A THIRTEENTH-CENTURY
SALVATIONIST
Most of the Ten Commandments can be made into laws of the land by
legislative enactment, but not so the Sermon on the Mount. It is not
only a sin, it is a crime, a breach of law, to murder and steal. But
no statesman has ever yet passed a law compelling men to be poor in
spirit, meek, merciful, pure of heart, loving to enemies, and glad
when lied about and persecuted. A man may be restrained by the
strong hand of the law from stealing or committing murder; but he
can be constrained only by grace to be meek and lowly in heart, to
bless them that curse him, to pray for them that despitefully use
him, and to love them that hate him.
"The law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ" (John i. 17). He was "full of grace and truth" (John i. 14).
When His heart broke on Calvary it was like the breaking of Mary's
alabaster box of ointment. And when He poured out the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost, rivers of grace and truth began to stream forth to every
land, to all people.
The nature-religions and philosophies of the Gentile world, and the
religion of the Scribes and Pharisees, sunk into legal forms and
ceremonies, were powerless to give peace to troubled consciences,
strength to slaves of vice and corruption, or life to souls dead in
trespasses and sin. But this is just what the grace of God in Christ
did. It met and fitted the moral and spiritual needs of men as light
meets the eye, as the skin fits the hand.
When Paul went to luxurious, licentious Corinth and preached Christ
to the revelling populace, lo! fornicators, idolaters, adulterers,
sodomites, thieves, covetous people, drunkards and revellers became
saints. Their eyes were opened, their darkness vanished, their
chains fell off, and they received "beauty for ashes, the oil of joy
for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness" (Isa.
lxi. 3). Christ made them free. They loved each other. They lived in
close association with each other, but they did not shut themselves
away from their unsaved neighbours. They went everywhere declaring
the good news of redeeming love and uttermost salvation in Christ.
But not all who named the name of Christ departed from iniquity.
Heresies crept in. Persecutions arose. The awful corruptions and
subtle philosophies of the heathen world undermined the morals,
weakened the courage, and dimmed or destroyed the faith of many. The
whole social and political order of the ancient world began to
crumble. The Roman empire fell before the assaults of northern
barbarians, and the Dark Ages supervened. The secret of salvation
and sanctification by faith, which made Paul's converts in Corinth
victorious over the proud and putrid world in which they lived, the
flesh which had enslaved them and the Devil who had deceived them,
was largely if not wholly lost.
Earnest souls, sick of sin, weary of strife, and ignorant of the way
of victorious faith in an indwelling Christ, fled to the desert and
wilderness to escape temptation. Many of them became hermits, living
solitary lives on pillars in the desert and in dens an caves of the
earth, while others formed monastic communities of monks and nuns.
They harked back to the grim austerity and asceticism of Elijah and
John the Baptist, and lost the sweet reasonableness and holy
naturalness of Jesus. In the solitude of desert dens and the
darkness of wilderness caves and on the tops of lonely pillars they
kept painful vigil and fought bitter battles with devils. With
prolonged fastings and flagellations they struggled to overcome the
unsanctified passions of the flesh.
There were saints among these seekers, who found God and kept sacred
learning and faith alive. It was the hermit St. Jerome who
translated the Scriptures into the common language, giving us the
version known as the Vulgate. It was the monk Thomas a' Kempis who
wrote "The Imitation of Christ." While some of the sweetest and most
stirring hymns of Christendom leaped forth from glad and loving
hearts, in monasteries of the Dark Ages. Those ages were dark, but
not wholly dark.
As the iron empire of Rome, corroded and rusted by luxury and
utterly corrupt vices, began to crumble and fall before the fierce,
barbaric hordes of the north, feudalism sprang up and the great mass
of men became serfs who tilled the fields and fought the wars of
petty lords who lived in castles overlooking the towns and villages
that dotted the plains. Towns and cities torn and reddened by
internal factional strife made war on each other. The baron made war
on his enemy, the rich abbot, and endowed and adorned his castle and
church with spoils of his petty warfare. The clergy were generally
greedy and corrupt. Poverty, illiteracy, filth and disease were
universal. Brigands infested the forests and mountains, and pitiful,
loathsome lepers begged for alms along the highways.
It was at the end of a thousand years of such dimness and darkness,
when was breaking a new dawn which he was greatly to hasten, that
St. Francis of Assisi appeared. He was the son of a prosperous
Italian cloth merchant and of a gentle and devout French lady who
probably sprang from the nobility. A beautiful, courteous lad, with
flashing eyes and equally flashing spirit, who sang the songs of the
troubadours in his mother's native tongue, delighted in the sports
and revelry and dare-devil doings of the youth of the town -- such
was Francis Bernadone. Little did he seem to have in him the stuff
of a saint who should transform the Christendom of his day and hold
the wondering and affectionate gaze of seven centuries. His father
was a tradesman, but he was rich and free-handed with his dashing
and attractive son.
The boy was lavish with money, courteous and gay of spirit, which
made him the friend and companion of the young nobility who dwelt in
castles. War broke out between Assisi and the city of Perugia, so
Francis, burning with the pride of youth and the fires of
patriotism, went forth with the young noblemen and their bands of
serfs to fight the enemy. But the battle went against the Assisians,
and a company of the leaders, with Francis, were captured and spent
a year in prison.
The youthful aristocrats, deprived of liberty, languished, but
Francis, whom they kept among them, never lost his spirit, but
cheered them with his kindness, his gaiety, and his songs. He
laughed and sang and made merry, and possibly half in jest but more
in earnest, through some strange youthful premonition, he assured
them that he would one day be a great prince, with his name on the
lips of all men. Little did he or they suspect what kind of a prince
he would be, or the nature of the acclaim with which men would greet
him.
Months of sickness followed his imprisonment. He began to think on
the things that are eternal, the things of the spirit. Recovered
from his illness, he went forth again on a fine steed, in glittering
armour, to war. But, for some rather obscure reason, he returned and
fell into strange meditative moods. His companions suspected that it
was an affair of the heart, and asked him if he was dreaming of a
lady-love. He admitted that he was --a fairer love than they had
ever imagined: Lady Povery! He was thinking of giving up all for
Christ.
One day, while Francis was serving a customer in his father's shop,
a beggar came in and asked for alms in the name of God. Francis,
busy with his customer, sent him away empty-handed, but afterwards
said to himself, "If he had asked in the name of some nobleman, how
promptly and generously I should have responded. But he asked in the
name of the Lord, and I sent him away with nothing!" Leaving the
shop, he ran after the beggar and lavished money upon him, and from
that day he was the unfailing friend of beggars and all the poor.
Lepers were peculiarly repulsive to him, and he stood in a kind of
fear of them. One day when riding he met a leper, and a fear he
would not have felt on a field of battle gripped him. He rode past
the poor creature and then, ashamed of himself, he won a greater
victory than ever was won by armed warriors on a field of blood. He
wheeled his horse about and returned, and leaping down he kissed the
leper and gave him all the money he had with him. Joy filled his
heart, and ever after he was the friend, the benefactor and the
frequent nurse and companion of lepers.
He was a creature of generous, self-sacrificing impulse, but once he
yielded to the impulse it became a life-long principle, and he
served it with unfailing devotion of a lover to his mistress. As
yet, however, like little Samuel, he "did not..... know the Lord,
neither was the word of the Lord yet revealed unto him" (I Sam. iii.
7). But one day he was praying before the altar in a poor,
half-ruined little church: "Great and glorious God, and Thou, Lord
Jesus, I pray, shed abroad Thy light in the darkness of my mind. Be
found of me, O Lord, so in all things I may act only in accordance
with Thy Holy Will." His eyes were upon a crucifix as he prayed, and
it seemed to him that the eyes of the Saviour met his. The place
suddenly became a holy place, and he was in the presence of the Lord
and Saviour as was Moses when he drew near the burning bush on Horeb.
The sacred Victim seemed alive, and as a Voice spoke to Moses from
the bush, so a wondrous, sweet, ineffable Voice seemed to speak from
the crucifix to the longing soul of Francis, bidding him repair the
church that was falling into decay and ruin. From that day he was
assured that Christ knew him, heard him, loved him, and wanted his
service. He could say: "I am my Beloved's, and my Beloved is mine."
Francis was essentially a man of action rather than of
contemplation, so instead of retiring to a hermit's lodge in the
desert or a monastery on some hill-top, he sallied forth at once to
repair the little church of St. Damien in which he had been praying
and had heard the Voice. He begged stones and carried them himself,
repairing the church with his own hands, and when that was completed
he repaired yet another church. It had not yet dawned upon him that
the Voice was calling him to repair, not the four walls of a church
made with hands, but the spiritual Church with its living stones not
built with hands.
His proud and disappointed father fell upon him, beat him, and
imprisoned him in his home; but during the absence of his father his
mother released him, and he returned to the church, where he lived
with the priest, wearing, instead of his gay clothing, a hair shirt
and a rough brown robe tied around him with a rope, which was later
to become the uniform of the myriad brothers of the Franciscan
Order. He worked or begged for his bread and in Assisi was looked
upon as a madman. His father and brother cursed him when they saw
him.
He publicly renounced all right to his patrimony and adopted utter
poverty as one of the rules of his life. He made poverty one of the
rules -- indeed, the most distinctive rule of the Order which he
founded. And later, when the Bishop of Assisi gently reproved him
and argued that he should not go to such an extreme, he silenced the
Bishop, who had trouble with his own riches, by shrewdly replying,
"If we own property we must have laws and arms to defend them, and
this will destroy love out of our hearts."
In a short time -- as with a true Salvationist, with any true
Christian -- the sincerity, the sweetness, the joy and devotion of
his life began to disarm criticism, win approval, and cause
searchings of heart in many of his fellow townsmen.
His first convert was a wealthy man who had been impressed by his
joyous, simple life. He invited Francis to spend the night with him,
and only simulated sleep that he might watch the young man. When
Francis thought he was asleep, he knelt by his bedside and spent
most of the night in prayer. Next morning Bernardo, who became one
of the most noted and devout of the brothers, decided to sell all,
give to the poor, and cast in his lot with Francis.
A third, named Pietro, joined himself to them, and the three went to
church where, after praying and examining the Scriptures, they
adopted as the rule of their new life the words of Jesus:
If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the
poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow Me
(Matt. xix. 21).
Jesus, having called the twelve, gave them power and authority over
an devils, and to cure diseases. And He sent them to preach the
Kingdom of God..... And He said unto them, Take nothing for your
journey, neither staves, nor scrip, neither bread, neither money;
neither have two coats apiece. And whatsoever house ye enter into,
there abide, and thence depart. And whosoever will not receive you,
when ye go out of that city, shake off the very dust from your feet
for a testimony against them. And they departed, and went through
the towns, preaching the gospel, and healing every where (Luke ix.
1-6).
The literal strictness with which Francis and his early disciples
followed and enforced the rule of utter poverty gave them great
freedom from care, great freedom of movement, and much joy. But,
later, this led to much strife and division in the Order, the
beginnings of which in his lifetime saddened the last days of the
saint.
The Pope sanctioned his Rule and granted him and the members of the
Order the right to preach. Like the early disciples they went
everywhere testifying, singing, preaching, labouring with their
hands for food, and, when unable to get work, not hesitating to ask
from door to door for bread.
At first they were scorned and often beaten, but they gloried in
tribulation. My brothers, commit yourselves to God with all your
cares and He will care for you," said Francis, and they went with
joy, strictly observing his instructions:
Let us consider that God in His goodness has called us not merely
for our own salvation, but also for that of many men, that we may go
through all the world exhorting men, more by our example than by our
words, to repent of their sins and keep the commandments. Be not
fearful because we appear little and ignorant. Have faith in God,
that His Spirit will speak in and by you.
You will find men, full of faith, gentleness, and goodness, who will
receive you and your words with joy; but you will find others, and
in great numbers, faithless, proud, blasphemers, who will speak evil
of you, resisting you and your words. Be resolute, then, to endure
everything with patience and humility.
Have no fear, for very soon many noble and learned men will come to
you; they will be with you preaching to kings and princes and to a
multitude of people. Many will be converted to the Lord all over the
world, who will multiply and increase His family.
How like William Booth that sounds!
And what he preached, Francis practised to the end. He died
prematurely, surrounded by his first followers, exhausted, blind
and, at his own request, stripped, but for a hair shirt, and laid
upon the bare ground. His Rule, his Order, his life and example were
a stern and mighty rebuke to the wealth, the greed and the laziness
of the priests and the monks. But he exhorted his brethren not to
judge others, not to condemn or be severe, but to honour them, give
them all due respect and pray for them, remembering some whom they
might think to be members of the Devil would yet become members of
Christ.
Within a brief time five thousand friars in brown robes were going
everywhere with their glad songs, their burning exhortations, their
simple testimony and sacrificial lives, and all who met them met
with a spiritual adventure not to be forgotten. In Spain some of
them fell upon martyrdom. They went to Germany, France, and to far
Scandinavia, where they built the great cathedral of Upsala. Francis
himself went to the Holy Land with the crusaders, and at the risk of
his life, with two of his brothers boldly entered the camp of the
Saracens and sought to convert the Saracen leader and his host. In
this he failed, but he made a deep impression on the followers of
Mohammed.
Once he was called to preach before the Pope and the College of
Cardinals. He carefully prepared his sermon, but when he attempted
to deliver it he became confused, frankly confessed his confusion,
forgot his prepared address, threw himself upon the Lord, and spoke
from his heart as moved by the Spirit -- spoke with such love and
fire that he burned into all hearts and melted his august audience
to many tears. Long before Hus and Luther appeared, thundering
against the abuses of the Church, he wrought a great reformation by
love, by simplicity, and self-sacrifice. He was a kindred spirit of
George Fox and John Wesley and William Booth, and would have gloried
in their fellowship.
After seven centuries his words are still as sweet as honey, as
searching as fire, as penetrating and revealing as light. One
winter's day, bitterly cold, he was journeying with a Brother Leo,
when he said: May it please God that the Brothers Minor (the 'Little
Brothers,' the name he adopted for the Franciscan Order) all over
the world may give a great example of holiness and edification. But
not in this is the perfect joy. If the Little Brothers gave sight to
the blind, healed the sick, cast out demons, gave hearing to the
deaf, or even raised the four-days' dead -- not in this is the
perfect joy.
"If a Brother Minor knew all languages, all science, and all
scripture, if he could prophesy and reveal not only future things,
but even the secret of consciences and of souls -- not in this
consists the perfect joy.
If he could speak the language of angels, if he knew the courses of
the stars and the virtues of plants, if all the treasures of earth
were revealed to him, and he knew the qualities of birds, fishes,
and all animals, of men, trees, rocks, roots, and waters -- not in
these is the perfect joy."
"Father, in God's name, I pray you," exclaimed Leo, "tell me in what
consists the perfect joy."
"When we arrive at Santa Maria degli Angeli (soaked with rain,
frozen with cold, covered with mud, dying of hunger)," said Francis,
"and we knock, and the porter comes in a rage, saying 'Who are you?'
and we answer, 'We are two of your brethren,' and he says, 'You lie;
you are two lewd fellows who go up and down corrupting the world and
stealing the alms of the poor. Go
away!" and he does not open to us, but leaves us outside in the snow
and rain, frozen, starved, all night -- then, if thus maltreated and
turned away we patiently endure all without murmuring against him;
if we think with humility and charity that this porter really knows
us truly and that God makes (permits) him to speak to us thus, in
this is the perfect joy. Above all the graces and all the gifts
which the Holy Spirit gives to His friends is the grace to conquer
one's self, and willingly to suffer pain, outrages, disgrace, and
evil treatment for the love of Christ."
This sounds very like echoes from the Sermon on the Mount and the
epistles and testimonies of Paul. It is a commentary upon Paul's
Psalm of Love in the thirteenth chapter of First Corinthians, and on
his testimony: "I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in
necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake" (2
Cor. xii. 10).
It is a commentary on the words of Jesus: "A man's life consisteth
not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth" (Luke xii.
13), and on those other, often forgotten and neglected words:
Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and
shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for My sake.
Rejoice, and be exceeding glad (Matt. v. 11, 12).
Francis had found the secret of joy, of power, of purity, and of
that enduring influence which still stirs and draws out the hearts
of men of faith, of simplicity, of a single eye. Across the
centuries he speaks to us in a wooing, compelling message that
humbles us at the feet of Jesus in contrition and adoring wonder and
love.
He found hidden reservoirs of power in union with Christ; in
following Christ; in counting all things loss for Christ; in meekly
sharing the labours, the travail, the passion, and the Cross of
Christ. Thus his life became creative instead of acquisitive. He
became a builder, a fighter, a creator; he found his joy, his
fadeless glory, his undying influence, not in possessing things, not
in attaining rank and title and worldly pomp and power, but in
building the spiritual house, the Kingdom of God -- in fighting the
battles of the Lord against the embattled hosts of sin and hate and
selfishness.
This creative life he found in the way of sacrifice and service. He
found his life by losing it. He laid down his life and found it
again, found it multiplied a thousandfold, found it being reproduced
in myriads of other men.
And this I conceive to be the supreme lesson of the life of Francis
for us of The Salvation Army, and for the whole Church of God
to-day. For it remains eternally true, it is a law of the Spirit, it
is the everlasting word of Jesus, that:-
He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life
for My sake shall find it (Matt. x. 39).
O Lord I help me, help Thy people everywhere, help the greedy,
grasping, stricken world, to learn what mean these words of the
Master, and to put them to the test with the deathless, sacrificial
ardour of the simple, selfless saint of Assisi!
I knew that Christ had given me birth To brother all the souls of earth, And every bird and every beast Should share the crumbs broke at the feast.
John Masefield
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