[Life of St. Francis of Assisi by Paul Sabatier]@TWC D-Link book
Life of St. Francis of Assisi

CHAPTER X
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He saw only too well that the Brothers, having renounced everything, were in danger of being unjust or severe toward the rich and powerful of the earth; he, therefore, sought to arm them against this tendency, often concluding his counsels with these noble words: "There are men who to-day appear to us to be members of the devil who one day shall be members of Christ." "Our life in the midst of the world," said he again, "ought to be such that, on hearing or seeing us, every one shall feel constrained to praise our heavenly Father.

You proclaim peace; have it in your hearts.
Be not an occasion of wrath or scandal to anyone, but by your gentleness may all be led to peace, concord, and good works." It was especially when he undertook to cheer his disciples, to fortify them against temptations and deliver them from their power, that Francis was most successful.

However anxious a soul might be, his words brought it back to serenity.

The earnestness which he showed in calming sadness became fiery and terrible in reproving those who fell away, but in these days of early fervor he seldom had occasion to show severity; more often he needed gently to reprove the Brothers whose piety led them to exaggerate penances and macerations.
When all was finished and each one had had his part in this banquet of love, Francis would bless them, and they would disperse in all directions like strangers and travellers.

They had nothing, but already they thought they saw the signs of the grand and final regeneration.
Like the exile on Patmos they saw "the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, like a bride adorned for her husband ...


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