St. Francis of Assisi: A New Way of Being Christian, 24 topics, 25 minutes per topic.
Speaker:
- Franciscan School of Theology
Why is Francis of Assisi the World’s 2nd Most Popular
Saint?
From the humble backyard birdbath to the splendor of St. Peter’s Basilica in
Rome, images of this Italian cloth merchant’s son can be found almost anywhere.
His followers now number nearly one million in more than ninety-six countries,
lay and religious, men and women.
But who was St. Francis? Why do so many of us find him such an attractive
Christian and human figure? What is fact and what is fiction about his life, his
teaching, and his impact on global society? What do you most want to know about
this gentle saint?
Now you can trace the amazing story of Saint Francis' life and work with this
exciting new 24-lecture series by renowned Franciscan scholar Brother William
Short, former President of the Franciscan School of Theology in Berkeley.
800 Years of Innovation
Learn how Saint Francis founded, not one, but three Orders in the Catholic
Church. How did he become a guest of the most powerful Islamic ruler of his day,
right in the middle of the Crusades?
Francis founded a group of brothers, and then he accepted a sister named
Clare. And he welcomed lay men and women into a new Order designed especially
for them. During a time of shocking clerical misconduct, he did his level best
to improve their formation.
Though an uneducated man himself, he formed a young priest known as Anthony
of Padua. Personally drawn to a deep contemplative life, he wrote the first
instructions for a missionary Order in the Church. Enduring resistance and
opposition, he pioneered a new way of being Christian, claiming that God had
revealed to him that the Gospel was to be his life. Enshrined in the Rule he
composed, that way of life celebrates its 800th anniversary in 2009.
In this series of lectures presented by Franciscan brother William Short, you
can learn more about this simple and profound man, the Orders he founded, and
their influence among common people from Tuscany to Tibet, on university
professors in Oxford and Paris, and on civic governments in Europe. The main
point of interest will be Francis himself, since so much of the later Franciscan
movement grows from the amazing contradictions of his own life. The 13th
century, known as the century of Francis and Clare, will receive the most
attention, but the story of Franciscan missions stretches well into the early
16th century.
The Legacy of Francis
Some have defined the gift of Francis to the Church as "a difficult
inheritance," and there is good reason for this. His love of poverty provoked
sharp divisions among his later followers, and even led to the rebellion
recounted in Umberto Eco’s novel, The Name of the Rose. His successor as head of
the Lesser Brothers, or Order of Friars Minor, was St. Bonaventure, classmate of
St. Thomas Aquinas, the determined leader who rewrote the story of Francis in
the midst of fierce opposition to the Franciscans in many Church circles. His
era, in the late 13th century, will take the listener into the world of the
medieval universities, and the rapid expansion of the Franciscan influence from
Europe into the Holy Land, Central Asia, China and Tibet. Few people realize
that a Franciscan Archbishop was conducting a Chinese choir in Beijing in the
13th century! Or that one of his brothers was visiting the Palace of the Dalai
Lama in Tibet at the same time. Or that Franciscans have been in the Americas
since Columbus’ second voyage in 1493. These stories and more round out the
topics of this series of lectures, giving a good reason for Francis to be called
"The Universal Brother."