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The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi by Brother Ugolino
CHAPTER XXV HOW ST FRANCIS HEALED MIRACULOUSLY A LEPER BOTH IN HIS BODY AND IN HIS SOUL, AND WHAT THE SOUL SAID TO HIM ON GOING UP TO HEAVEN
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The true disciple of Christ, St Francis, as long as he lived in this
miserable life, endeavoured with all his might to follow the example of
Christ the perfect Master; whence it happened often, through the
operation of grace, that he healed the soul at the same time as the
body, as we read of Jesus Christ himself; and not only did he willingly
serve the lepers himself, but he willed that all the brethren of his
Order, both when they were travelling about the world and when they
were halting on their way, should serve the lepers for the love of
Christ, who for our sake was willing to be treated as a leper. It
happened once, that in a convent near the one in which St Francis then
resided there was a hospital for leprosy and other infirmities, served
by the brethren; and one of the patients was a leper so impatient, so
insupportable, and so insolent, that many believed of a certainty that
he was possessed of the devil (as indeed he was) for he ill-treated
with blows and words all those who served him; and, what was worse, he
blasphemed so dreadfully our Blessed Lord and his most holy Mother the
Blessed Virgin Mary, that none was found who could or would serve him.
The brethren, indeed, to gain merit, endeavoured to accept with
patience the injuries and violences committed against themselves, but
their consciences would not allow them to submit to those addressed to
Christ and to his Mother, wherefore they determined to abandon this
leper, but this they would not do until they had signified their
intention to St Francis, according to the Rule. On learning this, St
Francis, who was not far distant, himself visited this perverse leper,
and said to him: "May God give thee peace, my beloved brother!" To this
the leper answered: "What peace can I look for from God, who has taken
from me peace and every other blessing, and made me a putrid and
disgusting object?" St Francis answered: "My son, be patient; for the
infirmities of the body are given by God in this world for the
salvation of the soul in the next; there is great merit in them when
they are patiently endured." The sick man answered: "How can I bear
patiently the pain which afflicts me night and day? For not only am I
greatly afflicted by my infirmity, but the friars thou hast sent to
serve me make it even worse, for they do not serve me as they ought."
Then St Francis, knowing through divine revelation that the leper was
possessed by the malignant spirit, began to pray, interceding most
earnestly for him. Having finished his prayer, he returned to the leper
and said to him: "My son, I myself will serve thee, seeing thou art not
satisfied with the others." "Willingly," answered the leper; "but what
canst thou do more than they have done?" "Whatsoever thou wishest I
will do for thee," answered St Francis. "I will then," said he, "that
thou wash me all over; for I am so disgusting that I cannot bear
myself." Then St Francis heated some water, putting therein many
odoriferous herbs; he then undressed him, and began to wash him with
his own hands, whilst another brother threw the water upon him, and, by
a divine miracle, wherever St Francis touched him with his holy hands
the leprosy disappeared, and his flesh was perfectly healed also. On
this the leper, seeing his leprosy beginning to vanish, felt great
sorrow and repentance for his sins, and began to weep bitterly. While
his body was being purified externally of the leprosy through the
cleansing of the water, so his soul internally was purified from sin by
the washing of tears and repentance; and feeling himself completely
healed both in his body and his soul, he humbly confessed his sins,
crying out in a loud voice, with many tears: "Unhappy me! I am worthy
of hell for the wickedness of my conduct to the brethren, and the
impatience and blasphemy I have uttered against the Lord"; and for
fifteen days he ceased not to weep bitterly for his sins, imploring the
Lord to have mercy on him, and them made a general confession to a
priest. St Francis, perceiving this evident miracle which the Lord had
enabled him to work, returned thanks to God, and set out for a distant
country; for out of humility he wished to avoid all glory, and in all
his actions he sought only the glory of God, and not his own. It
pleased God that the leper, who had been healed both in his body and in
his soul, after having done penance for fifteen days, should fall ill
of another infirmity; and having received the sacraments of the Church,
he died a most holy death. His soul on its way to heaven appeared in
the air to St Francis, who was praying in a forest, and said to him:
"Dost thou know me?" "Who art thou?" asked the saint. Said he: "I am
that leper whom our Blessed Lord healed through thy merits, and to-day
I am going to life eternal, for which I return thanks to God and to
thee. Blessed by thy soul and thy body, blessed by thy holy words and
works, for through thee many souls are saved in the world; and know
that there is not a single day in which the angels and other saints do
not return thanks to God for the holy fruits of thy preaching and that
of thy Order in various parts of the world. Be comforted, then, and
thank the Lord, and may his blessing rest on thee." Having said these
words, he went up to heaven, leaving St Francis much consoled.
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