<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3><span class="smcap">Francis—Called to be a Saint.</span></h3>
<div class="poem0"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"God's interpreter art thou,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">To the waiting ones below<br/></span>
<span class="i0">'Twixt them and its light midway<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Heralding the better day."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>We have seen Francis as a young man, gay, careless,
pleasure loving, kind-hearted, a leader at every feast and
revel, known to his companions as a thorough good fellow.
We have watched the first strivings of the Holy Spirit in his
soul, and marked his earnest attempts to follow the light
that then began to penetrate his hitherto dark soul. We
have followed that glimmering light with him, step by
step, seen him persecuted, mocked, stoned, beaten, watched
his lonely wilderness wrestlings when there was no human
eye to pity, no human arm to succour. We have seen, too,
how, little by little, this thorny pathway led to a closer and
more intimate acquaintance with God, for which acquaintance
Francis counted his sufferings as nothing, and the
world well lost.</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>"Saint" Francis.</i></div>
<p>Francis was not an extraordinary character in any
sense of the word. He was what he was simply and solely
by the grace of God, which is ever free for all men. He was
not a man created for the hour. He was a vessel, cleansed
and emptied, and thus fit for the Master's use, and God
used him, as He always uses such vessels. The whole
secret of his sainthood lay in his simple, loving, implicit
obedience. Not the lifeless obedience that one renders to
inexorable law, but the heart-felt, passionate desire to
serve, and to anticipate the lightest want of the One
Object of the affections! That baptism of personal love<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span>
for God and union with Christ was poured out upon
Francis in the black hour of what looked to him complete
failure; when hunted and pursued, he sought refuge from
his angry friends in the caves of the earth. The gift that he
then received he never ceased to guard and cherish, and
other blessings were added to it, for God has promised, "To
him that hath it shall be given." And God gave liberally,
good measure, pressed down, and running over. But the
gifts which were Francis are ours too, by right of grace
Divine—to be had for the faithful seeking, and kept by
pure, faithful, and obedient living—"Called to be saints."
The few? One here and there in every century? Oh, no.
"Called to be saints," are the myriad souls who have
received the Divine touch of regeneration. This is the
calling and election of the redeemed; but oh, how few
there are that make them <i>sure</i>!</p>
<p>Five years had now elapsed since that spring morning,
when, weak and ill from fever, Francis dragged himself out
of doors, to look again on the glorious landscape that he
thought would bring him health and healing. The story of
his disappointment we have already told. During those
five years Francis made gigantic strides in heavenly
wisdom and knowledge, and we feel that we cannot do
better than to pause in our narrative and try to give you
some idea of the spiritual personality of the man, whose
name even now the people were beginning to couple with
that of "saint."</p>
<p>In appearance Francis was a thorough Italian. He was
rather below than over the ordinary height, his eyes and
hair were dark, and his bearing free and gracious. He was
chiefly remarkable for his happy, joyous expression. This
he never lost: even when illness had robbed him of his good
looks, the light in his eyes, and the smile on his lips were
always the same.</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>Holy Boldness.</i></div>
<p>The most striking points of Francis' character are, perhaps,
his humility, his sincerity, and his childlike simplicity.
Humble Francis was not by nature. There was
nothing in his training to make him so, and everything
that would tend to the growth of pride and arrogance. But,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span>
with his conversion, humility became one of his strongest
convictions. He truly considered himself less than the least,
and he held it to be an offence against God if he ever let
himself, or his little feelings and prejudices, stand in the way
of accomplishing what he believed to be for the extension
of the Kingdom. It seemed as though he had no feelings to
be hurt. What most people would call justifiable sensitiveness,
Francis would call sin. He went straight to the
mark, and if he did not accomplish all he wanted to at first,
he simply tried again, and generally succeeded sooner or
later.</p>
<p>In places where the Friars were not known, Francis often
found it a little difficult to get permission to preach in the
churches. At a place called Imola, for instance, where he
went to ask the bishop for the use of the church, the
bishop replied, coldly and distantly:—</p>
<p>"My brother, I preach in my own parish; I am not in
need of anyone to aid me in my task."</p>
<p>Francis bowed, and went out. An hour later, he
presented himself again.</p>
<p>"What have you come for again?" asked the bishop,
angrily. "What do you want?"</p>
<p>"My lord," answered Francis, in his simple way,
"when a father turns his son out of one door, the son has
but one thing to do—to return by another."</p>
<p>This holy boldness won the bishop's heart.</p>
<p>"You are right," he said. "You and your brothers may
preach in my diocese. I give you a general permission to
do so. Your humility deserves nothing less!"</p>
<p>Francis never considered himself at liberty to "shake the
dust" of a city off his feet unless he had tried and tried
again and again, to get a hearing there; indeed, nothing
convinced him of the uselessness of his quest unless he
were thrown out neck and crop, then it was more than
likely he would gather himself up, and try another
entrance! He entirely forgot himself in his love for his
Master.</p>
<p>His love of truth was with him almost a passion.
Between his thoughts, and his words, and his actions<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span>
there was a perfect agreement, neither one contradicted the
other; he saw to it that it was so, knowing that nothing
hurt the Gospel of Christ like insincerity or double dealing.
Distractions in prayer he looked upon as secret lies, and
saying with the lips what the heart did not go with.</p>
<p>"How shameful," he used to say, "to allow oneself to
fall into vain distractions when one is addressing the great
King! We should not speak in that manner even to a
respectable man!"</p>
<p>On one occasion he had carved a little olive-wood vase,
probably meaning to sell it for food. But, while at prayer
one day, some thought connected with this work came into
his mind, distracting his soul for the moment. Instantly
he was full of contrition, and, as soon as he left his prayer,
hastened to put his vase into the fire, where never again it
could come between his soul and God!</p>
<p>One day, on meeting a friend on the road, they stopped to
converse. On parting, the friend said, "You will pray for
me?" To which Francis replied, "Willingly." Hardly
was the other out of sight, when Francis said to his
companion,—</p>
<p>"Wait a little for me; I am going to kneel down and
discharge the obligation I have just contracted." This
was always his habit. Instead of promising and forgetting
as so many do, he never rested till he had fulfilled the
promise he had made.</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>A Fox-skin.</i></div>
<p>During the last two years of his life he was often very
weak and ailing. One cold winter, his companion, seeing
that the clothes he was wearing were very thin and patched,
was filled with compassion on his account. He secretly
got a piece of fox-skin.</p>
<p>"My father," he said, showing him the skin, "you
suffer very much from your liver and stomach; I beg of you
let me sew this fur under your tunic. If, you will not have
it all, let it at least cover your stomach."</p>
<p>"I will do what you wish," said Francis; "but you
must sew as large a piece <i>outside</i> as in."</p>
<p>His companion couldn't see any sense in this arrangement,
and objected very strongly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The reason is quite plain," said Francis: "The outside
piece will show everybody that I allow myself this
comfort." They had to give in at last, and Francis had
his way.</p>
<p>"Oh, admirable man," writes a friend after his death;
"thou hast always been the same within and without, in
words and in deeds, below and above!"</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>A Temptation.</i></div>
<p>On another occasion, he tore off his tunic, because, for a
brief moment of weakness, he harbored the thought that he
might have led an easier life, and still serve God. Like other
men, he might have had a settled home, and lived a tranquil
existence. It was a passing temptation, but Francis,
tearing off his coarse garment, emblem of the Cross that he
strove to follow, cried—</p>
<p>"It is a religious habit—a man given up to such thoughts
would be a robber if he wore it." Nor did he put it on
again till he felt he could do so with a pure heart and clean
conscience.</p>
<p>With the crystal transparency of his inner and outer life
went a simplicity that was akin to that of a little child.
His sermons and addresses were of the very simplest and
plainest. Though Francis was undoubtedly one of the
orators of the age, his fiery words and burning language
were such that even the most unlearned could easily
follow. His theme was simply Christ, and Christ crucified
for our sins, and an exhortation to repentance and holy
living. Learned ones pondered his words and marvelled
wherein lay his power, little dreaming that his very plainness
of speech was his strength.</p>
<p>His delight in the beauties of nature never left him.
Sunset and sunrise, mountain and plain, river and sea
alike, filled him with joy, and all spoke to him of the glory
of God. Flowers always gave him especial pleasure. He
insisted that his disciples should always reserve some
portion of their gardens for the growth of flowers as well as
vegetables, "to give them a foretaste of the eternal sweetness
of Heaven." When the brethren went to the fields to
chop wood, Francis always warned them to take care of the
roots, so that the trunk might sprout again and live. To<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</SPAN></span>
take life of any kind was intolerable to him. For this
reason he always lifted the worms out of his path and laid
them at the side of the road, lest an incautious traveller
might crush them.</p>
<p>His love and power over animals are almost too well
known to need mention. He always spoke of them as his
brothers and sisters. He disdained nothing. All were to
him alike beautiful, because the work of his God. For a
long time, he had a tame sheep, that followed him about
wherever it could get a chance. This sheep always seemed
to know exactly how to behave under all circumstances.
When the brethren knelt at prayers, it knelt too; when
they sang, it joined in with a not-too-loud little bleat!</p>
<p>Near his room, at the Portiuncula, there lived a grasshopper
in a fig-vine. This little insect would hop on his
finger at his bidding, and when told to "sing and praise
the Lord," used to chirp with all its might! Birds, insects,
and even fishes and wild animals, we are told, all recognized
in Francis a friend, and readily did his bidding.</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>Two Small Mites.</i></div>
<p>Francis' love for God was supreme, and his belief that
God loved him never wavered. To make people love and
know God was his one burning desire. It was not so much
God's service he delighted in as God Himself. He never
lost sight of the Master in the Work, and to a large extent
this was the key to all his success. His work was the outcome
of his love. After we have received, the first natural
impulse is to give. Francis possessed "two small mites,"
an ancient historian writes—"they were his body and his
soul. He gave them both, bravely and freely, according to
his custom."</p>
<p>Whatever came—joy, sorrow, success, failure, pain,
weariness, sickness, insult, or favor—Francis took as direct
from the hand of God, and blessed Him for all. Why
shouldn't he? His heart was right, he had the assurance
that his ways pleased God, and his faith was not dependent
upon knowledge. He was content, nay, glad to trust where
he could not see, confident in the belief that "nothing
could hurt a sanctified soul." His disciples could not
always follow him so far. Some of them, when they saw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span>
their master suffering—as he did suffer severely in his last
days—thought that God might have led His beloved Home
by a less painful road. One of them once gave expression
to his feelings thus:—</p>
<p>"Ah, my brother, pray to the Lord that He may treat
you more gently. Truly, He ought to let His hand weigh
less heavily upon you."</p>
<p>Hurt to the quick, as well as indignant, Francis cried:—</p>
<p>"What is that you are saying? If I did not know your
simplicity I should henceforth hold you in horror! What!
you have the audacity to blame God's dealings with me!"
Then, throwing himself on his knees, he prayed:—</p>
<p>"Oh, my Lord God! I give Thee thanks for all these
pains I endure. I pray Thee to send me a hundredfold
more if such be Thy good pleasure! I willingly accept all
afflictions. Thy holy name is my superabundant joy!"</p>
<p>Nothing could ever make Francis say that anything in
his lot was "very hard." His love was too loyal, his trust
too complete.</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>Rejoice Always.</i></div>
<p>Joy was one of his cardinal articles of faith. "Rejoice
always!" was a divine command, and one not to be overlooked.
As a young man, he had been of a bright,
joyous nature, but easily plunged into depths of sadness and
melancholy. God taught him upon what to base his joy,
and, when he had torn down all earthly external devices,
led him to derive his all from the true source. He held
joy to be the normal state of those whom God loves—the
fruit of Christian life, without which everything languishes
and dies.</p>
<p>"The devil," Francis always said, "carries dust with
him, and whenever he can, he throws it into the openings
of the soul in order to cloud the clearness of its thoughts
and the purity of its actions. If joy knows how to defend
itself and subsist, then he has had his spite for nothing;
but if the servant of Christ becomes sad, bitter or unhappy,
he is sure to triumph. Sooner or later, that soul will be
overwhelmed by its sadness, or will seek for false joys or
consolations. The servant of God who is troubled for any
reason" (Francis always allowed that causes for trouble in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</SPAN></span>
this world are innumerable) "must immediately have
recourse to prayer, and remain in the presence of his
Heavenly Father till the joy of salvation has been restored
to him, otherwise, his sadness will increase and engender
a rust in the soul."</p>
<div class="sidenote"><i>The Duty of Cheerfulness.</i></div>
<p>This duty of cheerfulness Francis impressed upon all
with whom he had to do.</p>
<p>"My brother," he said to a friar, of doleful countenance,
one day, "if thou hast some fault to mourn, do it in secret,
groan and weep before God, but here, with thy brethren, be
as they are in tone and countenance."</p>
<p>His conviction of this duty was so strong that, during
one large gathering of the friars, he had this advice
written in large letters and posted up.</p>
<p>"Let the brethren avoid ever appearing sombre, sad and
clouded, like the hypocrites, but let them always be found
joyful in the Lord, gay, amiable, gracious—as is fitting."</p>
<p>Amiability and graciousness he also considered amongst
the virtues—courtesy, he called it. And courtesy he always
said was akin to charity, her younger sister, who was to go
with the elder one and help to open all hearts to her! An
historian writes thus of Francis: "He was very courteous
and gracious in all things, and possessed a peace and
serenity that nothing could disturb. This sympathy and
benevolence was expressed on his countenance; his face
had in it something angelic."</p>
<p>His songs and hymns were the outcome of his perpetual
joy in the Lord. In those days there were no popular
religious hymns or songs. People praised God in Latin,
with psalms and chants. Francis never found that these
gave vent to his feelings, and so, with the help of one of
the brothers—Pacificus, a trained musician—he began to
write his own; and soon, wherever the friars passed, they
left a train of simple melody in their wake. It was Francis,
and his brethren, who first turned the Italian language into
poetry, and gave it that impetus which has since rendered
it the typical language for song.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</SPAN></span></p>
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