Saint Francis of Assisi (1181-1226) must surely be one of the Church's most popular saints. But 2026 has been proclaimed a Franciscan Jubilee year (commemorating the 800th anniversary of the saint's death). So even more attention may be expected to be focused on Francis this year. In this expectation, I have turned to an already quarter-century old contribution to the Francis story, Adrian House, Francis of Assisi: A Revolutionary Life (Paulist Press, 2001).
House firmly situates Francis well within the context of the medieval society he inhabited, a society so seemingly (unlike ours) in harmony with its natural surroundings, simultaneously (like ours) filled with conflicts of every kind - class conflicts, social conflicts, political conflicts, military conflicts, and, of course, religious conflicts, (both intra-religious and inter-religious). The reader encounters traditional aristocrats and peasants, as well as the rising urban bourgeoisie, especially the emerging communes in rising Italian city-states, like Assisi. The chronology is complex, as was the era being recounted, an era of big personalities like Pope Innocent III and Emperor Frederick II Stupor Mundi.
For all the secular history, however, the focus of the book remains always on one person Francis - Giovanni di Pietro di Bernardone (1181-1226) - Saint Francis of Assisi, il poverello, who, having experienced a profound personal conversion and call from Christ to rebuild his Church, adopted a radically poor lifestyle in an extremely intense identification with Jesus, and then attracted thousands of followers, forming the various branches of the Franciscan religious family, which survives today.
The story of Saint Francis is always two stories. It is, first, the story of Francis himself, of his heroic effort to identify totally with Jesus in a life of extreme self-abnegation and service to others. Francis' sanctity seems to have been almost universally recognized in his own lifetime (as well as ever since), and his unique identification with Christ appeared to have been confirmed by the miracle of the stigmata, a spiritual phenomenon which was then new and unprecedented in the Church.
The second story is that of his followers, those who came to form the three orders, devoted to living according to his Rule with greater or lesser severity. There is always a temptation when telling the story of Francis to create an inherent conflict between Francis' radical following of the Gospel in extreme poverty and the Church's efforts to mitigate Francis' extremism through her compromises with the lived experience of human frailty. There is truth to this traditional trope, although of course it is also an oversimplification. House at times indulges in this oversimplified paradigm, while also recognizing its interpretive inadequacy.
As his contemporaries recognized, Francis represented something unique, a following of Christ so intense that it merited the stigmata, and so extreme that it could only be lived fully by. him. Others - above all his fellow Franciscans - might seek to imitate him, but their imitation will likely always remain partial. But that is not the same as insincerity or falsehood, but rather a recognition of diverse human capacities and Francis' own unique gifts.
House commendably does well at navigating this complicated reality. He concedes that the "decisions to release the friars from their vow of absolute poverty, so as to sustain the momentum of their growth, and to build a monument to Francis which he never would have wanted, may have been wrong. Or, since the order still thrives and millions of people visit Assisi each year, it may have been right." Indeed, he recognizes Francis' "lasting achievement" in the lives of the Friars, the Poor Clares, and the Third Order "dedicated to the aims of the founders all over the world."
The author also desires to relate Francis' story as much as possible to more universal and non-Christian themes. While commendable, this effort seems at times strained and overdone - most especially in the distracting employment of Jungian language and imagery. That quibble conceded, this account is a fine introduction and/or rediscovery of the treasure the Church has received in the ever exciting story of Saint Francis.





