
Saint Jane Frances de Chantal
(1572-1641)
Whatever good or evil befalls you, be
confident that God will covert it all to your good.
-- St. Jane Frances de Chantal
The mere renunciation of sins is not
sufficient for the salvation of penitents, but
fruits worthy of repentance are also required of
them.
-- St. Basil the Great
We always find that those who walked closest
to Christ, our Lord, were those who had to bear the
greatest trials.
-- St. Teresa of Avila
The more you abandon to God the care of all
temporal things, the more He will take care to
provide for all your wants; but if, on the contrary,
you try to supply all your own needs, Providence
will allow you to continue to do just that, and then
it may very well happen that even necessities will
be lacking, God thus reproving you for your lack of
faith and reliance on Him.
-- St. Jean Baptiste de la Salle

The Call of Matthew (detail)
by Caravaggio
(1599-1600)

"Repent and believe the Good News!"
Penance means conversion. The Confraternity of
Penitents is a world wide private Catholic
association of the faithful, completely loyal to our
Pope and the Magisterium.
Our Rule of Life has been reviewed by our bishop and
recognized in these words: "this Rule does not
contain anything contrary to our faith; therefore it
may be safely practiced privately by you or by
anyone inclined to do so. . . . His Excellency
is appreciative of your efforts to live and promote
Franciscan spirituality and especially promote the
neglected practice of penance and he wishes you
success" (January 30, 1998).
Members of the Confraternity of Penitents live this
Rule in their own homes, devoted to prayer, penance,
fasting, conversion, and works of mercy modeled on
Jesus Christ and inspired by the lives and teachings
of
St. Francis,
St. Dominic,
St. Therese,
St. Benedict,
St. Augustine,
St. Ignatius,
and all the saints, most especially Mary, the Mother
of God, who lived a life of true penance
(conversion) in perfect union with our Lord.
May Our Lady and all the saints intercede for all
who wish to embrace a life of penance, anywhere in
the world, so that the grace of God will assist them
to obtain every virtue necessary for a life of
holiness and surrender to the Will of God! Amen.
PRAYER OF PENITENTS
"Most High, Glorious God, enlighten the darkness
of my mind, give me right faith, a firm hope and
perfect charity, so that I may always and in all
things act according to Your Holy Will. Amen."
(Saint Francis's prayer before the San Damiano
Crucifix)
MISSION OF PENITENTS
"Go and repair My House
which, as you can see, is falling into ruin." (The
message given to St. Francis in a voice from the San
Damiano Crucifix.)
ACTION OF PENITENTS
To pray for God's
specific direction in one's life so that, through
humbly living our Rule of Life, each penitent may
help to rebuild the house of God by bringing love of
God and neighbor to his or her own corner of the
world.
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WALK HUMBLY WITH YOUR GOD

The Journey to
Emmaus
by Robert Zund
"You
have been told, O man, what is good, and what the
Lord requires of you: Only to do the right and to
love goodness, and to walk humbly with your God."
(Micah 6:8, New American Bible)
From one of the smallest books of the Bible comes a
line of incredible richness and depth, a line that
sums up the whole spiritual life, not only for
people in general but for penitents in particular. A
life of penance would be well lived if the spirit of
this verse guided such a life.
YOU HAVE BEEN TOLD
God has revealed to us what we are to do. We don't
have to try to figure it out. His words are very
clear, in Scripture, in the teachings of the Church.
"You have been told." We need not wonder if we know
or if we have heard aright. Read the Bible. Study
the Catechism. Meditate on the documents of the
Church and the writings of the Holy Father. Consult
the Lord in prayer. "You have been told." We know
that God calls us to conversion, to penance. He
tells us how to go about it. It is all very clear,
if only we listen. We have been told.
O MAN
God reminds us that we are not gods. In every age,
some people have aspired to the godhead. They have
been worshipped formally in past ages; in the
present one, the worship is informal but is it any
less heady? Centuries ago, people may have thought
the emperor was god. Now we think we have no God. So
we consult psychics and politicians, newscasters and
athletes, and Hollywood stars and psychologists to
teach us how to act. We who have turned our backs to
the God Who is make others into gods who are not.
Yet every one of these non-gods is human. "O man."
That is all we are. That is fully who we are. Man,
the highest created being next to the angels.
Creature, though, not creator. We have great value,
but only because God gave it to us. "O man, remember
that you are dust and unto dust you shall return:"
(Genesis 3:19). God had to remind Adam and Eve of
that truth when they tried to pluck godhead with the
fruit of the forbidden tree. "O man" Not one of us
has or will escape returning to that dust except He
Who became man and was raised before corruption set
in and the Mother of this God-Man for whom, by God's
singular grace, the favor of perpetual virginity was
linked with perpetual sinlessness and bodily
incorruption.
WHAT IS GOOD
Jesus said, "Why do you call me 'good?' No one is
good but God alone." (Mark 10:18) We who are but
huamn have been told what is good, and not only told
but shown. God came as Jesus to show us what is
good. We look at Christ and we know. We see goodness
reflected in Him and in all the teachings of the
Church which speak of facets of His goodness. We do
not only know what is good. We also know Who is
good.
AND WHAT THE LORD REQUIRES OF YOU
Ah, here is the rub. Micah is not talking about what
God suggests or wishes but what He requires.
Something that is required must be done or else
there is an unpleasant consequence. We are required
to pay our heating bill; if we don't the heat is
turned off. We are required to renew our driver's
license; if we fail, it expires. We are required to
eat or we die. If we do not fulfill the requirement,
the privilege that follows is revoked. God requires
something of us. If we do not fulfill it, we are on
our own. Being on our own brings us back to making
ourselves into gods and seeing where that takes us.
In the end, it takes us right down to a meaningless
death and to an end of everything we worked for in
this life.
ONLY
Ah, little words can have profound and infinite
meanings. "Only" to do the right, as if it were so
easy to do. "Only" means "this is the one thing you
must do." This is everything. Pay attention.
TO DO THE RIGHT
Not to discuss the right, vote on the right, weigh
the right and the wrong, the good, the better, and
the best. Not to decide what is right for society
today as opposed to what was right in the past or
for me to decide what is right for me and you to
decide what is right for you. There is only one
right. It is THE right, not A right. And once we
know it, we are to DO it. God requires us to "do the
right" no matter how difficult that is, no matter
how many want us to do the wrong or not to do
anything at all. God REQUIRES that we DO the right.
AND
Another simple word. There is more than "doing the
right." Something else is required. Pay attention.
TO LOVE GOODNESS
God is good. He has shown us goodness in His Son.
What was that goodness but turning the other cheek,
forgiving enemies, exposing hypocrisy, loving the
sinner, instructing the ignorant, feeding the
hungry, healing the sick, preaching the Good News,
and sacrificing one's life for the sake of the
ungrateful? If we are to do what is right, we must
do these things that are good, and we must not only
do them but must love them. We are to embrace
goodness with love, being good not grudgingly but
joyfully. Love means to hold close to your heart, to
become what you love. To love goodness means to
become goodness, as much as we can, with God's
grace. And to be that goodness no matter how much
badness is going on around us.
AND
There is more. Pay attention.
TO WALK HUMBLY WITH YOUR GOD
So rich an instruction, a line that sums up the
entire spiritual life. Like toddlers whose hands are
in the hand of the Father, we are to walk humbly
with our God. What toddler is proud? What toddler
thinks he's better than anyone else? The toddler is
unsteady, toddling along. He knows that he must hold
the parent's hand or else he'll topple. So he walks,
clutching the parent's finger, carefully stepping,
keeping pace with those big adult legs and neither
lagging behind or darting ahead or dawdling off to
what's interesting to the left or the right. Safety
lies in holding onto that hand so that one can keep
one's balance. We are to walk humbly with our God
Who will never walk too fast for us, nor too slow.
We are to know that we are not God, but that He is.
We are to understand that we do not know the way,
but that He does. We are little and weak, but He is
powerful and strong. We are ignorant, but He knows
it all. We are unsteady, but His strength holds us
upright. He is not a god but our God. He belongs to
us and we belong to Him, not like a dog belongs to a
man but like a child belongs to a parent. We belong
to Him because He is God Who created us out of love.
We belong to Love that made us to love -- to love
goodness, to do the right, and to walk humbly with
Him.
When we walk humbly with our God, then we will
automatically do the right because God will lead us
only to do right. He cannot lead us to do evil or to
remain indifferent for God is never indifferent or
evil. He may walk us through evil, with foes all
around us. Some of them may harm us, but then, they
harmed His Son to Whom we are to be conformed.
Ultimately the evil will be turned to our good, for
God, if He bring us through evil, does so because
that is the only way to bring us to the good He has
in mind. God may walk us through indifference in
which the world seems oblivious to our plight, but
God is not oblivious. He knows what we need and, if
we walk humbly with Him in trust, He will bring us
to the good, which is never fully realized in this
world but only in the next. We need to trust Him in
Whose hand we are to put our baby fingers. The
terrain may be unfamiliar, terrifying, rugged, or
harsh to us, but He knows it more intimately than
Sacagawea knew the Northwest and He will lead us
more securely to glory than she led Lewis and Clark
to the Pacific.
If we walk humbly with our God, we will
automatically love goodness because God is Good and
being with Him means knowing the Good. We must walk
humbly with God. He is not going to drag us or pick
us up and carry us, kicking and screaming, into the
good. To walk humbly with God means to allow Him to
lead and we can only do that if we know that He is
good. When we know that He is good, we automatically
love Him.
Walk humbly with your God. We are walking with Him
when we know, each moment, that He is with us, even
when we do not see Him. A blind toddler can let the
parent lead even if she does not know what the
parent looks like. We may be in a spiritually blind
time, yet we know that God has led us there and that
our hand still is in His as He leads us through the
darkness. We try to discern where He is leading by
prayer, by good counsel, by the dictates of the
Church, and by our circumstances. Sometimes we do
not know where He is leading--our goal is to hold
fast to Him and wait just as a child must hold the
parent's hand on a long walk and only when they stop
at Grandma's does the child know the destination.
When we face a decision, and each day we face many,
we ask God, "What do You want me to do?" and we
listen for the answer and then "do whatever He tells
you." (John 2:5) Sometimes He seems to take long in
answering, but maybe we do not understand His
language, just as a toddler does not understand the
parent's words but must mature and grow into the
understanding. There is a whole spiritual language
that we do not know, that deals with reading the
circumstances, feeling the nudgings of the Spirit,
and listening to the gentle voice of God when our
own is louder and drowning His out. The longer we
cling to His hand, the more we will come to
understand that spiritual language, the more we will
grasp about goodness and the more quickly we will do
the right.
"You have been told, O man, what is good, and what
the Lord requires of you: Only to do the right and
to love goodness, and to walk humbly with your God."
(Micah 6:8, New American Bible)
A life of penance is a life of conversion. The Rule
of the Confraternity of Penitents deals with
penance, stems from conversion, and leads to deeper
conversion. A life of penance, lived well, helps us
to recognize what is good, to embrace it with love
and joy, and do it. Penance helps us to become
goodness, not by our own efforts, but by walking in
all humility with God Who created us for goodness.
He Himself will lead us to perfection if we humbly
hold His Hand and let him take us where He wishes.
The Rule for the Confraternity of Penitents, indeed
any Rule of Life dedicated to penance (conversion),
is a grown up way to make us into babies. It's a way
to put our little baby hands into the mighty hand of
our loving Father and allow Him to support us and
lead us wherever He wants. We do not question. We do
not balk. We do not run off. We clutch His hand
tightly and walk with Him--we the creature and He
the Creator, we the sinful and He the sinless; we
the child and He our Daddy--humbly we walk with Him,
straight into eternity. He Who left the unspeakable
grandeur of heaven to take up our simple humanity
calls us to that same humility; He Who walked always
with the Father calls us to do the same. He is our
model, and to be one with Him, we must be the
servants of all. The kingdom of God is conquered by
the littlest, by the childlike, by grown down
toddlers who hold the hand of God and walk humbly
with Him.
"You have been told, O man, what is good, and what
the Lord requires of you: Only to do the right and
to love goodness, and to walk humbly with your God."
(Micah 6:8, New American Bible) Lord Jesus, help us
to do what you require. Amen.
Madeline Pecora Nugent

Confraternity of Penitents
520 Oliphant Lane
Middletown RI USA
02842-4600
401/849-5421
bspenance@hotmail.com
copenitents@yahoo.com
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