Authors: Lawrence S. Cunningham
ISBN-13: 9780802827623, ISBN-10: 0802827624
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Eerdmans Pub Co
Date Published: May 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Francis of Assisi is counted among the most important personalities of history. The life and ideals of this humble, semiliterate medieval monk have had a shaping influence on the Christian church that has spilled over into Western culture at large. This biography by Lawrence Cunningham looks anew at Francis's life and legacy, seeking to counter efforts to romanticize him yet without diminishing his deep piety or abiding significance.
Francis of Assisi, the most written-about saint in Western Christianity, is the subject of two more books. Haule (Divine Madness) is a Jungian analyst interested in the mechanics and dynamics of the saint's spiritual life, while Cunningham is a theologian and longtime Francis scholar who situates the saint's life and work within the larger life of the Western Christian church. Both authors agree that Francis's experience and understanding of poverty are central to his originality. Haule presents poverty for Francis as the transcendent, personified Lady, the object of the troubadour's desire. Repeating a 19th-century argument exemplified by Paul Sabatier's still-circulating 1894 biography, Haule portrays Francis as a self-actualized individual whose hardscrabble poverty placed him in conflict with cold-eyed practitioners of theology and law. This study focuses on the inner life of the saint and his ecstatic experiences. Taking a more traditional biographical approach, Cunningham proposes poverty as a way in which Francis, the biblical literalist, could imitate the humble God disclosed in Jesus. Cunningham defends the more recent argument that Francis was, in fact, an orthodox Catholic who tried to be a Catholic reformer, preaching and living the ideals of the reform Councils of the Lateran. Another recent biography of Francis is Donald Spoto's Reluctant Saint; this reviewer's favorite is the little work by G.K. Chesterton, St. Francis of Assisi. Both these new books are suitable for larger public libraries where interest in Catholic saints is strong. Cunningham's book, with its more scholarly approach, is also recommended for academic and seminary libraries.-David I. Fulton, Coll. of St. Elizabeth, Morristown, NJ Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Francis of Assisi: A Modest Foreword | vi | |
1. | Beginnings at Assisi | 1 |
2. | Francis and His Companions | 30 |
3. | Rome and Beyond Rome | 48 |
4. | Francis and the Rule(s) of the Lesser Brothers | 65 |
5. | The Stigmata of Saint Francis | 79 |
6. | Saint Francis and the Love of Creation | 92 |
7. | The Final Years | 108 |
8. | Francis Reconsidered | 120 |
9. | A Reading Essay | 140 |
Appendix | The Prayer of Saint Francis | 146 |
Index | 150 |