Fr. Richard Rohr is a globally recognized ecumenical teacher bearing witness to the universal awakening within Christian mysticism and the Perennial Tradition. He is a Franciscan priest of the New Mexico Province and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation (CAC) in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Fr. Richard's teaching is grounded in the Franciscan alternative orthodoxy--practices of contemplation and lived kenosis (self-emptying), expressing itself in radical compassion, particularly for the socially marginalized. Fr. Richard is the author of numerous books, including Everything Belongs, Adam's Return, The Naked Now, Breathing Under Water, Falling Upward, Immortal Diamond, and Eager to Love: The Alternative Way of Francis of Assisi. Fr. Richard is academic Dean of the Living School for Action and Contemplation. Drawing upon Christianity's place within the Perennial Tradition, the mission of the Living School is to produce compassionate and powerfully learned individuals who will work for positive change in the world based on awareness of our common union with God and all beings. Visit cac.org for more information.
"Eager to Love illuminates the path of Francis of Assisi as a path
of evolving life toward integral wholeness." --Ilia Delio, O.S.F.,
author, Compassion: Living in the Spirit of St. Francis"A gift to
all Franciscan-hearted people everywhere!" --Daniel P. Horan,
O.F.M., author, The Last Words of Jesus: A Meditation on Love and
Suffering "This book captures the essence of our Franciscan
spirituality. Richard has woven a masterful tapestry that combines
ancient sources with cutting edge experience and thought. He writes
with the authority of a man who has faithfully embraced our life
for over half a century, an authentic mystic drawing on his own
experience. This book may indeed help re-ignite the Franciscan
revolution in our 21st Century." --Robert Lentz, O.F.M. "A
marvelous, companionable book for those eager to love as Francis
and Clare loved. Both philosophical and experiential, theological
and historically based, Eager to Love is itself a chronicle and
sustained meditation on how Friar Richard has come to understand
and live the Franciscan life he vowed as a young man. It is a
wisdom book packed with insight, compassion, and love - a mellowing
and deepening of a modern prophetic voice." --Murray Bodo, O.F.M.,
author, Francis and Jesus
Ever since the current pope took the name Francis, interest in the
life and message of Francis of Assisi has grown exponentially. Rohr
(Silent Compassion), a Franciscan priest and director of the Center
for Action and Contemplation, examines the life of Francis of
Assisi, God's "holy fool." This is not a biography, however, but
rather an examination of themes in Francis's ministry that can help
inspire and motivate contemporary people of faith. Francis focused
primarily on loving and being in solidarity with the poor,
suffering, and outcast. His outwardly focused spirituality does not
emphasize pursuing personal piety. In this way, the author posits
that Francis serves as a "corrective" for those who are exceedingly
pious or think they can forge their own path to God without
community involvement. Simplicity is another key theme in Francis'
spirituality: simplicity involves placing oneself outside of
financial and consumerist desires that offer a false sense of
freedom. This Franciscan message is sorely needed in the world, and
Rohr's masterful exposition of its treasures offers spiritual
salve. -- Publishers Weekly In Eager to Love, [Rohr] reclaims the
mysticism inherent in the Franciscan legacy and he offers it as an
alternative to the hierarchical, patriarchal and authoritarian
Christianity that he suggests has primary responsibility for so
much of contemporary agnosticism in the West. ... He claims to want
to "reignite the Franciscan revolution," which is universally
accessible and inclusive, offering healing and liberation. As such,
he is building a bridge between the Christian mystical tradition
and estranged seekers of every ilk. ... Eager to Love is neither a
biography of Francis nor a history of the Franciscan order, but
Rohr's reflections on the best aspects of the Franciscan heritage
as lived out by its founder and its early worthies -- Clare,
Bonaventure and Dun Scotus. -- Dana Greene, National Catholic
Reporter
From the America magazine interview with Richard Rohr: Why another
book on St. Francis when there is already so much on him?
Well, first of all it isn't a biography on St. Francis, and I don't
really talk about him until one of the later chapters. I make that
point at the beginning. My emphasis in the book is on what flowed
from him, what was validated by him and then toward the end of the
book I look at the source: Francis himself. Francis was not a
theologian, much less a systematic theologian. But he was an
intuitive genius, at least in terms of spiritual things and the
gospel. Who are you writing for?
I would say interested but sincere seekers. I don't care if they're
in the church or out of the church. I would like to believe that
interested but sincere seekers, probably with some degree of
education, will read it. Some of the chapters are quite heavy; the
one on contemplation is really central. People who haven't done a
little homework in these fields will probably jump over some of
these heavier chapters because it might be too much for the common
reader. I worried about that a bit because I don't want to write
for the elite, but neither do I want to make Francis into a
lightweight as he's so often been portrayed. So I guess I'm
shooting at the middle. What does the title "Eager to Love" mean
for you?
As I began writing it, I was wondering what I would title it, and
then in reading Bonaventure--Bonaventure is the
philosopher-theologian who takes Francis' intuitive vision and
makes a systematic theology and philosophy out of it--is where I
found it. In my reading of Bonaventure, I don't remember if he
actually uses that phrase, but whatever phrase I was reading
prompted that image. What Bonaventure saw in Francis and what he
desired in himself was an eagerness to love. It wasn't just an
intellectual head trip that the gospel for both Francis and
Bonaventure was immediately oriented toward love and service in the
world. And love of the world and service toward the world. So the
phrase came to me and I never changed it after that. The publishers
liked it and it stuck. Read the entire interview here.
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