What happens when success collapses—and faith begins?
In this episode of Gospel Gumbo, we explore the life of Francis of Assisi, one of the most unexpected and unsettling figures in Christian history. Born into wealth and privilege in medieval Italy, Francis dreamed of glory, honor, and recognition. Then came war, imprisonment, illness—and a slow unraveling of everything he thought would define his life.
Francis’s response was not rebellion, protest, or reform from above. Instead, he chose poverty, obscurity, and joyful dependence on God. He renounced his inheritance publicly, embraced the poor, preached repentance and peace, and gathered a strange community of brothers who owned nothing, planned nothing, and trusted God daily for their needs. What emerged was not a movement designed for growth, but a way of life so compelling it could not remain small.
This episode follows Francis’s journey from admired young merchant to wandering preacher, from reluctant leader to sidelined founder, and finally to a quiet, painful death marked by weakness, prayer, and trust. Along the way, we explore the medieval world he inhabited, the tensions his movement created within the church, and the surprising legacy that followed after his death.
Rather than telling listeners what to learn from Francis, this episode lets the story do the work—inviting reflection on poverty and prosperity, obedience and control, strength and weakness, and what it might mean to take the gospel seriously without trying to manage the outcome.
In this episode:
- Medieval Europe, wealth, and the rise of the merchant class
- Francis’s captivity, illness, and spiritual collapse
- The renunciation of wealth and the embrace of poverty
- The early Franciscan movement and its growing pains
- Francis’s withdrawal, suffering, and final years
- The legacy of the Franciscans after his death
- Why Francis still unsettles the church today
Francis of Assisi did not save the church.
He did not build an empire.
He did not control what came after him.
He simply trusted that Christ was enough—and let go.
Thanks for listening.
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