Relevant Saint?
October is a great month for saints: St. Therese Lisieux (the Little
Flower), St. Boniface, St. Damien of Hawaii, St. Teresa Avila, St. Luke, St.
Jean de Brebeuf of Canada, St. John Paul II and several more. And October is
also the month for the second most popular Christian ever, St. Francis of
Assisi (1181-1226). But is St. Francis relevant?
No, not unless the goal is for young adults to quit
their jobs, abandon their cell phones, roam about begging and maybe repairing a
church building here or there. All the while dressed in a long hooded jacket.
Wait a minute: young adults do wear hoodies. Back in the
old days a hoodie was called a capuche. St. Francis never picked a standard
color, sometimes appearing in black or dark green. He didn’t intend to
establish a uniform for his friends and he hardly was making a fashion
statement, even a counter-cultural one. Eventually one group among his
followers picked a standard color that reminded people of coffee mixed with
foaming cream. That type of coffee, now popular with young adults, was called
cappuccino. Thus, that group of followers were then and now called the
Capuchins.
St. Francis never did anything; he never launched a
project; he had no four step program. Instead, he spent his career extending
gestures. And for some reason, the young adults of his time thought he was
interesting. So much so that hundreds joined him, creating the Francis
movement.
His gesture toward the latest innovation in town summarizes
all his others. You see, before the 13th century few people needed
any time-keeping device other than direct observation of the sun. But when the
mercantile economy emerged in Europe, people wanted to keep appointments. So a
clock tower was installed in the public square. St. Francis turned his back to
the clock to remind people that a life fixated on clocks (be they now a cell
phone app) and tight schedules and transactions is not ultimately satisfying.
It was the same message he tried to impart by disrobing in
front of a church tribunal that was mediating a dispute between St. Francis and
his father, a prominent clothier. St. Francis took off all his clothes.
Fashion, ornaments, car accessories, and mansions are all ultimately
unsatisfying.
St. Francis once made a courageous anti-war gesture. It
was during the Crusades. He and a friend decided to walk across enemy lines and
meet with Malik al-Kamil, the sultan of Egypt. In a surprising return gesture,
the sultan conversed with St. Francis during an entire week. The gesture did
not dissuade the so-called Christians from continuing their wrong-headed
attacks. But once again, many young adults saw an alternative to senseless war.
Young adults today are understandably disenchanted. Star
athletes betray their profession by abusing other people and by cheating in the
very nature of competition. Prominent business leaders engage in
pseudo-commerce, peddling products that are unhealthy and some that don’t even
exist. Bishops cover-up the egregious behavior of some employees. Politicians needlessly
stoke resentment and racism.
To be disenchanted means to be away from the magic. Who
wouldn’t be jaded when it comes to the magical or miraculous in daily life?
Disenchantment is a fixed by-product of modern life. People assume that modern
culture will provide meaning, but in its drive for efficiency our culture must
dispel enchantment. We are left with, at best, an upbeat and vacuously positive
approach to life, otherwise known as self-help.
Science and technology and individuality are gifts that
come wrapped within the modern and they are to be cherished. But we need also
to be caught up or taken up or drawn in. Enchantment means to be aware of the
alluring and mysterious; to be awake to hues, shades, dialect, mood and gaps in
sequence. Enchantment is outside of clock time. It is a belief that the
so-called past is existentially present and that the current moment has a
future.
St. Francis was enchanting to many young adults. We need
him today.
Bill Droel edits
INITIATIVES (PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL
60629), a newsletter about faith and work.
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