed
themselves called by God to reform the Church to which they imputed the
faults of private persons, even going to the length of rebelling against
the teachings and Authority of the Holy See, later they openly manifested
the real intentions with which they were animated. It is a notorious
fact that before long the greater part of these heretics ended their careers
in licentiousness and in vice, and succeeded in embroiling the state in
difficulties and in undermining the Foundations of Religion, of Property,
of the family, and of society. In a word, what happened then is precisely
what We see recurring so often in the course of the Centuries; namely,
rebellions levelled against the Church are followed or accompanied by rebellion
against the state, the one receiving aid and comfort from the other.
Although the Catholic Faith still lived in the hearts
of men, in some cases intact and in others a bit obscured, however lacking
they might have been in the Spirit of the Gospels, the Charity of Christ
had become so weakened in human society as to appear to be almost extinct.
To say nothing of the constant warfare carried on by the partisans of the
Empire, on the one hand, and by those of the Church on the other, the cities
of Italy were torn by internecine wars because one party desired to rule,
refusiing to recognize the rights of the Barons to Govern, or because the
strong wished to force the weak to submit to them, or because of the struggles
for supremacy between political parties in the same city. Horrible
massacres, conflagrations, devastation and pillage, exile, confiscation
of property and estates were the bitter fruits of these struggles.
Sad Fate of Common People
Sad indeed was the fate of the common people, while
between Lords and Vassals, between the greater and the lesser, as they
were called, between the owners of land and the peasants existed relations
in every sense of the word foreign to the spirit of humanity. Peace-loving
people were harassed and oppressed with impunity by the powerful.
Those who did not belong to that most unfortunate class of human beings,
the proletariat, allowed themselves to be overcome by egotism and greed
for possessions and were driven by an insatiable desire for riches.
These men, regardless of the Laws which had been promulgated in many places
against vice, ostentatiously paraded their riches in a wild orgy of clothes,
banquets, and feasts of every kind. They looked on poverty and the
poor as something vile. They abhorred from the depths of their hearts
the lepers -- leprosy was then very widespread -- and neglected these outcasts
completely in their segregation from society. What is worse, this
greed for wealth and pleasure was not even absent, though many of the Clergy
are to be commended for the austerity of their lives, from those who should
have most scrupulously guarded themselves from such a sin. The custom,
too, was prevalent of monopolizing wealth and piling up large fortunes.
These fortunes were often acquired in divers and sinful manners, sometimes
by the violent extortion of money and at other times by usury. Many
increased and swelled their patrimony by an illicit trade in public offices
and emoluments, in the administration of justice, and even by the procuring
of immunity from punishment for persons convicted of crime.
The Church was not silent under these circumstances;
neither did it spare its edicts of punishment; but of what use was all
this when even the Emperors drew down on themselves the anathemas of the
Holy See -- and to the great scandal of all -- contumaciously despised
these decrees? Even the Monastic Life, which had brought so many
spiritual fruits to maturity, tarnished now by the dirt of this world,
possessed no longer the strength to resist and to defend itself.
If the founding of new Religious Orders brought some small help and strength
to the maintenance of Ecclesiastical Discipline, certainly a much stronger
Flame of Light and Love was necessary to reform human society which had
been so profoundly disturbed.
Spirit of St. Francis That of Gospels
To bring Light to the people of this world which
We have described, and to lead them back again to the pure ideals of the
Wisdom of the Gospels, there appeared, in the Providence of God, St. Francis
of Assissi who, as Dante sang, "shone as the sun," (Paradiso,
Canto II.) or as Thomas of Celano had already written of a similar
figure, "he shone forth as a resplendent star on a dark night, like the
morning which spreads itself over the darkness." (Legenda
I, No. 27.)
As a youth, St. Francis was expansive and high-strung,
a lover of luxurious dress. He was accustomed to invite to magnificent
banquets the frineds he had chosen from amongst the elite and pleasure-loving
young men of the town. He walked through the streets with them, singing
gaily. But even at that time in his life he became known for the
integrity of his moral life, his correctness in conversation, and his utter
disdain of wealth. After his imprisonment in Perugia, which was followed
by a long illness, he felt himself, not without a certain sense of astonishment,
completely transformed. However, as if he desired to flee from the
Hands of God, he went to Puglia on a military mission. On this journey
he felt himself commanded by God in unmistakable terms to return to Assissi
and learn there what he must do. After much wavering and many doubts,
through Divine Inspiration and through having heard at Solemn Mass that
passage from the Gospels which speaks of the Apostolic Life, he understood
at last that he, too, must live and serve Christ "according to the very
words of the Holy Gospels." From that time on he undertook to unite
himself to Christ alone and to make himself like unto Him in all things.
In "all his efforts, public as well as private, he turned to the Cross
of Our Lord, and from the moment he began to live as a soldier of Christ,
the Divine Mysteries of the Cross shone around about him." (Thomas
of Celano, Treaise on Miracles, No. 2.) Truly
he was a brave soldier and Knight of Christ because of the nobility and
the generosity of his heart; wherefore to prove that neither he nor his
Disciples were ever to be separated from Our Lord, he always had recourse
to the Gospels as to an oracle whenever he had to make a decision on any
matter. The Rules of the Orders founded by him were made to agree
most scrupulously with the same Gospels, and the Religious Life of his
followers with the life of the Apostles. For this reason at the very
beginning of his Rule, he wrote: "This is the life and Rule of the
Friars Minor, to observe the Holy Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ." (Rule
of the Friars Minor.)
In order not to prolong this subject unduly, let
Us see now with what exercise of perfect Virtue Francis prepared himself
to follow the Counsels of Divine Mercy and to make himself a capable instrument
for the reformation of society.
Poverty of St. Francis
It is not hard to imagine -- although We know it
is a very difficult task to describe fitly in words -- the love of Evangelical
Poverty which burned within him. Everyone knows how he, because
of the noble character bestowed on him by nature, loved to befriend the
poor, and how, as St. Bonaventure has said, he was so filled with
kindness that being "no mere hearer of the Gospel" he had decided never
to deny help to the poor, especially if they in asking for assistance did
so with the plea "for the love of God." Divine Grace completed in
him the work of nature and brought him to the highest perfection.
Having on one occasion refused alms to a poor man, he forthwith repented
and felt impelled to go and seek him out so that by the very abundance
of his charity he might succor this man in his poverty.
On another occasion he was with a party of young
men, singing in the streets after a gay banquet, when he stopped suddenly
and, as if lifted outside himself by a wonderful vision, turned to his
companions who had asked him if he was thinking of getting married and
quickly replied, with some warmth, that they had guessed rightly because
he proposed to take a spouse, and no one more noble, more rich, more beeautiful
than she could possibly be found, meaning, by these words, Poverty or the
Religious State which is founded on the profession of Poverty. In
fact, he had learned from Our Lord Jesus Christ Who, "although He was rich
made Himself poor for us" (II Corinthians, 8, 9.)
that we, too, should become rich by His poverty, which is, in truth, Divine
Wisdom; a Wisdom which cannot be overthrown by the sophistries of human
wisdom, a Wisdom which alone can renew and restore all things. For
Christ has said: "Blessed are the poor in spirit; if thou wilt be
perfect, go, sell what thou hast and give to the poor, and thou shalt have
treasure in Heaven; and come, follow Me." (Matthew, 5, 3,
and Matthew, 19, 21.)
Poverty, which consists in the voluntary renunciation
of every possession for reasons of love and through Divine Inspiration
and which is quite the opposite of that forced and unlovable poverty preached
by some ancient philosophers, was embraced by Francis with so much affection
that he called her in loving accents, Lady, Mother, Spouse. In this
regard, St. Bonaventure writes: "No one was ever so eager for gold as he
was for poverty, nor more jealous in the custody of a treasure than he
was of this pearl of the Gospel." (Legenda Maior, Chap. VII.)
Francis himself, recommending and prescribing for his followers in the
Rule of his Order the exercise of this Virtue in a very special manner,
manifested the high esteem he had for poverty when he wrote these expressive
words: "This is the sublimeness of the highest poverty which made you,
my dearest brothers, heirs and kings of the Kingdom of Heaven, which made
you poor in things of this world but enriched you with all virtue.
This should be your heritage; to which, giving yourselves up entirely in
the Name of Our Lord Jesus Christ, nothing else will you desire forever
under Heaven." (Rule of Friars Minor. Chap. VI.)
The reason why Francis particularly loved poverty
was because he considered it a special Virtue of the Blessed Virgin, and
because Jesus Christ on the Cross, even more especially chose Poverty for
His Spouse. Since then poverty has been forgotten by men and has
appeared to the world both irksome and foreign to the spirit of the age.
Often when thinking of these things, St. Francis
used to break down and shed bitter tears. And who would not be moved
at this spectacle of a man who was so much in love with poverty that he
appeared to his former boon companions and, to many others besides, bereft
of his senses? What are We to say then of the generations following
him which, even if they are very far from an understanding and the practice
of Evangelical Perfection, are filled with admiration for so ardent a lover
of poverty, an admiration that is continually on the increase and which
is particularly noteworthy in the men of our own day? Dante anticipated
this admiration of posterity in his poem "The Nuptials of St. Francis and
Poverty," in which poem one finds it difficult what to admire more, the
remarkable sublimity of the ideas expressed or the beauty and elegance
of the style. (Paradiso, Canto XI.)
Humility of St. Francis
The high ideals and the generous love of poverty
which possessed the mind and heart of Francis could not be satisfied by
the mere renunciation of external wealth. For who would ever succeed
in acquiring true poverty, following the footsteps of Jesus Christ, if
he did not make himself also poor in spirit by means of the virtue of humility?
Francis well understood this truth; he never separated one virtue from
the other and greeted them both warmly: "Holy Lady Poverty, may the Lord
save you and your sister, Holy Humility. . . . Holy Poverty destroys all
cupidity and avarice and anxiety for the things of this world. Holy
Humility destroys pride, all men who are of the world, and all the things
which are in the world." (Opusculum, Salutatio Virtutum,
p. 20 et seq., edition 1904.)
The author of that Golden Book "The Imitation of
Christ" describes St. Francis in a word when he calls him "humble."
"For how much soever each one is in Thine eyes, O Lord, so much is he and
no more, saith the humble St. Francis." (Imitation of
Christ, Book III, Chap. 50.) In fact, it was the
supreme wish of his heart to carry himself always with humility as the
least and last amongst men. Therefore, from the very beginning of
his conversion, he ardently desired to be looked down upon and to be despised
by all. Later on in life, although he became the founder, the writer
of their Rule, and the Father of the Friars Minor, he insisted on whom
even he was to depend. At the earliest possible moment, steeling
himelf against the prayers and wishes of his disciples, he desired to give
up the Supreme Government of his Order "in order to practice the Virtue
of Holy Humility" and to remain "with her till death, living more humbly
than any other Friar." (Thomas of Celano, Legenda, Chap.
II, No. 143.)
Cardinals and great Lords often offered him hospitality
but he abruptly refused all these invitations; and though he exhibited
the greatest esteem for all men and rendered each man every possible deference,
he looked upon himself as a sinner, considering himself as only one amongst
many sinners. In fact, he believed himself the greatest of all sinners.
He was accustomed to say that if the mercy shown him by God had been extended
any other sinner, the latter would have become ten times holier than he.
To God alone must be attributed whatever was found
in him of goodness and beauty, for from God only was it derived.
For this reason he tried in every possible way to hide those privileges
and graces, especially the Stigmata of Our Lord which were imprinted on
his body, which might have gained for him the esteem and praise of men.
When at times he was praised, either in public or in private, he not only
refused to accept such praise but protested he was worthy only of
contempt and abuse and was really saddened thereby. Finally, what
must We say of the fact that he thought so humbly of himself that he did
not consider himself worthy to be Ordained a Priest!
On this selfsame foundation of humility he desired
that his Order of the Friars Minor should be Founded and built. He
repeatedly taught his followers, in exhortations begotten of a truly marvelous
Wisdom, that they should glory in nothing, and above all not in their acquisition
of Virtues or in the possession of Divine Grace. He admonished them,
too, and even, on occasion, reproved those Friars who because of their
duties as Preachers, men of Letters, Philosophers, Superiors of Convents
and Provinces, were exposed to the dangers of vain glory. It would
take too long to go into details: this is enough to prove our point that
St. Francis, following the example and words of Christ, considered humility
in his followers the distinctive mark of his Order -- namely, he insisted
that his disciples be called "Minors," and the Superiors of his Order "Ministers."
He did this in order both to make use of the very language of the Gospels
which he had promised to observe and to make his disciples understand by
the name which they bore that they must go to the school of the humble
Christ in order to learn humility.
Obedience and Fidelity to Church
We have seen how the Seraphic Father, motivated
by the ideal of perfect poverty which had taken complete possession of
his soul, made himself so small and humble as to obey others (it would
be better to say almost everyone) with the very simplicity of a child,
for the reason that he who does not deny himself and give up his own will,
certainty cannot be said to have renounced all things or to have become
humble of heart. St. Francis by his Vow of Obedience Consecrated
gladly and submitted fully his will, the greatest gift which God has bestowed
on human nature, to the will of the Vicar of Jesus Christ.
What evil they do and how far from a true appreciation
of the Man of Assisi are they who, in order to bolster up their fantastic
and erroneous ideas about him, imagine such an incredible thing as that
Francis was an opponent of the discipline of the Church, that he did not
accept the Dogmas of the Faith, that he was the precursor and prophet of
that false liberty which began to manifest itself at the beginning of modern
times and which has caused so many disturbances both in the Church and
in civil society! That he was in a special manner obedient and faithful
in all things to the Hierarchy of the Church, to this Apostolic See, and
to the Teachings of Christ, the Herald of the Great King proved both to
Catholics and non-Catholics, by the admirable example of obedience which
he always gave. It is a fact proved by Contemporary Historical Documents,
which are worthy of all credence, that he held in veneration the Clergy,
and loved with a great affection all who were in Holy Orders. "As
a man who was truly Cathoic and Apostolic," (Thomas of Celano,
Legenda, Chap. I, No. 62.) he constantly insisted in his sermons,
that "inviolable fidelity should always be shown towards the Church, and
that the Priests who by their Ministry bring into being the sublime Sacrament
of the Lord, should therefore be held in the highest Reverence." (Julian
a Spira, Life of St. Francis, No. 28.) "He also
taught that the Doctors of the Law of God and all the Orders of Clergy
should be shown the utmost respect at all times." That which he taught
to the people from the pulpit he insisted on much more strongly amongst
his Friars. We may read of this in his famous Last Testament and,
again, at the very point of death he admonished them about this with great
insistence; namely, that in the exercise or the Sacred Ministry they should
always obey the Bishops and the Clergy and should live together with them
as it behooves children of peace.
Devotion Towards Roman Pontiff
The most important side of his obedience, however,
is shown by the fact that as soon as the Seraphic Patriarch had drawn up
and written out the Rules of his Order, he delayed not even an instant
in presenting himself personally, together with his first eleven disciples,
to Innocent III, in order to gain the Pope's approval of his Rule.
That Pontiff of Immortal Memory, moved deeply by the words and the presence
of the humble Poverello, embraced Francis with great affection
and, divinely inspired, sanctioned the Rules presented to him. He
also gave to Francis and to his co-laborers the faculty to preach Penance.
History attests that Honorius III added a new confirmation to this Rule,
after it had been somewhat modified, in answer to the Prayers of St. Francis.
The Seraphic Father commanded that the Rule and
the Life of the Friars Minor should be the following: To observe
the "Holy Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ" living in obedience without
possessing any property and in all Chastity, and this not according to
one's own whims. or individual interpretation of the Rule, but according
to the commands of the Roman Pontiffs, Canonically Elected. For those
who eagerly longed "to follow this manner of life . . . they had to be:
first diligently examined by the Clergy concerning their Catholic Faith
and their reception of the Sacraments of the Church, and whether they believed
all these things and were firm in their intention to profess them until
the end of life." Those who had already become members of the Order
must likewise do nothing in any way contrary to all this, except it be
"according to the mandate of Our Lord, the Pope." To the Clerics
of the Order it is prescribed that they Celebrate the Divine Office according
to the Calendar of the Roman Church; to the Friars in general it was commanded
that they should not preach in the territory of a Bishop without his permission,
and that they should not enter, even for reasons of their Ministry, the
Convents of Sisters without a special Faculty from the Apostolic See.
No less reverence and docility towards the Apostolic See is shown by the
words that St. Francis uses to commanding that a Cardinal Protector should
be appointed for the Order: "In obedience, I enjoin the Ministers
to ask the Lord Pope for one of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church
to be the Guide, Protector and Corrector of this Brotherhood; so that subordinate
at all times and submissive, at the feet of the same Roman Church, and
thus established in the Catholic Faith, we shall observe, as we have promised
to do, the Holy Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ." (Rule of
Friars Minor, passim.)
His Purity and Charity
We must speak also of the "beauty and cleanlliness
of purity" which the Seraphic Father "loved singularly," of that Chastity
of soul and body which he kept and defended even to the maceration of his
own flesh. We have already seen that as a young man, although gay
and fashionable, he abhorred everything sinful, even in word. When
later on he cast aside the vain pleasure of this world, he began to repress
the demands of his senses with great severity. Thus at times when
he found himself moved or likely to be influenced by sensual feeling, he
did not hesitate to throw himself into a bush of thorns or, in the very
depths of winter, to plunge into the icy waters of a stream.
It is also well known that Our Saint, desiring to
call back men so that they would conform their lives to the Teachings of
the Gospel, used to exhort them "to love and fear God and to do Penance
for their sins." (Legend of the Three Companions, No. 33
et seq.) Moreover, he preached Penance by example.
He wore a hair shirt, he was clothed in a poor rough tunic, went about
barefoot, he slept resting his head on a stone or on the trunk of a tree,
ate so little that it was barely sufficient to keep him from dying of starvation.
He even mixed ashes and water with his food in order to destroy its taste.
He passed the greater part of the year in fasting. Besides all this,
no matter whether he was well or ill he treated his body with the greatest
severity, and he used to call his body "my brother the ass"; nor could
he be induced to give himself any relief or rest, not even when, as during
the last years of his life, he was suffering greatly, the sufferings of
one nailed to a cross, for he had become like unto Christ because of the
Stigmata which he bore. Neither did he neglect to inculcate austerity
of life in his disciples, and in this only did the Teachings of the Holy
Patriarch differ from his own actions, he advised them to moderate a too
excessive abstinence or punishment of the body.
Is there any one who cannot see that all these virtues
proceeded from the one and same Fountain of Divine Love1? In truth,
as Thomas of Celano writes, "He was ever afire with Divine Love and longed
to perform deeds of great heroism; walking with a strong heart in the way
of the Divine Commandments, he eargerly desired to reach the highest perfection";
(Legenda, Chap. 1. No. 55.) wherefore there
were those who "seeing him raised so rapidly to a state of intoxication
of Divine Love" burst into tears. (Legend of the Three Companions,
No. 21.) This Love of God he poured out in love for his neighbor,
and conquering himself loved with a special tenderness the poor and, amongst
the poor, the most miserable of all, the Lepers, whom as a youth he had
so abhorred; he dedicated both himself and his disciples completely to
their care and service. He also wished that a brotherly love similar
to his own should reign amongst his disciples; because of this wish of
his, the Franciscan Brotherhood grew to be "a noble edifice of Charity,
from the living stones of which, gathered from every part of the world,
there was built a dwelling for the Holy Ghost." (Thomas of
Celano, Legenda, Chap. I, No. 28 et seq.)
It is Our pleasure, Venerable Brothers, to detain
you somewhat more at length in a study of these his sublime Virtues, for
the reason that, in our times, many infected by the false spirit of secularism,
habitually attempt to strip our saintly heroes of the True Light and Glory
of their Sanctity. These writers view Our Saints merely as models
of human excellence or as the professors of an empty spirit of religion,
praising and magnifying them exclusively because of what they have done
for the progress of the arts and sciences, or because of certain works
of mercy which they have accomplished and which have proved helpful to
the fatherland and to mankind. We do not cease to wonder how an admiration
for St. Francis of this kind, so false and even contradictory in itself,
can in any way help his modern admirers who devote their lives to the search
for riches and pleasure or who, decked out in finery, frequent public places,
dances and theaters, or who roll in the very mud of voluptuousness, who
ignore and cast aside the Laws of Christ and His Church. In this
context the following warning is very significant: "He who pretends to
admire the good works of the Saints, must at the same time admire the Homage
and Love due to God. Therefore either imitate that which you praise
or do not permit yourself to praise that which you do not care to imitate.
He who admires the good works of the Saints must also distinguish himself
by the Holiness of his own life." (Roman Breviary, 7th of
November, Sermon on the Martyrs.)
Work of St. Francis
St. Francis, trained in the manly virtues We have
written about, was called providentially to a work of reform for the
salvation of his contemporaries and to assist in the work of the Church
Universal.
In the Church of St. Damian where he was
accustomed to pray, he heard three times a Voice from Heaven saying: "Go
Francis, rebuild My House which is falling down." (St. Bonaventure,
Legenda, Chap. II.) But he, because of that deep humility
which made him think himself incapable of accomplishing any great work
whatsoever, did not undeerstand the meaning of these mysterious words.
Innocent III, however, discovered their import through the Miraculous Vision
in which Francis was shown to him in the act of supporting on his shoulders
the Church of the Lateran, which was falling to the ground. The Pope
then understood clearly that the mission of St. Francis was a very special
one, given to him by a most merciful God.
The Seraphic Father founded two Orders, one for
men and the other for women, both made up of aspirants to Evangalical Perfection.
He then began a visit to the cities of Italy announcing, either personally
or through the first disciples who had come to him, the foundation of his
two Orders, preaching penance to the people in few but fiery words, gathering
by this ministry and by his words and example almost unbelievable fruits.
In all the places where he went to perform the functions of his Apostolic
Ministry the people and Clergy came out in procession to meet Francis,
and there was much ringing of bells, singing of popular songs, and waving
of olive branches. Persons of every age, sex, and condition flocked
to him and, by day and night, surrounded the house where he lived so that
they might have a chance of seeing him when he went out, of touching him,
speaking to him, or listening to him. No one, even if he were grown
grey in habits of vice and sin, could resist the preaching of the Saint.
Very many people, even some of mature age, vied with one another in giving
up all their earthly goods for love of the Evangelical Life. Entire
cities of Italy, reborn to a new moral life, placed themselves under the
direction of Francis. The number of his sons grew beyond measure.
Such was the enthusiasm which filled all to follow in his footsteps that
the Seraphic Patriarch himself was often obliged to dissuade many and turn
aside from the proposal to leave the world both men and women who were
willing and ready to give up their conjugal rights and the joys of domestic
life.
Meanwhile, the principal desire which filled these
new preachers of penance was to help bring back peace not only to individuals
but to families, cities, and even nations, torn by interminable wars and
steeped in blood. If at Assisi, Arezzo, Bologna, and in many other
cities and countries it was possible to bring about a general era of peace,
at times comfirmed even by Solemn Treaties, it was due altogether to the
superhuman power of the eloquence of these rough men.
Beneficial Effects of Third Order
In this work of reform and of bringing about a universal
peace, the Third order assisted greatly. The Third Order is an institution
which was altogether a new idea at that time, for while it possesses the
spirit of a Religious Order, it does not oblige its members to take Vows
but attempts to offer to both men and women living in the world, the
means not only of observing the Laws of God but of attaining Christian
perfection. The Rules of this new Sodality may be reduced to the
following Principal Articles. No one was accepted as a member unless
they were of an unquestioned Catholic Faith and obedient in all things
to the Church; the manner of receiving candidates from each of the sexes
into the Order; admission to Religious Professioon was permitted after
a year of Novitiate, subject to the consent of the wife in the case of
husbands and of the husband in the case of wives; love of purity and poverty,
especially in the use of clothes, and of modesty in feminine attire; that
the Tertiaries should abstain from feasting, from immodest shows and balls;
abstinence and fasting; Confession and Communion three times a year, taking
care to make peace with every one beforehand and to restore the goods rightly
belonging to others; not to bear arms except in defense of the Roman Church,
of the Christian Faith, and of one's own country, or with the consent of
one's Minister; the recitation of the Canonical Hours three months after
admission into the Order; to restore as soon as possible peace amongst
one's brethren or amongst those outside the Order if any trouble had arisen;
what to do in case the rights and privileges of the Sodality had been violated;
not to take an oath except in case of urgent necessity recognized by the
Apostolic See. To these rules were added others of no less importance;
for example, on the duty of hearing Mass; of attending meetings called
on certain fixed days; on the giving of alms by each according to his ability
to help the poor, and especially the sick; on the performing of the last
rites for dead members; on the manner of exchanging visits to case of illness;
on the manner of bringing back to the ways of virtue those who had fallen
or were obstinate in sin; on the duty of not refusing the offices and functions
assigned to each and to fulfill these with care; on the manner of settling
disputes.
We have dwelt on these matters somewhat in detail
so as to show how Francis either by his own Apostolate of by that of his
disciples and, by the Institution of the Third Order, laid the foundations
of a new social order built on lnes in strict conformity with the very
Spirit of the Gospels. Omitting everything in these rules which relate
to the Religious Life and to Spiritual Formation, even though these matters
are of primary importance, every one can understand how from the other
Prescriptions of the Rules there should result such an order both in public
and private life as to bring about a new type of civic intercourse.
We will not call this merely a brotherly fellowship based on the practice
of Christian perfection, but rather a shield of the rights of the poor
and the weak against the abuses of the rich and the powerful, and all this
without any prejudice to good order and justice. From the Association
of the Tertiaries with the Clergy there necessarily resulted this happy
consequence, that new members were permitted to participate in the same
exemptions and immunities which the latter already enjoyed. The Tertiaries
no longer were called upon to take the so-called Solemn Oath of Vassalage,
neither were they conscripted for military service, nor had they to go
to war or to bear arms, for in this the Rule of the Third Order they achieved,
too, a liberty which was otherwise impossible under the conditions of servitude
under which they had lived. When they were set on and harassed by
those whose every interest it was to cause conditions to return to their
former state, they had as defenders and patrons the Popes Honorius III
and Gregory IX who overcame every obstacle put in their way and prohibited
such attacks by the severest punishments.
From this source, therefore, there arose that profound
impulse towards a saving reform of human society, towards that vast expansion
and growth amongst Christian Nations which had its beginnings in the New
Order of which Francis was the Father and Teacher. Innocence of life,
too, blossomed forth once more to union with the spirit of penance.
From this source arose that ardent zeal which impelled not only Pontiffs,
Cardinals, and Bishops to accept the badge of the Thrid Order, but also
Kings and Princes who imbibed, together with the Franciscan spirit, Evangelical
Wisdom and from amongst whom, some rose even to the glory of Sainthood.
The noblest Virtues, too, came back into public esteem and honor.
In a word, the "face of the earth itself was changed."
His Mission to the Heathen
St. Francis, "a man who was truly Catholic and Apostolic,"
in the same admirable fashion that he had attended to the reformation of
the faithful, so likewise set about personally and commanded his disciples
to occupy themselves before everything else with the conversion of the
heathen to the Faith and Law of Christ. Nor need We dwell at length
on a subject so well known to all. Moved by an ardent desire to spread
the Gospel and even to undergo martyrdom, he did not hesitate to go to
Egypt and there bravely to appear in the very presence of the Sultan.
In the annals of the Church, too, are not the names of those numerous Apostles
of the Gospel who, from the beginning, that is to say, in the springtime
of the Order of Minors, found martyrdom in Syria and Morocco recorded in
words of highest praise? With the passing of time this Apostolate
has been developed with much zeal and often with great shedding of blood
by the numerous Franciscan Brotherhood, for many lands inhabited by the
heathen have been entrusted to their care through the express commands
of the Roman Pontiffs.
The Glory of St. Francis
No one will therefore marvel that throughout the
whole period of seven hundred years just ending the memory of so many benefits
derived from him has never been lost at any time or in any place.
On the contrary We see that his life and work, which as Dante writes "can
be sung better by those who enjoy the glories of Heaven" than by human
tongue, has raised and exalted him century after century in the devotion
and admiration of all so that not only is his greatness increasing in the
Catholic world because of a remarkable appreciation of his great sanctity,
but he is also surrounded by a certain civic cult and glory by reason of
which the very name of Assisi has become well known to the peoples of the
whole world.
Shortly after his death, Churches dedicated to the
Seraphic Father and admirable for the beauty of their architecture and
treasures of art began to rise, due to the wishes of the people to honor
him. The most famous artists competed one with another as to who
should succeed in portraying with the greatest perfection and beauty the
likeness and life of Francis in paintings, in statues, in engravings, and
in mosaics. Thus Santa Maria Degli Angeli was built on that very
plain where Francis "poor and humble entered rich into Heaven." Churches,
too, were built at the place of his glorious burial as well as on the hills
of Asisi, and to these pilgrims flocked from everywhere in parties or in
large groups, in order to recall for the benefit of their own souls the
memory of so great a Saint and to admire these immortal monuments of art.
Moreover, there arose to sing the praises of the Man of Assisi, as We have
already seen, a poet who has no equal, Dante Alighieri. He was followed
by others both in Italy and elsewhere who brought glory to literature by
exalting the greatness of the Saint.
Modern Franciscan Studies
Especially in our own days Francescana have been
studied more profoundly by the learned and a great number of works printed
in various languages have seen the light of day. The talents, too,
of artists have succeeded in arousing such an admiration for St. Francis
amongst our contemporaries that it is almost limitless, despite the fact
that sometimes this admiration is not based on a true understanding of
the Saint. Some admired in him the character of the poet by which
he so wonderfully expressed the sentiments of his soul, and his famous
Canticle became the delight of learned men who recognized in it one of
the first great poems of the early Italian language. Others were
taken by his love of nature, for he not only seemed fascinated by the majesty
of inanimate nature, by the splendor of the stars, by the beauty
of his Umbrian mountains and valleys, but, like Adam before his fall in
the Garden of Eden, he even spoke to the animals themselves. He appears
to have been joined to them in a kind of brotherhood and they were obedient
to his every wish. Others praised his love of country because in
him Our Italy, which boasts the great honor of having given him birth,
found a more fruitful source of graces than any other country. Others,
finally, honor him for that truly singular and Catholic love with which
he embraced all men. All of this is quite admirable but it is the
least that is to be praised in Our Saint, and it all must be understood
in a correct sense. If we stop at these aspects of his life and look
upon them as the most important, or change their import so as to justify
either our own morbid ideas or excuse our false opinions, or maintain some
of our prejudices, it is certain that we would not possess a genuine picture
of the real Francis. As a matter of fact, by his practice of all
the virtues in a heroic manner, by the auterity of his life and his preaching
of penance, by his manifold and restless activity for the reformation of
society, the figure of Francis stands forth in all its completeness, proposed
to us not so much for the admiration as for the imitation of Christian
peoples. As the Herald of the Great King, his purposes were directed
to persuading men to conform their lives to the dictates of Evangelical
Sanctity and to the love of the Cross, not that they should become mere
lovers of flowers, birds, lambs, fishes or hares. He seemed filled
with a great and tender affection for animals, and "no matter how small
they were" he called them all "by the name of brother and sister" -- a
love which if it is kept within bounds is assuredly not prohibited by any
law. This love of animals was due to no other cause than his own
love of God, which moved him to love these creatures because he knew that
they had the same origin as he, (St. Bonaventure, Legenda,
Chap. VIII, No. 6.) and in them he perceived the goodness
of God. St. Francis, too, "saw the Image of the Beloved imprinted
on all things, and he made of these things a ladder whereby to reach His
Throne." (Thomas of Celano, Legenda, Chap. II, No. 165.)
Why then forbid Italians to glory in him who was
an Italian, who even in the Sacred Liturgy is called the "Light of the
Fatherland?" (Breviary of Friars Minor.)
Why prevent the defenders of the rights of the people preaching the love
of Francis towards all men and especially towards the poor? The former
admirers of St. Francis, impelled by an excessive love of their own nation,
should take care not to boast of him as a mere sign and banner of their
new-born love of country, thus lessening his glorious title of "Catholic
Champion"; the latter should take care not to hold him up as a precursor
and defender of errors, which of course he was very far from being.
May it please Heaven that they who, through devotion to the Saint either
find pleasure in these lesser praises of the Man of Assisi or labor with
zeal to promote the success of this Centenary, all worthy of Our praise,
may, by the happy recurrence of his Feast, draw from his life strong motives
to examine more profoundly the true picture of this great imitator of Christ
and thus themselves aspire to higher ideals.
Fruits of Present Centenary
Meanwhile, Venerable Brothers, We have good reasons
for rejoicing because We see how through the united efforts of all
good men to celebrate fitly the memory of the Holy Patrirch during this
year which marks the Seven Hundredth Anniversary of his death, both Religious
and civic Solemnities are being prepared in every part of the world and
especially in that very district which, while living, he honored by his
presence, by the light of his Sanctity and the Glory of his Miracles.
It is with great pleasure, too, that We see you giving in this an example
to your own Clergy and people. From this hour onwards there is presented
to Our soul, or better still We can almost see with Our very eyes, the
great throngs of pilgrims who will visit Assisi and the other nearby Sanctuaries
of verdant Umbria, the rocky crags of Verna, and sacred hills that look
out on the Valley of the Rieti, all spots where Francis seems to live on,
giving Us even now an example of his Virtues, from where the pious pilgrims
can scarcely return home without being more and more filled with the Franciscan
Spirit. To quote Leo XIII: "Concerning the honors that are being
prepared for St. Francis, it should be borne in mind, that above all, these
honors will be agreeable to him to whom they are given only when they have
been made fruitful by the one who actually offers them. In this then
alone can We hope for lasting fruits, when those men who admire his great
virtue seek to copy in some way this man, and in imitating him make themselves
better." (Encyclical Auspicato, 17 Sept.,, 1882.)
Some will say, perhaps, that to restore Christian Society another Francis
is needed today. But We say, do what you can to make men take up
again with renewed zeal the ancient Francis as their teacher of piety and
Sanctity; do what you can that they imitate and follow the example which
he has left them, that they accept him as a man who was "a mirror of virtue,
a path of righteousness, a rule of morals." (Breviary of
Friars Minor.) And if this is done, will it not in itself
be enough to heal and even to stop the corruption of our own times?
Exhortation to Franciscan Brotherhood
First of all, then, the many children belonging
to the Three Orders must reproduce in themselves the glorious image of
their Father and Founder. They being now "established in all parts
of the world" -- as Gregory IX wrote to the Blessed Agnes, daughter of
the King of Bohemia -- "every day the Almighty is in many ways glorified
by them." (De Conditoris Ommium, 9 May, 1938.)
On the other hand We sincerely rejoice that the Religious of the
First Order, which is called Franciscan, in spite of the many unseemly
vexations and spoliations which they have had to suffer, like gold which
has passed through a crucible, have come to realize each day more and more
their pristine splendor. On the other hand, We no less sincerely
desire that they, by the example of real penance and humility which they
give, shall become living protests against the concupiscence of the flesh
and the pride of life so widespread amongst us. May it be their peculiar
function to call back their fellowmen to the Gospel Law of life.
With much less difficulty they will attain this end if they themselves
observe the Rule which their Founder has called "the book of life, the
hope of holiness, the substance of the Gospel, the way of perfection, the
key of paradise, the pledge of an eternal alliance." (Thomas
of Celano, Legenda, Chap. II, No. 208.) The Seraphic
Patriarch will not cease to look down from Heaven and bless the Mystical
Vine which he with his own hands planted, and to nourish and strengthen
its manifold roots with the moisture and sap of brotherly love, so that
all may become "one heart and one soul," so that all may give themselves
up in all fervor to the restoration of Christian Society.
The Holy Virgins of the Second Order who participate
"in that Angelic Life which was made known by St. Clare", by the snowlike
whiteness of their souls, should continue to spread abroad, like lilies
planted in the Garden of the Lord, a sweet fragrance so pleasing to God.
Through their prayers, may sinners in much larger numbers hasten back to
the Merciful Arms of Christ Our Lord, and may Our Holy Mother the Church
feel the increasing joy of seeing her children restored to Divine Grace
and to the Hope of Eternal Life.
Exhortation to Third Order
We turn finally to the Tertiaries, both to those
who are living together in Regular Communities and those who live in the
world. They, too, should try, with truly apostolic zeal, to promote
the spiritual welfare of Christian peoples. Their Apostolate which,
at the Origins, made them worthy to be called by Gregory IX "Soldiers
of Christ and new Maccabees," will today also, with no less efficacy,
succeed in promoting the common good, provided they, although they have
grown in numbers all over the world, become like their Father, St. Francis,
by giving proof of innocence of life and integrity of morals.
What Our Predecessors, Leo XIII in the Letter Auspicato
and Benedict XV in the Encyclical Sacra Propediem, wrote
to all the Bishops of the Catholic world and which greatly pleased them,
We repeat and recommend to your Pastoral zeal. We expect that you
will favor in every way within your power the Third Order of St. Francis,
either by yourselves or by means of cultured Priests and good Preachers,
teaching the aims of this Order of men and women who live in the world,
how worthy it is of popular esteem, how easy it is to enter this Sodality,
to observe its Holy Rules, and how abundant are the Indulgences and Privileges
which the Tertiaries enjoy. Finally, make known the great Blessings
which flow from the Third Order to individuals and to the communities where
they live. You should urge those who have not yet given their names
to this immortal band of soldiers to do so this year. As regards
those who cannot, because of their age, join the Third Order, they should
be enrolled as prospective Tertiaries so that from childhood they may become
accustomed to the Holy Discipline of this Order.
It seems that God in His kindness and mercy has
ordained that Our Pontificate shall not pass without the happiest fruits
for the Catholic Church, judging from the great and holy events in which
We have so often been called upon to participate. We, therefore,
view with great pleasure the preparations which are being made to Celebrate
this Solemn Centenary of St. Francis who "in his life propped up the house
and in his days fortified the Temple." (Ecclesiasticus, 50,
1.) We take all the more pleasure in this Festival since
from Our earliest years We have with great devotion venerated St. Francis
as Our Patron. We have numbered Ourselves, too, amongst his children,
having received the Badge of the Third Order. In this year, therefore,
which is the Seventh Centenary of the death of the Seraphic Father, the
Catholic world, and in particular Our nation, Italy, should receive, through
the intercession of St. Francis, so great an abundance of Blessings that
it will remain a year forever memorable in the History of the Church.
In the meantime, Venerable Brothers, We pray for
you all heavenly favors and as a pledge of Our love to you, to your Clergy,
and to your people, from the depths of Our heart, We impart, in Our Lord,
the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on the Thirtieth
of April of the year 1926, the Fifth of Our Pontificate.
PIUS XI, POPE
DESCRIPTION OF MAGNIFICENT
PAPAL CORONATION
As Peter was given a new name so does the new Supreme
Pontiff become known by another. After the election he extends his
first blessing to the people -- a Benediction which was not given in the
open for years until Pope Pius XI established the custom.
The Coronation, one of the most magnificent of
Vatican Ceremonies, takes place shortly after the election. With
the Pope carried high in a golden chair and attended by brilliantly attired
chamberlains and soldiers, the Coronation Mass is an unrivaled spectacle
of bearty, dignity, and ancient pageantry. At the Coronation, in
the midst of the pomp and splendor, a Master of Ceremonies recites in Latin:
"Holy Father, thus does the glory of the world pass away." As the
first Cardinal Deacon places the three-crowned Tiara on the head of the
Pope,
he says: "Receive the three-crowned Tiara, and know that thou art the Father
of Princes and Kings, the Pastor of the earth, and Vicar of Jesus Christ,
to Whom be honor and glory forever. Amen."
The CORONATION of Pope Pius XII took place on
the balcony of St. Peter's in March, 1939. (From the book "The
Vatican and Holy Year" by Stephen S. Fenichell & Phillip Andrews. --
1950 edition.)
(Tradition is an equal part [along with the Bible] of the Authoritative Teaching of the Church -- From the book "The Immaculate Way" by Brian Farrely, S.S.M. -- 1963 edition.)
The True Answer To
World Peace
Triumph
Of Church