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The Object of the
Order
Day 1
Jesus the Master speaks, Very
truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into
the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but
if it dies, it bears much fruit. Those who love their
life lose it, and those who hate their life in this
world will keep it for eternal life. Whoever serves me
must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be
also. Whoever serves me, the Father will
honour. (Jn 12.24-26)
The Master sets before us in the
example of his own sacrifice the secret of
fruit-bearing. He surrenders himself to death, and lo!
he becomes the source of new life to myriads. Lifted up
from the earth in sacrifice, he draws unto him all those
multitudes of which the Greeks, whose coming kindled his
vision, are the foretaste and prophecy. The life that is
cherished perishes: the life that is renounced is
eternal.
(cfJn 12.20-21)
Day 2 This law of
renunciation and sacrifice, which is the law of the
Master’s own life and fruit-bearing, he lays also upon
his servants, bidding them follow him in the same path.
To those who thus follow he promises the ineffable
reward of union with himself and acceptance by the
Father.
The object, therefore, of the
First Order, is to build up a body of men and women who,
accepting Christ as their Lord and Master, will seek to
follow him in the way of renunciation and sacrifice as
an act of witness and for the loving service of his
brothers and sisters in the world. |
The Three
Conditions of Life
Day
3 The community, recognising
that God has at all times called certain of his children
to embrace a state of celibacy for the kingdom of
heaven’s sake, that they may be free to give themselves
without distraction to his service, sets before itself
the aim of building up a body of men and women who shall
be completely dedicated to him alone both in body and
spirit. These, after a sufficient period of probation,
voluntarily in response to God’s call, dedicate
themselves to a life of devotion to our Lord under the
conditions of poverty, chastity and obedience.
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Day 4
It is
not without reason that these three conditions have ever been
embraced by those desiring to live the life of religious
detachment; for they stand for the ideal of perfect
renunciation of the world, the flesh and the devil, which are
the three great enemies of the spiritual
life.
Poverty
Day 5 The Master willingly
embraced a life of poverty in this world.
He was rich, yet for your
sakes he became poor. ( 2 Cor
8.9)
He chose a stable for his birthplace
and for his upbringing the house of a village carpenter. Even
that home he left in early manhood and became a wayfarer,
with nowhere to lay his
head. (Matt 8.20).
Us also he calls to poverty.
Whoever serves me must
follow me. (Jn 12.26)
None of you can
become my disciple if you do not give up all your possessions.
(Luke 14.33)
The
brothers and sisters, therefore, seek to be poor in spirit.
They desire to escape from the love of the world and the
things that are in the world and rather, like their patron
Saint Francis, to be in love with poverty. They covet only the
unsearchable riches of Christ. They recognise, indeed, that
while some of their members may be called to a literal
following of Saint Francis in a life of actual penury and
extreme simplicity, for most so high an ideal will not be
possible.
Day 6 The
brothers and sisters desire to possess nothing which cannot be
shared by those around them and such things as will help to
satisfy their needs.
They
receive no pay and own no personal possessions. They live as a
family having all things in common. They receive for their use
the simple necessities of life. Yet what they receive they
regard not as their own but rather as lent to them for a
season.
Nor must they, while excluding the
snare of the world from their individual lives, allow it to
return in the corporate community, where it may work a wider
and more fatal destruction. It would be small gain were they
to surrender their personal possessions only to live in luxury
through the abundance of the common stock. Therefore the
community must turn away from excess. The buildings it erects
and the style and manner of life which it permits must be the
simplest that are consistent with good health and efficient
work. If there is money beyond what such simple needs require,
let it be spent in works of mercy and service, or else be used
for the house of God, which it is right and seemly with proper
moderation to adorn, or for the purchase of books which are
necessary to the work of study.
Day 7 In all things let the
brothers and sisters exhibit the simplicity of true
Franciscans who, caring little for the world where they are
but strangers and pilgrims, have their hearts set on that
spiritual home
where
their treasure is. (Matt 6.21)
Chastity
Day 8 The
brothers and sisters are bound, like all Christians, to resist
and by God’s grace to conquer the temptations of the flesh and
to live lives of purity and self-control. They must ever
strive through faithful self-discipline and prayer to be
chaste both in mind and body.
Furthermore, that they may promote
unhindered devotion to the Lord (1 Cor 7.35), and give
themselves wholly to his work, being wedded only to Christ,
their true spouse, they embrace of their own will the vocation
of celibacy.
They do
this not because they believe that the unmarried state is in
itself higher than the married, but because they believe that
for them the unmarried state is that in which God wishes them
to serve him. Therefore they look to him with confidence to
give them the grace needed for this life which, if they should
undertake it contrary to his will, would be to them a state of
greater rather than less distraction than that of
marriage.
Day 9 In thus
accepting the state of chastity, the brothers and sisters must
ever be on their guard against the temptation to
self-centeredness, coldness or a lack of sympathy with the
interests of others. Their espousal to Christ must not weaken
or mar their human affections. Rather must their union with
him enable them to love more richly with his love all with
whom they are brought in contact.
Obedience
Day
10 The Master,
who, coming into the world not to do his own will but the will
of him that sent him, became obedient to the point of
death – even death on a cross (Phil 2.8), says to those
who follow him,
Take my yoke upon you, and
learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in
heart, and you will find
rest for your souls. ( Matt 11.29) The
brothers and sisters desire, therefore, to surrender their
wills to the will of God, in the spirit of perfect obedience,
that being delivered from self-will and pride they may find
true freedom and peace and be ready instruments which he can
use for his purposes.
Day 11
Further, by
voluntarily accepting the Rule as binding upon them, the
brothers and sisters pledge themselves to abide by this Rule
and to obey the decisions of the Chapter, by which the common
mind of the community is expressed and
interpreted.
It is
the work of the Ministers to administer the Rule and to see
that the decisions of the Chapter are observed. Their
directions, therefore, unless they order something contrary to
the Rule or in itself sinful, must be promptly and cheerfully
carried out. In their absence obedience is due to their
Assistants. Brothers or sisters put in charge of a department
of work are also to be obeyed in that department. But none may
on any authority act contrary to the guiding of their own
consciences. The Ministers are, like the other members, under
obedience to the Rule and Chapter and are bound to exercise
their authority, not in a spirit of partiality or pride or
selfishness, but with equal consideration and love and with
humble prayer for the divine wisdom.
Day 12 The
obligation of particular obedience within the community is
gladly accepted by the members, not as something different
from the obedience which they owe to God, but rather as part
of that obedience. They are confident that, if God has called
them to a life under Rule, they will, in fulfilling the
obligations of that life, be most truly obeying him and that
whatever limitations or humiliations their obedience may
involve will, if cheerfully accepted, be a means by which
pride is vanquished and a more perfect consecration
achieved.
When
working away from the community, the brothers and sisters
should put themselves under the discipline of the parish
or society in which they are
staying.
TheThree
Ways of Service
Day 13 The brothers
and sisters seek to serve their Master by the life of
devotion, by sacred study and by works. In the life of the
community as a whole all these three ways must find full and
balanced expression. It is not, indeed, to be expected that
all will devote themselves equally to each of these three
tasks. It is right that their several employments should vary
according to the particular ability which God has given them,
as that some should, with the approval of their Minister, give
themselves in large measure to prayer and contemplation,
others to the pursuit of learning and the writing of books and
others mainly to the ministry of active service. Yet must room
be found in the lives of all for at least some measure of each
of these three employments.
Prayer
Day 14
| Praise and prayer constitute the atmosphere in which
the brothers and sisters must strive to live. They must
endeavour to maintain a constant recollection of the
presence of God and of the unseen world. An
ever-deepening devotion to Christ is the hidden source
of all their strength and joy. He is for them the One
all-lovely and adorable, God incarnate, crucified and
risen, whose love is the inspiration of service and the
reward of sacrifice. |
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Day 15
| That their union with this Lord and Master may be
ever renewed and strengthened, the brothers and sisters
unite in offering daily before God the memorial of his
death and passion and feeding often upon his sacrificial
life. The Holy Eucharist is the centre round which their
life revolves. It is above all the heart of their prayer
life. | |
 | The
time of morning prayer is the preparation of mind and spirit
for entrance within the sanctuary. The meditation which
follows later is the opportunity for quiet tryst with him who
through the sacrament, is present inwardly, and for feeding on
him in the heart by faith with
thanksgiving.
The services of intercession and
thanksgiving are times when those who have been thus joined
with him in communion and meditation may plead with God in
sure reliance on his promise: if you abide in me, and my
words abide in you, ask for whatever you wish, and it will be
done for you, (John 15.7), and also thank him for continuous experience of its
fulfilment.
The
evening office is the renewed offering of praise and prayer to
the same Lord at the end of the day’s work, and in its closing
silence the hearts of all are together steeped afresh in the
peace of that inward uncreated light which, as the shadows of
life deepen, abides unchanged. Compline is the Master’s
blessing of protection and peace.
Day 16 The
brothers and sisters must strive ever to remember how
essential is the work of prayer to every department of their
lives. Without the constant renewal of divine grace the spirit
flags, the will is weakened, the conscience grows dull, the
mind loses its freshness and even the bodily vigour is
impaired. They must, therefore, always be on their guard
against the constant temptation to let other work encroach
upon the hours of prayer, remembering that if they seek in
this way to increase the bulk of their activity it can only be
at the cost of its true quality and value.
They
must be regular and punctual in their attendance at corporate
prayer. They must also bear in mind that it is of little value
to be present at the common devotions in a formal or careless
spirit. They must seek to make of each office an offering of
true devotion from the heart. The reverent, ordered and
earnest offering of the corporate worship is the very heart of
the community’s life.
Day 17
So,
too, the brothers and sisters must guard with jealous
watchfulness the times of private prayer.
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corporate worship is not a substitute for the quiet
communion of the individual soul with God, and they must
strive to go forward to ever fuller enjoyment of such
communion, till they are living in so constant a
remembrance of God’s presence that they do indeed
pray without ceasing. (1 Thess 5.17).
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Day 18 It is
to assist such an attitude and practice of recollection that
the rules of silence have been laid down and the brothers and
sisters will welcome and use such silence, regarding it not as
the imposition of an artificial restraint, nor merely as an
external rule to be observed by refraining from speech, but as
the opportunity for growing in the sense of the divine
presence. They will welcome in a like spirit the retreats and
days of quiet which the community’s Rule provides as times
when, in the withdrawal from all external distractions, the
life of the spirit may be renewed and
deepened.
In
these and suchlike ways, the brothers and sisters will seek to
keep ever fresh and living their devotion to Christ their
Lord; and when through human frailty they fail in their high
endeavour, they will yet return again to Christ with humble
contrition and earnest purpose of amendment; and they will
hold in special esteem that sacrament of penance and
absolution whereby they are cleansed from sin and renewed in
the life of grace.
Study
Day 19
The true
knowledge is the knowledge of God. The highest wisdom is
that holy wisdom whereby the soul is made one with God.
The first place, therefore, in the brothers’ and
sisters’ work of study will always be given to the study
and practice of the way of the soul’s ascent to God and
the devotional study of the scriptures as one of the
chief aids to that end. They will study also the
teaching of the Christian saints concerning the
spiritual life.
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the hope of the community that some of its houses may be not
only homes of prayer but also homes of learning. It is out of
this recognition of the value and importance of study that
some of the hours each day are set apart for this purpose
under the Rule; and it is mainly for the uninterrupted
securing of these hours that the rule of the lesser silence is
laid down whenever possible.
Works
Day 20 Jesus the Master took on
himself the form of a servant. He came not to be served
but to serve. (Mark 10.45)
He went about doing good; curing
all who were sick; bringing good news to the poor; binding up
the broken- hearted. (Acts 10.38), (Matt 8.16). Those who
would claim to be his servants and follow him must be diligent
in ministry to others. (Luke 4.18),(Isa 61.1)
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The active works by which the
brothers and sisters seek to serve their Master begin
within the house and garden. (1 Thess
5.17).
The
sweeping, dusting and other menial offices, as well as
certain forms of manual work, are apportioned among them
so that all may contribute their share to the work of
the household and the cost of their own living. All must
be capable of engaging in some form of manual work. All
must consider the interests of the community in its work
for God and study strict economy. Brothers and sisters
will do their own work as far as possible. Saint Francis
said that the idle (member) has no place in the
community. |
Day 21 Outside
the special works of service to the community itself there are
many opportunities of ministry, particularly to the
uncared-for, the sick, the suffering and needy. The community
sets before it, as the special programme of service which it
would like to be able to carry out, those acts of mercy the
doing of which even to the humblest the Master declares that
he will accept as done unto himself. By helping in the relief
of poverty we may give him food and drink.
By hospitality to strangers we may
take him in. By relieving those homeless and naked we may
clothe him. By caring for the sick we may relieve him.
By visiting the prisoners we may cheer him. (cf Matt
25.35-35)
The
community does not, indeed, expect ever to have at its
disposal many funds for the administration of charitable
relief, but it will gladly lend its members in the work of
such relief and co-operate with others who are doing it. In
all such work, the community will seek to serve all
irrespective of creed, offering its services not as a bribe
but as a reflection of the love of Christ
himself.
Day 22
But chiefest
of all forms of service that the brothers and sisters can
offer must ever be the effort to show others in his beauty and
power the Christ who is the inspiration and joy of their own
lives. They will seek to do this, not in a spirit of
aggression, nor with contempt for the beliefs of others, but
rather because, knowing in their own experience the power of
Christ to save from sin and to give newness of life, they must
needs seek to share their own supreme treasure. Out of the
fullness, therefore, of devoted love they would seek to give
their belovèd Master to all.
They must remember that, in this task
of showing Christ to others the witness of life is more
eloquent than that of words. Franciscans must, therefore, seek
rather to be living lives through which Christ can manifest
himself than to preach much in public. Nevertheless, there
will be some amongst them called more particularly to the
ministry of the Word, and all must be ready at all times to
give an answer for the faith that is in them,
(cf 1 Pet
3.15)
and particularly to guide all who are sincerely seeking after
truth. They must also be ready by instruction and prayer and
spiritual direction to strengthen the faith of Christians and
lead them forward in the spiritual life.
Day 23 The
brothers and sisters must be glad at all times to relieve
those who come to them for help or counsel. They must never
give the impression that they have no time for such ministry.
Rather must they be ready to lay aside all other work,
including even the work of prayer, where such service is
immediately required, confident that such a negligence will
surely be well-pleasing to the Servant of
all.
The Three Notes of the
Order
Day 24 The three
notes which must ever in special degree mark the lives of the
brothers and sisters are humility, love and joy. If these
prevail within its members, the object of the community will
be fulfilled and its work fruitful. If they are lacking, it
will be unprofitable and barren.
Day 25
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The brothers and sisters will
strive to keep ever before them the example of him who
emptied himself, taking the form of a slave
(Phil 2.7) and who, on the last night of his
life, humbly in the guise of a slave washed his
disciples’ feet.
(cf Jn
13.4-5).They will ever seek
after his pattern to clothe themselves with humility
in their dealings with one another. (1 Pet 5.5)
Humility is the recognition of the truth about God and
ourselves, the recognition of our own insufficiency and
dependence, seeing that we have nothing which we have
not received. It is the mother of all Christian virtues.
As Saint Bernard of Clairvaux has said, No spiritual
house can stand for a moment save on the foundation of
humility. It is the first condition of a happy life
within the family.
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Thus
those in the house must remember that brothers and sisters who
are always confident that they are right and eager to impose
their opinion on others, will themselves be unhappy as chafing
under the discipline of subordination and correction and will
also make the life of the family unhappy by marring that
distinctive atmosphere of harmony and order which depends on
everyone doing their allotted task with cheerfulness. The glad
acceptance of the rule of obedience, and the loyal fulfilment
of orders that are distasteful or difficult, will be one sure
means of growing in this grace.
Day 26 The brothers and sisters
must also refrain from all contemptuous thoughts one of
another, and not seeking for pre-eminence must regard
others as better than themselves. (Phil 2.3)
The faults that they see in others
must be subjects for prayer rather than criticism and they
must be more diligent to take the log out of their own eye
than the speck out of their neighbour’s eye. (Matt
7.5)
They must be ready not only gladly,
when invited, to go and sit down at the lowest place (Luke
14.10), but rather of their own accord take it.
Nevertheless, if entrusted with a work of which they feel
incapable or unworthy, they must not shrink from accepting it
on the plea of humility, but attempt it confidently through
the power (of Christ) made perfect in weakness (2 Cor
12.9).
In
their relations also with those outside, the brothers and
sisters must strive to show their Master’s humility. They must
welcome gladly all opportunities of humble service that come
to them and never desire pre-eminence or praise. In particular
they must resist the temptation to consider themselves
superior to others because dedicated to a life of religion,
realising how much greater often are the sacrifices and
difficulties of those engaged in the ordinary professions of
life and how much more nobly they face
them.
Love
Day 27 The Master says,
By this everyone will know that
you are my disciples, if you have love for one another. (John
13.35)
Love is thus the distinguishing
feature of all true disciples of Christ. It must be specially
an outstanding note in the lives of those who are seeking to
be specially consecrated to Christ as his servants. God is
love. (1
John 4 .8) and, for
those whose lives are hidden with Christ in God,
( Col
3.3), love will be
the very atmosphere which surrounds all that they
do.
This
love the brothers and sisters must show towards all to whom
they are united by natural ties of relationship or friendship.
They will love them not less but more as their love for Christ
grows deeper.
They
will love also with a special affection those to whom they are
united within the family of the community, praying for each
individually and seeking to grow in love for each. They must
be on their guard against all that injures this love: the
bitter thought, the hasty retort, the angry gesture; and never
fail to ask forgiveness of any against whom they have sinned.
They must seek to love equally with others those with whom
they have least natural affinity. For this love of one another
is not simply the welling up of natural affection but a
supernatural love which God gives them through their common
union with Christ. As such it bears testimony to its divine
origin. Our Lord intended the unity of those who believe in
him to be a special witness to the world of his divine
mission. The community must show the spectacle of a Christian
family whose members, even though they be of varied race and
education and character, are bound into a living fellowship by
this supernatural love.
Lastly, in all their relationships
with those, whether Christians or not, with whom their work
brings them in contact they will seek to show forth this same
supernatural Christ-like love; and, remembering that love is
measured by sacrifice, they will seek gladly to spend whatever
gifts they may possess of body, mind and spirit in the service
of those to whom God calls them to minister.
Joy
Day 28
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Finally, the
brothers and sisters, rejoicing in the Lord
always (Phil 4.4) must show forth in their
lives the grace and beauty of divine joy. They must
remember that they follow the Son of Man, who came
eating and drinking (Luke 7.34), who
loved the birds and the flowers, who blessed little
children, who was a friend of tax collectors and
sinners (cf Mark 10.16), who
sat at the tables alike of the rich and the poor. They
will, therefore, put aside all gloom and moroseness, all
undue aloofness from the common interests of people and
delight in laughter and good fellowship. They will
rejoice in God’s world and all its beauty and its living
creatures, calling (nothing) profane or unclean.
(Acts 10.28)
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They
will mingle freely with all kinds of people, seeking to banish
sorrow and to bring good cheer into other lives. They will
carry with them an inner secret of happiness and peace which
all will feel, if they may not know its
source.
Day 29
This joy, likewise, is a divine gift and
comes only from union with God in Christ. As such it can abide
even in days of darkness and difficulty, giving cheerful
courage in the face of disappointment and an inward serenity
and confidence in sickness and suffering. Those who possess it
can be content with weaknesses, insults, hardships,
persecutions, and calamities for the sake of Christ; for
whenever they are weak, then they are strong. (2 Cor
12.10)
Day 30 These three notes of humility,
love and joy, which should mark the lives of the brothers and
sisters, are all supernatural graces which can be won only
from the divine bounty. They can never be attained through our
own unaided exertions. They are miraculous gifts of the Holy
Spirit. But it is the purpose of Christ our Master to work
miracles through his servants; and, if they will but be
emptied of self and utterly surrendered to him, they will
become chosen vessels of his Spirit and effective instruments
of his mighty working, who is able to accomplish
abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine. (Eph 3.20)
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