Francis' Vision and the stigmata of the Crucified.
At Christmas time in 1223, Francis participated in an
important ceremony when he celebrated the birth of Jesus by
recreating the manger of Bethlehem at a church in Greccio, Italy. This
celebration demonstrated his devotion to the human Jesus, a devotion that would
be rewarded in most dramatic fashion in the following year. In the summer of
1224, Francis went to the mountain retreat of La Verna (Alvernia), not far from
Assisi, to celebrate the feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin
Mary (August 15) and to prepare for St. Michael’s Day (September 29) by
fasting for 40 days.
St. Francis of Assisi
Receiving the Stigmata
He prayed that he might know how best to please God; opening the Gospels
for the answer, he came upon references to the Passion of Christ three times.
As he prayed during the morning of the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross
(September 14), he beheld a figure coming toward him from the heavens. St.
Bonaventure, minister-general of the Franciscans from 1257 to 1274 and a
leading thinker of the 13th century, wrote:
As it stood above him, he saw that it was a man and yet a Seraph with
six wings; his arms were extended and his feet conjoined, and his body was
fixed to a cross. Two wings were raised above his head, two were extended as in
flight, and two covered the whole body. The face was beautiful beyond all
earthly beauty, and it smiled gently upon Francis. Conflicting emotions filled
his heart, for though the vision brought great joy, the sight of the suffering
and crucified figure stirred him to deepest sorrow. Pondering what this vision
might mean, he finally understood that by God’s providence he would be made
like to the crucified Christ not by a bodily martyrdom but by conformity in
mind and heart.
Then as the vision disappeared,
it left not only a greater ardour of love in the inner man but no less marvellously
marked him outwardly with the stigmata of the Crucified. For the remainder of
his life, Francis took the greatest care to hide the stigmata (marks
resembling the wounds on the crucified body of Jesus Christ). After the death
of Francis, Brother Elias announced the stigmata to the order by a circular
letter. Later, Brother Leo, the confessor and intimate companion of the saint who also
left a written testimony of the event, said that in death Francis seemed like
one just taken down from the cross.
Francis lived two years longer, in constant pain and almost totally
blind (he had contracted an eye disease while proselytizing in the East in 1219). Medical
treatment at Rieti was unsuccessful, and after a stay at Siena, he was
brought back to Assisi, where he died at the Porziuncola. He was buried
temporarily in the church of San Giorgio at Assisi. On July 15, 1228,
concluding a process of unprecedented speed, Francis was canonized by his
former protector, Pope Gregory IX. On the following day, the pope laid the foundation
stone for the basilica that Brother Elias would build in Francis’s memory, and
in 1230 the saint’s body was transferred to the lower church of the basilica.
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