The idea of entering a monastery in order to pursue a life
of prayer and joyful communion with the Lord, like St. Clare, is quite foreign
to many today. Our modern culture tells
our young girls that they cannot be happy unless they, like a Disney princess, marry
prince charming and live in a castle filled with all the luxuries money can
buy, or acquire the sort of job where she can buy her own castle and live life
according to her own whims and fancies.
St. Clare is often in my thoughts, and over the past year, I
have reflected often on her great courage. The courage of leaving her family,
leaving a life of luxury which many would kill for, in order to become a poor
nun.
Clare was of an aristocratic family. At 15 she refused to marry. Instead, she was drawn to the dynamic
preaching of St. Francis of Assisi. He
became her lifelong friend and spiritual guide.
Determined to dedicate her life to God, on Palm Sunday in the year 1212,
Clare escaped one night from her Father’s home.
Several miles away, she met St. Francis and his brethren at the poor
little chapel of the Portiuncula. At the
altar of Our Lady, she traded her rich clothing for the rough brown woolen
habit of the Franciscans, exchanged her jeweled belt for a common rope with
three knots to symbolize her poverty, chastity, and obedience, and caught off
her long golden tresses. Thus she became
espoused to Christ. Her sister Agnes, 14
years old, soon joined her, as did several other women, in the following weeks.
They lived a simple life of poverty, austerity, and
seclusion from the world. Clare and her
sisters went barefoot, slept on the ground, ate no meat, and observed almost
complete silence. This was the beginning
of the cloistered order of Franciscan nuns known as the Poor Clares, thus the
Virgin Clare was made the mother of countless virgins consecrated to Christ.
Many young women claim they are not called to the
consecrated life because they feel the call to bring children into the
world. A biological urge to have
children is not proof that one is not called to religious life. It is a sign of
health, a healthy body and a healthy mind and a generous soul.
Celibacy as a religious sister, brother, or priest is still
fertile, because it is aimed and raising children for God. Pope Francis spoke
recently of a “fertile chastity which generates spiritual children in the
Church” as the true aim of religious consecration, to be Virgin Mothers, like
Mary. Just as biological children bring joy to mothers, bearing spiritual
children can bring great joy, real fulfillment. The joy of spiritual
fruitfulness” is to animate our existence, the Pope said.
St. Clare, in her dedication to God, she was a virgin who
fought to be poor: she is the antithesis and antidote to the modern ethos. May
we, like Clare, trust God enough, love God enough, that we may have the courage
enough to follow him out of the luxury of the world, away from the empty
promises of our culture, to pursue the promises of Christ for the glory of God
and salvation of souls.
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