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Blessing All of Creation, September 29, 2017

Blessing all of Creation

Rev. Yme Woensdregt

About eight hundred years ago, a man named Francesco di Bernardone scandalized the church by taking the teachings of Jesus seriously. For him, it was a matter of renewal and transformation. He took vows of poverty, and refused to believe that being a follower of Jesus had anything to do with wealth or success.

Although he was born into the family of a wealthy cloth merchant, he renounced the wealth and prestige of his family at the age of 25 to embrace a lifestyle of simplicity, poverty, and grace. His father couldn’t understand it. He took his son to the town magistrates, complaining that Francesco was disregarding his responsibilities. The son agreed with his father and renounced all claims on his family. In front of the court, he stripped naked, placed his clothes at his father’s feet and said that from then on, God would be his father. He declared himself “wedded to Lady Poverty”, renounced all material possessions, and devoted himself to serving the poor.

We know him better now as St. Francis of Assisi. From that time forward, Francis saw his life’s work as waking people up so that they would focus on the pure and simple gospel and follow Jesus simply.

Francis took literally the words in Matthew’s gospel, “Preach as you go, saying, ‘The kingdom of Heaven is at hand.’ … You have received the Gospel without payment, give it to others as freely. Take no gold, or silver, or copper in your belts, no bag for your journey, no spare garment, nor sandals, nor staff.” (Matthew 10: 7–10)

He and his companions would have no money and no property, individually or collectively. Their task was to “proclaim the good news, using words if necessary,” and declaring in word and action the love of God in Christ. Francis of Assisi had a profound respect for all life, experiencing all of God’s creation as sacred.

In the early 13th century, the traditional religious way to seek God was to turn inward. Those following a religious path would live in a monastery or a cloister, seeking to transcend this world and spend their lives in contemplating God.

Francis chose a different route. Instead of turning inwards, he turned outwards. The world was shot through with God’s glory. Francis discovered God’s presence and love everywhere he looked. God was to be found in the midst of this world, in the everyday moments of life, in the midst of a bountiful and wonderfully varied creation. Rather than fleeing the world to find God, God is to be found right here, in the physical, material world.

The paradox of Francis’ life is that although he gave up material possessions, he valued the material things of the earth more completely. He treasured people who worked with their hands — farmers, craftspeople, artists, bakers — and he valued the fruit of their hands. He esteemed material things not as having intrinsic worth in and of themselves, but because they displayed the immense variety and wonder of God’s creative imagination.

Francis had a remarkable belief in the universal ability and duty of all creatures to praise God. His famous Canticle of the Creatures includes the words, “All praise be yours, my Lord, through Brother Sun … Sister Moon and Stars … Brothers Wind and Air … Sister Water … Brother Fire … Sister Earth … Sister Death. All praise be yours, my Lord, through all that you have made. Happy those who endure in peace.”

Many of the stories that surround St. Francis deal with his love for animals. He died on October 4, 1226. That became the feast day for this saint, since that was the day he was born into glory.

We will celebrate St Francis at Christ Church Anglican this Sunday. We invite you to join us on Sunday, October 1, at 2:00 pm for a blessing of the animals. Bring your animals and pets with you to church that afternoon for a special blessing. In the spirit of Francis, who called the animals his brothers and sisters, we celebrate the goodness of God, who calls us to live in peace with all creatures, and indeed with the whole of creation, treasuring it as God’s wonderful gift to us.

In this year, when we have tasted the fear and anxiety about the wildfires burning all around us, it is good to remember once again that all of creation is precious. Regardless of your faith stance, it is true that we all are charged with taking care of the beautiful world in which we live. We share time and space with creation. In blessing the animals, we bless all of creation, and make a new commitment to caring for the world in which we live.