
Saint
Jerome
(c.
341-420)
To
change your disposition is a much
greater accomplishment than to change
your dress.
--
St. Jerome
The
purpose of clothing is to keep warm in
winter and to cover your nakedness, not
to serve your vanity.
--
St. Cyril of Jerusalem
The
Lord says in the Gospel: "He who" will
"not" have renounced "all that he
possesses, cannot be My disciple" (Lk
14:33); and: "He who will have
wanted to save his soul, shall lose it"
(Lk 9:24). That man abandons all that he
possesses, and loses his own body, who
offers himself whole to obedience in the
hands of his prelate. And whatever
he does and says, that he himself knows,
which is not contrary to his will, as
long as what he does is good, is true
obedience. And if at any time the
subject sees better and more useful
things for his own soul than those which
the prelate precepts him, let him
sacrifice these willingly to God; but
those which are the prelate's, let him
strive to fulfill. For this is
charitable obedience (cf. 1 Pet 1:22),
since it satisfies God and neighbor.
--St. Francis of Assisi
Virtue demands discretion and all excess
is vice.
--
St. Bede the Venerable
Be sober and hard-working men; avoid all
vanity of dress that will exclude you
from heaven; try to keep to simplicity
of manners of our fathers.
--
St. Nicholas of Flue
Repentance is the returning from the
unnatural to the natural state, from the
Devil to God, through discipline and
effort.
--St. John of Damascus

Jesus and the Adulterous Woman (detail)
Woodcut by Gustave Dore
(1832-1883)
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"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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B EING
INCONSPICUOUS AS A PENITENT
Jesus told us that, when we do penance, we are
not to try to be conspicuous as the hypocrites
are, but are to wash our faces, comb our hair,
and not appear to be fasting. Then God, Who
alone sees us fasting, will reward us.
As penitents, our penitential practices ought to
remain hidden. We are to blend in with the crowd
even as we live lives of penance (conversion). A
few matters come to mind in this regard.
TO LIVE THE RULE OF 1221
The call from the Holy Spirit, and hopefully we
trust that call, was to "live the Rule of 1221
and to pray that more people will live the Rule
of 1221 nationwide and worldwide." When we look
at the Rule of 1221, we read about the clothing
requirements right there in Chapter One.
Penitents at the time the Rule was written were
to dress in "undyed cloth of humble quality."
This was in contrast to the rich and colorful
clothes the nobility, clergy, and bishops were
wearing. So penitents did stand out from the
nobility and clergy, although they could have
blended in with the poor who often wore undyed
cloth of humble quality. I say often because
frequently the poor were given cast off, dyed
clothing from the rich. We can assume, however,
that this clothing was in poor condition.
So why were penitents instructed to wear "undyed
cloth" when even the poor often wore dyed cloth?
Because wearing undyed cloth keeps one's life
simple and is truly a penance, especially if you
like bright colors. It also keeps a person more
inconspicuous than bright colors or patterns do.
In a crowd, folks generally notice pink more
than white, green more than brown, and stripes
or polka dots more than solids.
So in 1221, penitents were not totally
inconspicuous. Those who knew them would have
been aware that there were changes in their
dress. If they were asked about those changes,
we can imagine that they may have said, "I'm
living a Rule of Life in my own home and
clothing is part of the Rule."
Penitents today, who have dealings with the same
folks day in and day out, might be asked similar
questions. "Why I don't see you in red anymore?
I thought red was your favorite color." Today's
penitent can answer just like those 1221
penitents did. "I'm living a Rule of Life in my
own home and clothing is part of that Rule."
HEAD COVERINGS
Some female penitents have asked about using
head coverings at Mass. St. Paul asked that
women cover their heads at Mass, and this was
because those who didn't stood out from the
other women and were distracting, calling
attention to their uncovered heads. In other
words, in Paul's day, women with uncovered heads
at Mass were the exception. The 1917 Code of
Canon Law mandated head coverings for women
(1917 Canon 1262, No. 2). It also said that it
was desirable that men and women be separated in
church (1917 Canon 1262, No. 1). However, the
1983 Code of Canon Law, which is now in effect
and which did not mention head coverings,
abrogated (that is, abolished) the 1917 Code
(1983 Canon 6, No. 1, Section 1).
Thus, the 1917
Code is no longer in effect. The Code of 1983
does not address the issue. Therefore,
canonically, wearing head coverings in a Catholic
church is a matter outside the law. The old Code
has no effect in the Church today.
Since the Catholic
Church currently has no obligation that women's
heads be covered in church, most women
do not wear head coverings, although
some do. Suppose a penitent wishes to wear a
head covering in a
Catholic Church? Certainly that would be fine,
as long as she understands that it's her choice
and not mandated by the CFP Rule or by the
Church. She needs to know,
too, that those who don't wear head coverings
and those who do are both showing respect for
Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament. If she believes otherwise,
she is in opposition to the teachings of the
Catholic Church and, therefore, in opposition to
what our Rule enjoins.
The head covering, however, ought not be worn
all the time, as part of the penitent's day in
and day out dress. This is because it then
resembles a veil, and the penitent can be
confused with a religious, or with someone who
is trying to look like a religious (someone once
called lay women who wore head coverings indoors
and out "wannabe nuns"). Constant use
of a head covering can also make others think
that wearing head coverings make a woman holier.
Or wearing them is or ought to be part of the CFP Rule. All of these are misconceptions, and
we, as penitents, need to avoid fostering
misconceptions.
Suppose a penitent wants to wear a head covering
while at prayer while not in the presence of the
Blessed Sacrament? Certainly a penitent can wear
a head covering while praying in private. She
can also kiss the floor or prostrate herself
while at prayer or even, with the approval of
the spiritual director, do additional penances
and mortifications, when no one sees them but
the Lord. But these things should not be done in
public as they call attention to the penitent,
and that attention can be a matter of spiritual
pride. In the case of the CFP, it can also be a
matter of confusion for others. If a person
knows that someone is in the Confraternity of
Penitents, and always sees that person praying
with a head covering outside of a Catholic
Church, the assumption is that a head covering
is necessary for penitents while praying. The
penitent may say that praying puts one in the
Presence of God and one acknowledges God's
Presence with the head covering. This is an idea
adopted by some other religions as part of their
religious practices. But it is not part of the
Catholic faith, as we know that we are always in
God's Presence, whether we are conversing with
Him or not. Therefore, ought we wear head
coverings all the time because God is always
with us? What the Church has not mandated, we
ought not mandate for ourselves.
SINGULARITY
Penitents who want to continually wear head coverings in
public are really being asked by the Holy Spirit
to strip themselves of their personal desire for
the sake of the community. Putting the
community before one's personal preferences is
part of religious life. A religious sister or
brother, for example, may have to give up many
of their religious practices or prayers to fit
in with their community. The purpose of entering
religious life is to give up one's will for the
sake of God. The CFP is a community of lay
people who are living a religious Rule of Life.
We, too, need to give up our wills for the sake
of God, and living our Rule and being mindful of
the community and the public are part of giving
up that will. All that we do must reflect
accurately what the community expects of its
members and must be done out of obedience to our
Rule, just like those who take religious vows.
Just as those in religious life are not to
appear singular to others in their community,
so, too, penitents ought not appear singular to
other penitents. Singularity causes confusion
and spiritual competition. If, for example, a
religious brother decided to wear visibly a
medal which is not part of his religious habit,
another brother might see this and decide to
wear one as well. Or maybe two. One can imagine
a community of brothers who now are following
their own spiritual bent, competing in who looks
holier by the number, size, or type of medals he
sports.
Similarly, women who always wear head coverings
can make other penitents think that, in order to
be really humble and holy, they, too, ought to
wear head coverings. Or male penitents who
always wear a white shirt and black pants can
make other penitents feel less mortified if they
have a more varied wardrobe. As penitents, our
focus ought to be on change of heart, not on
appearing singularly holy by our dress.
PROPER ATTITUDE
One woman who inquired with us a few years ago
owned a pink flowered dress that she liked
very much. She said, "No way am I giving up my
pink flowered dress." And she didn't give it up.
She gave up being in what was then the Brothers
and Sisters of Penance. That woman joined the
Benedictine oblates, who have no clothing
requirements. Recently, she sat next to me at
Mass, and she was wearing her pink flowered
dress and her Benedictine oblate name tag. A head covering
or a certain style of clothing can be like a
pink flowered dress. Certainly there is nothing
wrong with it. However, for the sake of our
Rule, we may have to relinquish it, and maybe we
don't want to. We may feel that we are holier wearing
a certain garb,
but the Church does not say that we are. To
consider certain clothes necessary for ourselves is to go
beyond the teachings of the Church. It is to say
that we know better than the Church what ought
to be worn.
Penitents certainly can wear hats and scarves if
the weather warrants their use. I nearly always
wear a scarf outdoors because my head gets cold
and, if it's windy, I'm subject to ear aches.
When it's really cold, I wear a warm hood indoors because my head is cold since we keep our
heat low. But I don't wear the hood indoors in
public (if I have to answer the doorbell, I take
it off, or if a repair man is working in the
house, I keep it off unless I tell him, "Please
excuse this but my head is cold.").
Penitents
might prefer certain styles of dress. But they
ought to vary the colors so that they don't
appear to be wearing a habit. Some women, for
example, feel more comfortable in jumpers than
in slacks. They can wear jumpers all the time,
as long as they aren't all the same color of
jumper. If they are the same, the jumper has
become a habit.
That said,
penitents must always be sure to do God's Will.
Certainly God's Will is above any written Rule.
The CFP does not want to stand in the way of how
God is calling an individual to serve Him.
Saints
were sometimes called to extreme styles of dress
or unusual mortifications and penances. If a
penitent feels that the Lord is calling him or
her to any garb, mortification, or penance
beyond what our Rule enjoins, he or she must
pray intensely to determine if the penitent is
really hearing the voice of the Holy Spirit. If
the penitent feels that is the case, he or she
must share these inspirations with the spiritual
director,
reminding him or her that penitents are not to
appear to be religious, not to stand out, and to
dress as the Rule asks.
If the spiritual
director feels that the penitent is, indeed,
dealing with a prompting of God, and if
obedience to this prompting would involve a
visible variation from our Rule of Life, the
penitent's spiritual director should contact the
Visitor and Minister General of the
Confraternity and discuss the matter. The
Visitor and Minister General will pray about the
request and speak to the penitent and spiritual
director about it. The Visitor and Minister
General shall, together, have the final say on
whether or not a penitent ought to follow these
inspirations and how this might be done.
ARE YOU A NUN (BROTHER, PRIEST)?
Female and male penitents are sometimes asked if
they are nuns, brothers, or priests. This is
because others see the visible cross or crucifix
and the plain clothing and somehow think that
those dressed in that way are religious. That is
frequently a false assumption as many clergy and
religious who wear secular dress wear bright
colors and prints and often do not wear any
religious symbol.
Penitents need not feel
uncomfortable if they are mistaken for
religious. The reason this happens is not
because penitents are dressing like religious
but because religious are dressing like laity.
Our call is to "live the Rule of 1221." If we
are faithful to that call, we will be faithful
to the clothing element in the Rule, no matter
how secular looking religious and clergy may
become. If a person has a brick home and a brick
Catholic Church is built next door, does that
mean that the home owner ought to cover the
brick with aluminum siding so that folks don't
mistake the house for the parish rectory?
It's important for penitents to understand why
someone may ask them if they are clergy or
religious. The questioner may:
a. Have an intention which needs prayer.
b. Have a question about the Catholic Church.
c. Have a problem for which they need counsel or
a listening ear.
d. Be trying to figure out how to address the
individual.
e. Be looking for a religious presence in a
secular world.
All of these are good reasons for wanting to
speak to a religious. Rather than feel awkward
about being asked if they are nuns, brothers, or
priests, penitents ought to use the question as
an opportunity to help someone else. How about
this answer? "No, I'm a lay person who is living
a Church accepted Rule of Life in my own home.
Might you have something you wanted to discuss
with a religious or a prayer intention I could
pray for?" Answering this way may minister to
someone who would otherwise not have found
anyone he or she felt comfortable enough with
whom to talk.
Our CFP Constitutions ask us not to be conspicuous and yet,
because we dress simply, people notice. Is this
notice violating the Constitutions? Not at all. The
Constitutions are asking that we not stand out because our
bright and worldly colors call attention to
themselves. Clergy and religious are not to
call attention to themselves either, yet, if they
are in religious garb, they definitely stand
out. What folks are noticing about us in the CFP
is not our dress but our dress combined with the
crucifix or cross. If we began wearing patterns
and colors and still wore the cross or crucifix,
folks would notice and still ask if we were
religious or priests as religious and priests
wear these colors. The only way that penitents
could look "just like everybody else" is to not
wear the cross or crucifix at all. That would
violate our CFP Constitutions.
WITNESSES TO CHRIST
God may be asking us penitents to be willing to
be His witnesses in the world. Remember why
folks ask if we are priests or religious. They
are looking for a religious presence in a
secular world. They are trying to see if God
matters to anyone. They want someone to pray
with them or for them or to answer their
questions. Our plain garb with its cross or
crucifix is a way of saying that God does
matter, prayer matters, others matter, at least
to us. People who are looking for answers,
prayer, support, or just a listening ear, see the
cross and crucifix as indicating someone who can
provide those helps. Today especially, when rock
stars and atheists are wearing religious symbols
as jewelry, while religious are not wearing
habits, we penitents have to expect to be
singled out.
The original charism of the Confraternity of
Penitents was "to live the Rule of 1221." We
thought we were to live it for ourselves, but it
is becoming increasingly clearer that we are to
live it for the sake of others as well. If our
simple, plain dress with the cross or crucifix
says to someone that we are loving and serving
the Lord in a special way, isn't that a good
thing? St. Francis once told a friar that they
were going out to preach. They walked up and
down the hills of Assisi and returned to the
friary without having said a word. The friar
questioned St. Francis about the preaching
mission. Francis said that they preached a good
sermon by their demeanor. We, who are living
the same Rule, need to "preach" in the same way.
The clothing part of our Rule and Constitutions is critical to how
we live this life, and perhaps more critical to
others than we know. Let us be open to preaching
without words wherever we go. If someone does
ask us if we are priests or religious, then we
can use words to minister to them as the Holy
Spirit directs.
EATING ENGAGEMENTS
Consider our days of fast and abstinence. Do
penitents have to turn down luncheon dates with
coworkers or friends, if they fall on days on
which the Rule enjoins fast or abstinence? Not
at all! Charity is the most important part of
the Rule and is written into it. Penitents
certainly can go to luncheons. They can order
meatless meals on abstinence days, if that's
possible. If they are served meat on such days, they ought to
eat it in charity. If they are served a between
meal snack, they ought to enjoy it. If they go
to a restaurant between meals with co-workers or
friends, they can order a soft drink or fruit
juice. If they go to a buffet on abstinence days, they can select
the meatless items. There is absolutely no need
to turn down luncheon or dinner dates or to stay
back when everyone else goes for coffee!
LIVING A RULE OF LIFE
A Rule of Life is a way in which all those in
the organization are to live. It is the thread,
other than our faith in God, that binds us
together. Living a Rule is a way to exercise
obedience and denial of self will. If we want to
change the Rule or mitigate it or forget parts
of it, or make it stricter, then we are not
living our Rule of Life but another Rule. It
takes great humility to live a Rule. That's why
many folks won't do it. May the Holy Spirit give
us the wisdom, love, grace, and courage to live
our Rule and Constitutions as we have them. We are
promised eternal life if we do.
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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