
Saint Francis of Assisi
Saint  Francis of Assisi (1182-1226), was an Italian mystic and  preacher, who  founded the Franciscans. Born in Assisi, Italy and  originally named  Giovanni Francesco Bernardone, he appears to have  received little  formal education, even though his father was a wealthy  merchant. As a  young man, Francis led a worldly, carefree life.  Following a battle  between Assisi and Perugia, he was held captive in  Perugia for over a  year. While imprisoned, he suffered a severe illness  during which he  resolved to alter his way of life. Back in Assisi in  1205, he performed  charities among the lepers and began working on the  restoration of  dilapidated churches. Francis's change of character and his expenditures  for charity angered his father, who legally disinherited him.  Francis  then discarded his rich garments for a bishop's cloak and  devoted the  next three years to the care of outcasts and lepers in the  woods of  Mount Subasio.
For his devotions on Mount Subasio, Francis restored the ruined chapel  of Santa Maria degli Angeli. In  1208, one day during Mass, he heard a  call telling him to go out into  the world and, according to the text of  Matthew 10:5-14, to possess  nothing, but to do good everywhere.  Upon  returning to Assisi that  same year, Francis began preaching. He  gathered round him the 12  disciples who became the original brothers of  his order, later called  the First Order; they elected Francis  superior. In 1212 he received a  young, well-born nun of Assisi, Clare,  into Franciscan fellowship;  through her was established the Order of  the Poor Ladies (the Poor  Clares), later the Second Order of  Franciscans. It was probably later in  1212 that Francis set out for the  Holy Land, but a shipwreck forced him  to return. Other difficulties  prevented him from accomplishing much  missionary work when he went to  Spain to preach to the Moors. In 1219 he  was in Egypt, where he  succeeded in preaching to, but not in  converting, the sultan. Francis  then went on to the Holy Land, staying  there until 1220. He wished to  be martyred and rejoiced upon hearing  that five Franciscan friars had  been killed in Morocco while carrying  out their duties. On his return  home he found dissension in the  ranks of the friars and resigned as  superior, spending the next few  years in planning what became the Third  Order of Franciscans, the  tertiaries.
In September 1224, after 40 days of fasting,  Francis was praying upon  Monte Alverno when he felt pain mingled with  joy, and the marks of the  crucifixion of Christ, the stigmata, appeared  on his body. Accounts of  the appearance of these marks differ, but  it seems probable that they  were knobby protuberances of the flesh,  resembling the heads of nails.  Francis was carried back to Assisi, where  his remaining years were  marked by physical pain and almost total  blindness. He was canonized in  1228. In 1980, Pope John Paul II  proclaimed him the patron saint of  ecologists. In art, the emblems of  St. Francis are the wolf, the lamb,  the fish, birds, and the stigmata.  His feast day is October 4.
Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh     READ MORE________________________________________________