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Book
Review: The Poverty of Privilege
The
Poverty of Riches: St. Francis of Assisi Reconsidered
By Kenneth Baxter Wolf, Professor of History, Pomona College
Little, Brown and Co., 2003• 224 pp., $20.00 hardcover
Rich or poor, my grandfather says, its
nice to have money. Whether interpreted as truism or cliché,
the very existence of such an adage speaks to the wealth-driven nature
of modern Western culture. Ever since the first medieval burgher used
his monetary gains to catapult himself to a position of social prominence,
financial success has offered one of the surest routes to power, status
and fame. But in spite of its ubiquitous place in capitalist society,
there is something about money that makes us a little uneasy. A seamy
and unethical shadow hovers over financial transactions, tainting them
with an aura of corruption. We have the vague sense that money and virtue
are incompatible; that the most valuable and enduring gifts of humanity
cannot be purchased with cash. All I have to do is open a boxed set by
the Beatles to learn that money cant buy me love. Everybody
tells me so.
The story of St. Francis of Assisi appears to confirm our suspicion that
wealth and goodness share an inverse relationship. The life of St. Francis,
as narrated by his earliest hagiographers, includes both poverty and wealth,
goodness and evil, each neatly aligned for convenient moral distinction.
As the son of a well-to-do cloth merchant, Francis spent his childhood
in material ease and moral dissolution. Upon divesting himself of all
riches, he became one of the holiest men in the history of Christendom.
Indeed, few Catholic saints have garnered the universal acceptance and
popularity afforded to Francis.
My grandfathers financial advice also includes a missive never to
discuss money in public. Better, then, to continue to revere St. Francis
quietly than to pry rudely or too deeply into his personal relationship
with wealth. For the past eight hundred years, historians and hagiographers
have done just that, avoiding the impolitic, the impolite, the dangerous
questions surrounding the poverty of St. Francis. The world, it would
seem, was unwilling to risk besmirching its favorite saint with the shadowy
stain of financial involvement with the world. But with his latest book,
The Poverty of Riches: St. Francis of Assisi Reconsidered, Pomona
College professor of history Kenneth Baxter Wolf has blown the lid off
this taboo subject once and for all. In a tightly written 87 pages Wolf
argues that Franciss brand of poverty may be considerably more problematic
than has been generally assumed. By attracting the attention of almsgivers,
for example, Francis and his followers drew charitable resources away
from more traditional recipients. Compounding this situation, Francis
banned his followers from engaging in charitable fundraising, afraid that
it would taint their own commitment to perfect poverty. Also, by making
the abandonment of wealth a prerequisite for obtaining the sanctifying
power of holy poverty, those with nothing to abandon, like the involuntary
poor, were effectively excluded from the piety of destitution.
Wolf frames his exploration of Franciss poverty with five questions:
How did he go about transforming himself from a rich man into a
poor one? How successful was he? How did his self-imposed poverty compare
to the involuntary poverty of the poor people whom he met in and around
Assisi? What did poor people of this type get out of their contact with
Francis? What did Francis get out of his contact with them? To answer
these questions, Wolf divides his task yet again, first describing the
nature and implications of Franciss poverty as it exists in the
earliest accounts of St. Franciss life, then investigating the historical
circumstances that allowed such a poverty to arise. The book closes with
a lengthy appendix, which provides an evaluation of the primary sources
that inform the body of the work.
The Poverty of Riches never strays far from Wolfs five initial
questions. But far from limiting the work, each query results in an amazing
variety of ironies and insights. Never satisfied with one answer, Wolf
investigates Franciscan poverty from a number of angles. I approached
the study of Franciss holy poverty as if it were a house with many
doors, each providing a unique entrance to a common space, Wolf
says.
In the first section, for instance, Wolf explores Franciss poverty
first through tales of Franciss interaction with lepers, then through
the stories of his clothing, and finally his association with the figure
of lady poverty. Although the approach changes, common themes
appear throughout these topically focused studies. One of the themes that
surfaces with the most frequency addresses the third of Wolfs five
questions. Wolf contends that the paupers of Assisi received far less
from Francis than he received from them. For example, the lepers that
Francis met, and even kissed, were not healed by his ministrations, nor
did he provide them with spiritual solace. Nor did his presence aid in
their plight as social outcasts. According to Wolf, when Francis
and his imitators interacted with lepers they did so primarily for the
spiritual benefits to which they could lay claim for having voluntarily
abandoned the world. They did not do so to relieve the pain and suffering,
whether here or in the next world, of people who had no choice but to
live the very life that Francis voluntarily assumed. In another
uneven exchange, the poor of Assisi provided Francis with a model for
his own behavior in his quest for perfect poverty, while Francis, by pursuing
his own impoverishment, abandoned the means to assist them in return.
Nor did he bring publicity to the poor as a cause célèbre
for their suffering. Franciss own highly publicized imitation of
destitution, Wolf argues, did not draw attention to the involuntary poor.
Instead, it made their plight seem somehow less worthy, less holy. Thanks
to Francis, there was now a right and a wrong way to be poor.
Not only did Francis choose to pursue a life of destitution, Wolf claims,
he actively and aggressively tried to maintain the most degrading and
abject state possible, distinguishing himself from the lifestyle of the
involuntary poor he sought to imitate. He had his tunic custom-made, for
instance, to ensure that it was as unattractive and uncomfortable as possible.
This decision to design a tunic that would out-rough
and out-humble every tunic in Assisi set his poverty apart
from the poverty around him. For we must imagine that most poor people,
then as now, regularly wore the best of the poor clothes that they could
find.
Revered as a holy man during his own lifetime, Francis was reduced
to manufacturing the kind of popular disdain that, for him, was a key
ingredient of his rejection of the world. Needless to say, no truly poor
person ever had to work this hard to earn the disdain of his community,
nor would they have welcomed it.
The gulf that emerges between the poverty of St. Francis and the ordinary
poverty of his world leads Wolf to one of his most surprising, and most
insightful, conclusions. Because Francis approached poverty as a
rebellious member of the merchant class ... his destitution would have
to be constructed artificially, not out of the actual experience of the
poor, but out of a theoretical inversion of the experiences of the wealthy.
While Francis himself professed a desire to be poor, he actually strove
to be not-rich, which turns out to be something else altogether. As it
turns out, the rich and poor of Assisi shared a common value; they all
wanted to have money. After all, its nice to have.
Thus far, Francis has gotten a pretty bad rap. His actions did little
to alleviate the horrors of involuntary poverty. It can even be argued
that he actually worsened the social standing of the impoverished men
and women he imitated. In one of his most condemning statements, Wolf
writes, Francis embodied and endorsed a very specific kind of poverty
that only Christians of means could effectively embrace. Considered from
this angle, Francis, whom we are accustomed to imagining as a friend
to the poor, comes across more like a Robin Hood in reverse, stealing
the one spiritual advantage that the poor seemed to havethat is,
their povertyand giving it to the rich. Holy poverty, after
all, was voluntary poverty. Only the rich have the privilege of choosing
to be poor.
While Wolf is unsparing in his critique of holy poverty, he does not indict
Francis as a conscious conspirator, malevolently planning to harm the
material and spiritual welfare of the destitute in order to increase salvation
opportunities for the wealthy. Instead, the second half of the book places
Francis in context; the product of an emerging urban burgher culture and
13th-century notions of sanctity.
Wolf focuses on one particular debate within the medieval Church. Was
it holier, they wondered, to live a life of active service, ministering
to the people of this world (in Latin, the vita activa), or to withdraw
completely from all earthly entanglements (the vita passiva)? From martyrs
to hermits to monks, by the 13th century the vita passiva had a long history
of coming out on top. Hagiographers stressed their subjects withdrawal
from worldly matters, even when the subject was a bishop or a businessman.
To illustrate his point, Wolf provides a case study, contrasting St. Francis
and one of his medieval contemporaries, St. Raymond Palmerio
of Piacenza. Never heard of him? Thats the point. Raymond is what
Wolf terms a civic saint. He cared for the sick, raised money
for the poor, mediated disputes and built shelters for the destitute.
He chose the very epitome of the vita activa as his model. In contrast,
though Francis began his holy career in much the same way, by feeding
the poor and by ministering to the sick, he soon shifted the focus of
his regimen. Instead of continuing to fill his tables with bread for the
poor or retiring to a leprosarium and tending to the needs of the sick,
Francis opted to become a beggar and seek out charitable benefactors of
his own. Francis owned nothing in this world, he cared for no material
goods, and he demonstrated that commitment to the vita passiva by divesting
himself of his wealth, even at the expense of the welfare of others. That
Francis outstrips Raymond in popularity, even 800 years later, attests
to a powerful bias in favor of the passive life, not only among churchmen,
but their lay followers as well.
If all of this talk of active and passive lives, voluntary and involuntary
poverty has led you to believe that The Poverty of Riches caters
exclusively to an audience of specialists, then I have done it and Ken
Wolf a great disservice. This little book will be of interest to far more
people than scholars of Francis, sainthood or poverty. Through five specific
questions, Wolf is able to tackle a much larger issue. He reminds us that
the Church and its saints are social entities. Theological choices affect
more than the soul. Money and virtue cannot be separated.
The Poverty of Riches presents both Christianity and sainthood in a significantly
more problematic light than that to which many of us are accustomed. And
for that it will no doubt ruffle a few feathers. Arthur Jones of the National
Catholic Reporter, for instance, accuses Wolf of mounting a case
against Francis and his sanctity. Whether or not Francis was a holy
man, a friend of God, is a matter of faith, not history. Wolf is not interested
in tearing apart the piety of saints, but in understanding the phenomenon
of sainthood. And while it may not be pleasant, understanding how Christianity
has both shaped and conformed to the prevailing values of the society
around it is essential to understanding the Western world. In a time when
we are quick to conjure up religion as an explanation for the actions
of others, we had best understand religion itself. The Poverty of Riches
represents a fascinating and insightful contribution to that understanding.
Sarah Lamm 03, the 2003 Pomona College Downing
Scholar,
is studying medieval history at Cambridge University.
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