

A Special Year of
Saint Francis
Jubilee
1226 — 2026
Welcome to the
Special Year of St. Francis Jubilee
Step into a sacred season of faith, reflection, and renewal. During this special Jubilee Year, we invite you to encounter the living spirit of St. Francis through prayer, worship, and quiet moments of grace. Discover a vibrant expression of Franciscan spirituality where peace, simplicity, and compassion are celebrated each day.
Wander 25 acres of serene desert gardens and sacred spaces shaped by the Franciscan way of life. Celebrate joyful liturgies with our Franciscan friars, enter into a guided retreat, or simply pause in stillness for personal prayer. Whether you come seeking rest, inspiration, or community, you are welcome here.
"Our time is not very different from that in which Francis lived, and precisely in the light of this his teaching is perhaps even more valid and understandable today."
— Excerpt from the DECREE: On the Eighth Centenary of the Death of St. Francis of Assisi, a Special Jubilee Year Is Being Announced with Attached Plenary Indulgences (under the usual conditions of sacramental confession, Eucharistic communion and prayer for the intentions of the Holy Father).

St. Francis of Assisi
A Life of Faith and Renewal

Francis of Assisi, born Giovanni di Pietro di Bernardone (Assisi, 1181/1182 – Assisi, October 3, 1226), was, at his core, a man of God. His life, fascinating and full of dramatic turns, was an extraordinary journey of transformation and courageous choices. Initially driven by personal ambitions, Francis embarked on a path that led him to discover the true meaning of existence, ultimately becoming a man of poverty, humility, and profound fraternity. His story is marked by pivotal encounters that shifted the focus of his life from himself to others. After his conversion, Francis, known as “Brother Francis,” dedicated himself entirely to others: to the Lord Jesus Christ, whom he loved with all his heart; to the brothers who shared the evangelical way of life with him; and to the men and women—both simple and learned, poor and wealthy—whom Providence placed along his path. As a young man, Francis dreamed of becoming a knight and achieving glory and honor. However, his life changed radically after serving lepers—an experience he recounts in his Testament—and after encountering Christ in a new and personal way in the crumbling chapel of San Damiano near Assisi. In an extraordinary act of boldness, Francis renounced his wealthy family, publicly stripped himself of his garments and privileged status before his father and the bishop of the city, and chose a life of penance and conversion. Over time, a small group of companions joined Francis, inspired by his desire to live the Gospel. This first group of 12 friars received oral approval of their way of life from Pope Innocent III in Rome in 1209. Together, they worked humbly alongside the poor to earn their livelihood, lived in simple huts borrowed from ecclesiastical or lay landowners, and devoted their days to prayer, praise, and exhorting people to recognize God’s love in their lives and live according to His will. As the years passed, the fraternity grew rapidly, spreading throughout Europe and even into the Middle East. Francis became universally recognized as a man of God, and the friars were respected by clergy and laypeople alike for their simple lives and sincere devotion. Francis also stood out as a tireless promoter of peace and reconciliation, working to heal divisions and family feuds that tore apart Italian cities. Led by Clare of Assisi, women also embraced Francis’s Gospel-inspired way of life, forming the Second Franciscan Order. Similarly, laypeople who wished to follow his spirituality without leaving their families or marriages founded the Third Franciscan Order, now known as the Secular Franciscan Order. These groups shared the same spirituality of simplicity, poverty, and trust in Providence that characterized Francis and the friars. In the final years of his life, Francis faced personal challenges, including fragile health due to his harsh penances and frequent fasting, as well as tensions within the growing fraternity. At the request of the Papacy and in light of the rapid expansion of the Order, Francis drafted a more structured rule in 1223, taking into account the requirements of canon law at the time. Although he struggled with this evolution, fearing it might compromise the evangelical ideal he had embraced through divine inspiration, Francis accepted it with humility. A defining moment came in September 1224, when Francis received the stigmata of Christ at La Verna. This profound experience revealed to him that God did not ask him to fight for his ideals but to entrust his life and insights entirely to the Church and the fraternity. Only in this way, he realized, could his mission bear authentic fruit in the spirit of the Gospel. After receiving the stigmata, Francis wrote the Canticle of Brother Sun in 1225, a hymn of praise to God through all creation. This text is recognized as the first masterpiece of Italian literature. In 1226, as his health deteriorated, Francis passed away on October 3 at the Porziuncola in Santa Maria degli Angeli, singing and welcoming “Sister Death.” He entrusted himself completely to God and blessed all the friars, both present and absent, saying with great freedom: “I have done my part; may Christ teach you to do yours.” Inspired by the life and mission of Saint Francis of Assisi, the friars and staff at the Franciscan Renewal Center carry forward his enduring call to conversion, prayer, and fraternity. The Franciscan Renewal Center exists as a sacred place of spiritual growth, healing and transformation and service to others. The Casa invites all people to step away from the noise of daily life, rediscover God’s loving presence, and return renewed to serve the world. In this way, Francis’s mission of personal conversion and communal transformation continues to bear fruit, making God’s love visible in our time.

CHURCH
MINISTRIES
GROUNDS
RETREATS
Celebrate the Jubilee Year with
Pathways to Renewal at the Casa

Photo by Rick Rusch



Pope Leo's Prayer for St. Francis of Assisi
Saint Francis, our brother, you who eight hundred years ago
went to meet Sister Death as a man at peace,
intercede for us before the Lord.
You recognized true peace in the Crucifix of San Damiano,
teach us to seek in Him the source of all reconciliation
that breaks down every wall.
You who, unarmed, crossed the lines of war
and misunderstanding,
give us the courage to build bridges
where the world raises up boundaries.
In this time afflicted by conflict and division,
intercede for us so that we may become peacemakers:
unarmed and disarming witnesses of the peace that comes from Christ.
Amen





