3. The Mission
In the first two Lenten meditations we have explored some decisive stages in Francis’s spiritual journey. The first led us to the heart of his conversion: not simply an act of will, but a profound transformation of his sensibility wrought by grace, capable of turning bitterness into sweetness and giving him a new perspective on himself and on reality. The second showed us how this conversion did not remain an inward and isolated event: the Lord gave him brothers, and fraternity became the tangible setting in which this experience took shape.
The third meditation invites us to take a further step. Conversion and fraternity are not the end point: they find their fulfilment in mission. What Francis received – a transformed sensibility, the joy of his brothers, the discovery of a God who loves by giving Himself – cannot be kept to himself, but is called to reach out and touch the lives of others.
The journey we will undertake is divided into five phases: the primacy of witness over the word, in accordance with the Franciscan insight that Christ is not proclaimed first and foremost, but is made known through a transformed life; the style of allowing oneself to be welcomed, even before wishing to offer anything; the art of waiting for the other’s questions, without anticipating unsolicited answers; the fruitfulness of the encounter, as shown by Francis’s journey to the Sultan of Egypt; and finally the evangelical paradox of submission, which is not weakness, but the highest form of love – the very same with which God gives Himself.
