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MESSAGE OF JOHN PAUL II TO
THE MINISTER GENERAL OF THE FRIARS MINOR ON THE OCCASION OF THE REOPENING
OF THE PORTIUNCOLA IN ASSISI
To the Most Reverend Fr Giacomo Bini Minister General of the Franciscan
Order of Friars Minor
1. The reopening of the Basilica and Chapel of the Porziuncola after
completion of the repairs occasioned by the damage sustained in the
earthquake of 1997, gives me a welcome opportunity to send warm greetings
to you, beloved Brother, and to the Franciscan Community in Assisi. There
you do a much-valued service to the Church in caring for the places dear
to the memory of the Poverello of Assisi, as also in caring for
the faithful and pilgrims who flock to the home of Francis and Clare to
enjoy a deep spiritual experience. The faithful tread their way to the
gates of Assisi, deservedly named the"special city of the Lord"
because of the many wonders of compassion worked there.
Today the doors of the Porziuncola Chapel and the Patriarchal Basilica
open once more to receive great numbers of people drawn by their yearning
for God and the charm of his holiness, made abundantly plain in his
servant Francis.
The Poverello knew well that "divine grace can be lavished
on God's chosen ones in any place. Yet he also found that the location of
St Mary of the Porziuncola was rich in more abundant graces ... and he was
accustomed to say to the brethren: "This is a holy place, and the
dwelling of Christ and his Virgin Mother" (Speculum perfectionis,
83).
The poor, humble little church had become for Francis an icon of the
Holy Virgin, the "Virgin made Church" (Salutation of the BVM
I) herself unassuming and a "tiny portion of the world" (1 Celano,
XII, 18), yet the indispensable means by which the Son of God should
become man. For this reason the saint addressed Mary as: Tabernacle,
House, Vesture, Handmaid, and Mother of God (Salutation of the BVM
I).
It was in the Chapel of the Porziuncola, restored by the work of his own
hands, that Francis reached a decision on hearing the words of chapter 14
of Matthew's Gospel. He decided to abandon his brief period of eremitical
life in order to preach in the midst of the people, "with simplicity
of words and generosity of his heart" as his first biographer, Thomas
of Celano, attests (1 Celano, I, 23). So began his characteristic
itinerant ministry. It was at the Porziuncola that Clare received the
religious habit, and thereby founded the Order of the "Poor Ladies of
San Damiano". Again it was here that Francis begged Christ, through
the intercession of the Queen of Angels, for the great pardon or "indulgence
of the Porziuncola", confirmed by my revered Predecessor, Pope
Honorius III, on 2 August 1216. Thence sprang the missionary activity that
took Francis and his brothers to some of the Muslim countries and the many
nations of Europe. And at the end, it was here that the saint greeted with
song "our Sister bodily death" (Canticle of the Creatures,
12).
2. The little church of the Porziuncola preserves and hands on a message
and a special grace deriving from the actual experiences of the Poverello
of Assisi. Message and grace still continue, and form a powerful
summons to any who will allow themselves to be drawn by his example. This
is borne out by the witness of Simone Weil, a daughter of Israel who fell
under the spell of Christ: "Alone in the tiny romanesque chapel of St
Mary of the Angels, a unique wonder of purity in which Francis had often
prayed, I experienced a force greater than myself that drove me, for the
first time in my life, to my knees" (Spiritual Autobiography).
The Porziuncola is one of the most venerable Franciscan places, dear not
only to the Order of Minors but to all Christians who find themselves
overwhelmed by its wealth of historical memories, finding light and
inspiration for a renewal of life, a deepening of faith and a more genuine
love. I like to underline the specific message that comes from the
Porziuncola and its indulgence. It is the message of pardon and
reconciliation, that is, of the grace that God's goodness pours out on us
when we are willing to receive it, because God is truly "rich in mercy" (Eph
2:4).
How could we fail to stir up in ourselves, every day, a humble and
trusting prayer for the redeeming grace of God? How could we fail to be
aware of the great gift he has given us in Christ "once for all time" (Heb
9:12) and continues to offer with unchanging goodness? It is the gift of
free pardon that brings us to peace with him and with ourselves, inspiring
new hope and new joy in living. In the light of all this it is not
difficult to understand the austere life of penance embraced by Francis.
We are encouraged to hear the call to a continuing conversion of life that
detaches us from the pursuit of selfish aims and directs our spirit
instead to God, who himself gives focus to our whole existence.
3. Being the Tent of Meeting of God with men, the sanctuary of
the Porziuncola is a house of prayer. Having experienced it himself,
Francis loved to repeat the saying: "Whoever prays here with devotion
will receive what he asks for" (1 Celano, I, 106). Within the ancient
walls of the tiny church anyone may taste the sweetness of prayer in
company with Mary, Mother of Jesus (cf. Acts 1:14) and know the power of
her intercession.
In that sacred building restored by the work of his own hands, the new
man Francis used to listen to Jesus' invitation to shape his own life "according
to the form of the holy Gospel" (Testament, 14) and, in
poverty and joy to go through the world proclaiming the kingdom of God and
conversion. That holy place had become for Francis a Tent of Meeting
with Christ himself, the living Word of salvation.
The Porziuncola is in a special way the meeting-place with the
grace of forgiveness, deriving from a particular experience of Francis. St
Bonaventure writes: "One day, while he wept bitterly over the memories
of his past life, Francis felt himself overtaken by the joy of the Holy
Spirit, from whom he received the assurance that all his sins were
completely forgiven" (Legenda Major III, 6). He wanted
everyone to enjoy such an experience of God's mercy, and so he requested
and obtained a plenary indulgence for all who would come as pilgrims to
the tiny church to receive remission of their sins and an abundance of
divine grace (cf. Rom 5:20).
4. It is my sincere wish that all those who follow in the footsteps of
the Poverello of Assisi in an attitude of penance and
reconciliation and duly receive the Porziuncola indulgence with the proper
interior disposition, shall likewise know the joy of meeting God and the
tenderness of his merciful love. This is the "spirit of Assisi",
the spirit of reconciliation, of prayer, of mutual respect that I heartily
wish may prove a stimulus driving each one to communion with God and with
all brothers and sisters. It is the same spirit that marked the meeting of
prayer for peace with the representatives of the world religions, called
by me to the Basilica of St Mary of the Angels on 27 October 1986, a
meeting of which I treasure a vivid and grateful memory.
With these sentiments I join in spiritual pilgrimage with today's
celebration of the Porziuncola indulgence, taking place in the restored
Basilica of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Queen of heaven, as the great Jubilee
of the incarnation of Christ looms near.
To Our Lady, chosen daughter of the Father, I entrust all those in
Assisi and elsewhere throughout the world who wish to receive today the
Pardon of Assisi, in order to make of their hearts a dwelling-place and
Tent for the Lord who is coming.
To all, my blessing.
Given at Castel Gandolfo, 1 August 1999, in the 21st year of my
Pontificate.
JOHN PAUL II
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