Blessing
of
St.
Francis
(1226):
May whoever
observes all this
be filled
in heaven
with the blessing of the most high Father, and on earth
with that of His
beloved Son, together with the
Holy Spirit,
the Comforter.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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(circa 1210-1215)
Concerning Those Who Do Penance
All who love the Lord with their whole heart, with their
whole soul and mind, with all their strength, and love their
neighbors as themselves and hate their bodies with their
vices and sins, and receive the Body and Blood of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and produce worthy fruits of penance.
Oh, how happy and blessed are these men and women when
they do these things and persevere in doing them, because the spirit of the Lord will rest upon them and he will
make his home and dwelling among them, and they are
the sons of the heavenly Father, whose works they do, and
they are the spouses, brothers, and mothers of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
We are spouses, when by the Holy Spirit the faithful soul
is united with our Lord Jesus Christ, we are brothers to him
when we fulfill the will of the Father who is in heaven.
We are mothers, when we carry him in our heart and body
through divine love and a pure and sincere conscience; we
give birth to him through a holy life which must give light
to others by example.
Oh, how glorious it is to have a great and holy Father in
heaven! Oh how glorious it is to have such a beautiful and
admirable Spouse, the Holy Paraclete.
Oh, how glorious it is to have such a Brother and such a
Son, loved, beloved, humble, peaceful, sweet, lovable, and
desirable above all: Our Lord Jesus Christ, who gave up his
life for his sheep and prayed to the Father saying:
"Oh holy Father, protect them with your name whom you
gave me out of the world. I entrusted to them the message
you entrusted to me and they received it. They have known
that in truth I came from you, they have believed that it
was you who sent me. For these I pray, not for the world.
Bless and consecrate them, and I consecrate myself for their
sakes. I do not pray for them alone; I pray also for those
who will believe in me through their word that they may be
holy by being one as we are. And I desire, Father, to have
them in my company where I am to see this glory of mine in
your kingdom."
Concerning Those
Who Do Not Do Penance
But all those men and women who are not doing penance and
do not receive the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ
and live in vices and sin and yield to evil concupiscence
and to the wicked desires of the flesh, and do not observe
what they have promised to the Lord, and are slaves to the
world, in their bodies, by carnal desires and the anxieties
and cares of this life.
These are blind, because they do not see the true light,
our Lord Jesus Christ; they do not have spiritual wisdom
because they do not have the Son of God who is the true
wisdom of the Father. Concerning them, it is said, "Their
skill was swallowed up" and "cursed are those who
turn away from your commands". They see and acknowledge,
they know and do bad things and knowingly destroy their own
souls.
See, you who are blind, deceived by your enemies, the
world, the flesh and the devil, for it is pleasant to the
body to commit sin and it is bitter to make it serve God
because all vices and sins come out and "proceed from the
heart of man" as the Lord says in the Gospel. And you
have nothing in this world and in the next, and you thought
you would possess the vanities of this world for a long
time.
But you have been deceived, for the day and the hour will
come to which you give no thought and which you do not know
and of which you are ignorant. The body grows infirm, death
approaches, and so it dies a bitter death, and no matter
where or when or how man dies, in the guilt of sin, without
penance or satisfaction, though he can make satisfaction but
does not do it.
The devil snatches the soul from his body with such
anguish and tribulation that no one can know it except he
who endures it, and all the talents and power and knowledge and wisdom which they thought they had will be
taken away from them, and they leave their goods to
relatives and friends who take and divide them and say
afterwards, "Cursed be his soul because he could have
given us more, he could have acquired more than he did."
The worms eat up the body and so they have lost body and
soul during this short earthly life and will go into the
inferno where they will suffer torture without end.
All those into whose hands this letter
shall have come we ask in the charity that is God to accept
kindly and with divine love the fragrant words of our Lord
Jesus Christ quoted above. And let those who do not know how
to read have them read to them.
And may they keep them in their mind and
carry them out, in a holy manner to the end, because they are spirit and life.
And those who will not do this will have
to render an account on the day of judgment before
the tribunal of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Chapter I The Secular Franciscan Order
The Franciscan family, as one among many spiritual
families raised up by the Holy Spirit in the Church, unites
all members of the people of God--laity, religious, and
priests-- who recognize that they are called to follow
Christ in the footsteps of St. Francis of Assisi. In various
ways and forms but in life-giving union with each other,
they intend to make present the charism of their common
Seraphic Father in the life and mission of the Church.
The Secular Franciscan Order holds a special place in
this family circle. It is an organic union of all Catholic
fraternities scattered throughout the world and open to
every group of the faithful. In these fraternities the
brothers and sisters, led by the Spirit, strive for perfect
charity in their own secular state. By their profession they
pledge themselves to live the gospel in the manner of St.
Francis by means of this rule approved by the Church.
The present rule, succeeding Memoriale Propositi
(1221) and the rules approved by the Supreme Pontiffs
Nicholas IV and Leo XIII, adapts the Secular Franciscan
Order to the needs and expectations of the Holy Church in
the conditions of changing times. Its interpretation belongs
to the Holy See and its application will be made by the
General Constitutions and particular statutes.
Chapter II The Way of Life
The rule and life of the Secular Franciscans is this:
to observe the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ by following
the example of Saint Francis of Assisi, who made Christ the
inspiration and the center of his life with God and people.
Christ, the gift of the Father's love, is the way to
him, the truth into which the Holy Spirit leads us, and
the life which he has come to give abundantly.
Secular Franciscans should devote themselves
especially to careful reading of the gospel, going from
gospel to life and life to the gospel.
Secular Franciscans, therefore, should seek to
encounter the living and active person of Christ in their
brothers and sisters, in Sacred Scripture, in the Church,
and in liturgical activity. The faith of Saint Francis, who
often said "I see nothing bodily of the Most High Son of
God in this world except his most holy body and blood,"
should be the inspiration and pattern of their Eucharistic
life.
They have been made living members of the Church by
being buried and raised with Christ in baptism; they have
been united more intimately with the Church by profession.
Therefore, they should go forth as witnesses and instruments
of her mission among all people, proclaiming Christ by their
life and words.
Called like Saint Francis to rebuild the Church and
inspired by his example, let them devote themselves
energetically to living in full communion with the pope,
bishops, and priests, fostering an open and trusting
dialogue of apostolic effectiveness and creativity.
United by their vocation as brothers and sisters
of penance, and motivated by the dynamic power of the
gospel, let them conform their thoughts and deeds to those
of Christ by means of that radical interior change which the
gospel itself calls conversion. Human frailty makes
it necessary that this conversion be carried out daily.
On this road to renewal the sacrament of
reconciliation is the privileged sign of the Father's
mercy and the source of grace.
As Jesus was the true worshipper of the Father, so
let prayer and contemplation be the soul of all they are and
do.
Let them participate in the sacramental life of the
Church, above all the Eucharist. Let them join in
liturgical prayer in one of the forms proposed by the
Church, reliving the mysteries of the life of Christ.
The Virgin Mary, humble servant of the Lord, was open
to his every word and call. She was embraced by Francis with
indescribable love and declared the protectress and advocate
of his family. The Secular Franciscans should express their
ardent love for her by imitating her complete self-giving
and by praying earnestly and confidently.
United themselves to the redemptive obedience
of Jesus, who placed his will into the Father's hands, let
them faithfully fulfill the duties proper to their various
circumstances of life. Let them also follow the poor and
crucified Christ, witness to him even in difficulties and
persecutions.
Trusting in the Father, Christ chose for himself and
his mother a poor and humble life, even though he valued
created things attentively and lovingly. Let the Secular
Franciscans seek a proper spirit of detachment from temporal
goods by simplifying their own material needs. Let them be
mindful that according to the gospel they are stewards of
the goods received for the benefit of God's children.
Thus, in the spirit of the Beatitudes, and as
pilgrims and strangers on their way to the home of the
Father, they should strive to purify their hearts from
every tendency and yearning for possession and power.
Witnessing to the good yet to come and obliged
to acquire purity of heart because of the vocation they have
embraced, they should set themselves free to love God and
their brothers and sisters.
As the Father sees in every person the features
of his Son, the firstborn of many brothers and sisters, so
the Secular Franciscans with a gentle and courteous spirit
accept all people as a gift of the Lord and an image of
Christ.
A sense of community will make them joyful and ready
to place themselves on an equal basis with all people,
especially with the lowly for whom they shall strive to
create conditions of life worthy of people redeemed by
Christ.
Secular Franciscans, together with all people
of good will, are called to build a more fraternal and
evangelical world so that the kingdom of God may be brought
about more effectively. Mindful that anyone who follows
Christ, the perfect man, becomes more of a man himself,
let them exercise their responsibilities competently in
Christian spirit of service.
Let them individually and collectively be in
the forefront in promoting justice by the testimony of their
human lives and their courageous initiatives. Especially in
the field of public life, they should make definite choices
in harmony with their faith.
Let them esteem work both as a gift and as a
sharing in the creation, redemption, and service of the
human community.
In their family they should cultivate the
Franciscan spirit of peace, fidelity, and respect for life,
striving to make of it a sign of a world already renewed in
Christ.
By living the grace of matrimony, husbands and wives
in particular should bear witness in the world to the
love of Christ for his Church. They should joyfully
accompany their children on their human and spiritual
journey by providing a simple and open Christian
education and being attentive to the vocation of each
child.
Moreover they should respect all creatures,
animate and inanimate, which bear the imprint of the Most
High, and they should strive to move from the temptation
of exploiting creation to the Franciscan concept of
universal kinship.
Mindful that they are bearers of peace which
must be built up unceasingly, they should seek out ways of
unity and fraternal harmony through dialogue, trusting in
the presence of the divine seed in everyone and in the
transforming power of love and pardon.
Messengers of perfect joy in every
circumstance, they should strive to bring joy and hope
to others.
Since they are immersed in the
resurrection of Christ, which gives true meaning to
Sister Death, let them serenely tend toward the ultimate
encounter with the Father.
Chapter III Life In Fraternity
The Secular Franciscan Order is divided into
fraternities of various levels--local, regional, national,
and international. Each one has its own moral personality in
the Church. These various fraternities are coordinated and
united according to the norm of this rule and of the
constitutions.
On various levels, each fraternity is animated
and guided by a council and minister (or president) who are
elected by the professed according to the constitutions.
Their service, which lasts for a definite period, is
marked by a ready and willing spirit and is a duty of
responsibility to each member and to the community.
Within themselves the fraternities are structured in
different ways according to the norm of the
constitutions, according to the various needs of their
members and their regions, and under the guidance of
their respective council.
The local fraternity is to be established
canonically. It becomes the basic unit of the whole
Order and a visible sign of the Church, the community of
love. This should be the privileged place for developing a
sense of Church and the Franciscan vocation and for
enlivening the apostolic life of its members.
Requests for admission to the Secular
Franciscan Order must be presented to the local fraternity,
whose council decides upon the acceptance of new brothers
and sisters.
Admission into the Order is gradually attained
through a time of initiation, a period of formation of
at least one year, and profession of the rule. The
entire community is engaged in this process of growth by
its own manner of living. The age for profession and the
distinctive Franciscan sign are regulated by the
statutes.
Profession by its nature is a permanent commitment.
Members who find themselves in particular
difficulties should discuss their problems with the
council in fraternal dialogue.
Withdrawal or permanent dismissal from the Order, if
necessary, is an act of the fraternity council according
to the norm of the constitutions.
To foster communion among members, the council
should organize regular and frequent meetings of the
community as well as meeting with other Franciscan groups,
especially with youth groups. It should adopt appropriate
means for growth in Franciscan and ecclesial life and
encourage everyone to a life of fraternity. This communion
continues with deceased brothers and sisters through prayer
for them.
Regarding expenses necessary for the life of
the fraternity and the needs of worship, of the apostolate,
and of charity, all the brothers and sisters should offer a
contribution according to their means. Local fraternities
should contribute toward the expenses of the higher
fraternity councils.
As a concrete sign of communion and
co-responsibility, the councils on various levels, in
keeping with the constitutions, shall ask for suitable and
well-prepared religious for spiritual assistance. They
should make this request to the superiors of the four
religious Franciscan families, to whom the Secular
Fraternity has been united for centuries.
To promote fidelity to the charism as well as
observance of the rule and to receive greater support in
the life of the fraternity, the minister or president,
with the consent of the council, should take care to ask
for a regular pastoral visit by the competent religious
superiors as well as for a fraternal visit from those of
the higher fraternities, according to the norm of the
constitutions.
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