To read the texts click on the texts: Gal 6:14-18; Mt 11:25-30
At
a time when we are struggling to cope with how to respond to environmental
challenges, the feast of St. Francis Of Assisi (1181/1182 - 1226) comes as
(literally) a breath of fresh air. St. Francis realised that the easiest way to
see, feel and touch God was through all of God's creation. For him, the sun was
a brother and the moon a sister. Animals and plants were friends who had to be
nurtured and not feared.
In
his response to creation, Francis went back to the origin as narrated in
Genesis and God's command to the human race to live in harmony with the rest of
creation (Gen 1:28-30).
This
Gospel text chosen for the feast is addressed to all those who accept the
message of Jesus unlike those in Chorazin and Bethsaida. Jesus begins his
prayer here by giving thanks to the Father. It is openness to the revelation of
God that Jesus makes which is responsible for the receipt of this enormous
privilege. Acknowledging Jesus is not a matter of one’s superior knowledge or
insight, but given as a gift to those who open themselves to this revelation.
Jesus himself is an example of such openness, which allowed him to receive
everything directly from God. It is his intimacy with the Father and not his
religious genius, which is responsible for this grace.
Jesus
invites all those who are burdened to come to him for rest. The burden in this
context seems to be that of the law and its obligations. When Jesus invites the
burdened to take his yoke, which is easy, he is not inviting them to a life of
ease, but to a deliverance from any kind of artificiality or the blind
following of rules and regulations. The disciple must learn from Jesus who is
in Matthew “the great teacher”. The rest that Jesus offers is the rest of
salvation.
We
can get so caught up today with wanting to have more that we might lose sight
of the meaning of life itself. The desire to acquire more and more and be
regarded as successful based on what we possess sometimes leads to missing out
on so much that life has to offer.
This
then is the challenge that the feast of this extraordinary Saint offers us,
namely that we learn to love and live with our environment. Today more than
ever we need to go back to our origins and the response of St. Francis to
creation if we are to save our world. It is indeed fitting that St. Francis is
the patron of animals and environment.
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