By Guest Blogger Pope Benedict XVI
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Today
I would like to talk to you about St Thérèse of Lisieux, Thérèse of the
Child Jesus and of the Holy Face, who lived in this world for only 24
years, at the end of the 19th century, leading a very simple and hidden
life but who, after her death and the publication of her writings,
became one of the best-known and best-loved saints. “Little Thérèse” has
never stopped helping the simplest souls, the little, the poor and the
suffering who pray to her. However, she has also illumined the whole
Church with her profound spiritual doctrine to the point that Venerable
Pope John Paul II chose, in 1997, to give her the title “Doctor of the
Church”, in addition to that of Patroness of Missions, which Pius XI had
already attributed to her in 1939. My beloved Predecessor described her
as an “expert in the scientia amoris” (Novo Millennio Ineunte, n. 42). Thérèse expressed this science, in which she saw the whole truth of the faith shine out in love, mainly in the story of her life, published a year after her death with the title The Story of a Soul. The book immediately met with enormous success, it was translated into many languages and disseminated throughout the world.
I would like to invite you to rediscover this small-great treasure, this luminous comment on the Gospel lived to the full! The Story of a Soul, in fact, is a marvellous story of Love,
told with such authenticity, simplicity and freshness that the reader
cannot but be fascinated by it! But what was this Love that filled
Thérèse’s whole life, from childhood to death? Dear friends, this Love
has a Face, it has a Name, it is Jesus! The Saint speaks continuously of
Jesus. Let us therefore review the important stages of her life, to
enter into the heart of her teaching.
Thérèse
was born on 2 January 1873 in Alençon, a city in Normandy, in France.
She was the last daughter of Louis and Zélie Martin, a married couple
and exemplary parents, who were beatified together on 19 October 2008.
They had nine children, four of whom died at a tender age. Five
daughters were left, who all became religious. Thérèse, at the age of
four, was deeply upset by the death of her mother (Ms A 13r). Her father
then moved with his daughters to the town of Lisieux, where the Saint
was to spend her whole life. Later Thérèse, affected by a serious
nervous disorder, was healed by a divine grace which she herself
described as the “smile of Our Lady” (ibid., 29v-30v). She then received her First Communion, which was an intense experience (ibid., 35r), and made Jesus in the Eucharist the centre of her life.
The “Grace of Christmas” of 1886 marked the important turning-point, which she called her “complete conversion” (ibid.,
44v-45r). In fact she recovered totally, from her childhood
hyper-sensitivity and began a “to run as a giant”. At the age of 14,
Thérèse became ever closer, with great faith, to the Crucified Jesus.
She took to heart the apparently desperate case of a criminal sentenced
to death who was impenitent. “I wanted at all costs to prevent him from
going to hell”, the Saint wrote, convinced that her prayers would put
him in touch with the redeeming Blood of Jesus. It was her first and
fundamental experience of spiritual motherhood: “I had such
great trust in the Infinite Mercy of Jesus”, she wrote. Together with
Mary Most Holy, young Thérèse loved, believed and hoped with “a mother’s
heart” (cf. Pr 6/ior).
In November 1887, Thérèse went on pilgrimage to Rome with her father and her sister Céline (ibid.,
55v-67r). The culminating moment for her was the Audience with Pope Leo
XIII, whom she asked for permission to enter the Carmel of Lisieux when
she was only just 15. A year later her wish was granted. She became a
Carmelite, “to save souls and to pray for priests” (ibid., 69v).
At the same time, her father began to suffer from a
painful and humiliating mental illness. It caused Thérèse great
suffering which led her to contemplation of the Face of Jesus in his
Passion (ibid., 71rc). Thus, her name as a religious — Sr Thérèse of the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face —
expresses the programme of her whole life in communion with the central
Mysteries of the Incarnation and the Redemption. Her religious
profession, on the Feast of the Nativity of Mary, 8 September 1890, was a
true spiritual espousal in evangelical “littleness”, characterized by
the symbol of the flower: “It was the Nativity of Mary. What a beautiful
feast on which to become the Spouse of Jesus! It was the little new-born Holy Virgin who presented her little Flower to thelittle Jesus” (ibid., 77r).
For Thérèse, being a religious meant being a bride of Jesus and a mother of souls (cf.
Ms B, 2v). On the same day, the Saint wrote a prayer which expressed
the entire orientation of her life: she asked Jesus for the gift of his
infinite Love, to be the smallest, and above all she asked for the
salvation of all human being: “That no soul may be damned today” (Pr 2).
Of great importance is her Offering to Merciful Love,
made on the Feast of the Most Holy Trinity in 1895 (Ms A, 83v-84r; Pr
6). It was an offering that Thérèse immediately shared with her sisters,
since she was already acting novice mistress.
Ten
years after the “Grace of Christmas” in 1896, came the “Grace of
Easter”, which opened the last period of Thérèse’s life with the
beginning of her passion in profound union with the Passion of Jesus. It
was the passion of her body, with the illness that led to her death
through great suffering, but it was especially the passion of the soul,
with a very painful trial of faith (Ms C, 4v-7v). With Mary
beside the Cross of Jesus, Thérèse then lived the most heroic faith, as a
light in the darkness that invaded her soul. The Carmelite was aware
that she was living this great trial for the salvation of all the
atheists of the modern world, whom she called “brothers”.
She then lived fraternal love even more intensely
(8r-33v): for the sisters of her community, for her two spiritual
missionary brothers, for the priests and for all people, especially the
most distant. She truly became a “universal sister”! Her lovable,
smiling charity was the expression of the profound joy whose secret she
reveals: “Jesus, my joy is loving you” (P 45/7). In this context of
suffering, living the greatest love in the smallest things of daily
life, the Saint brought to fulfilment her vocation to be Love in the
heart of the Church (cf. Ms B, 3v).
Thérèse
died on the evening of 30 September 1897, saying the simple words, “My
God, I love you!”, looking at the Crucifix she held tightly in her
hands. These last words of the Saint are the key to her whole doctrine,
to her interpretation of the Gospel the act of love, expressed in her
last breath was as it were the continuous breathing of her soul, the
beating of her heart. The simple words “Jesus I love you”, are
at the heart of all her writings. The act of love for Jesus immersed her
in the Most Holy Trinity. She wrote: “Ah, you know, Divine Jesus I love
you / The spirit of Love enflames me with his fire, / It is in loving
you that I attract the Father” (P 17/2).
Dear friends, we too, with St Thérèse of the Child Jesus
must be able to repeat to the Lord every day that we want to live of
love for him and for others, to learn at the school of the saints to
love authentically and totally. Thérèse is one of the “little” ones of
the Gospel who let themselves be led by God to the depths of his
Mystery. A guide for all, especially those who, in the People of God,
carry out their ministry as theologians. With humility and charity,
faith and hope, Thérèse continually entered the heart of Sacred
Scripture which contains the Mystery of Christ. And this interpretation
of the Bible, nourished by the science of love, is not in opposition to academic knowledge. Thescience of the saints, in fact, of which she herself speaks on the last page of her The Story of a Soul, is the loftiest science.
“All the saints have understood and in a special way
perhaps those who fill the universe with the radiance of the evangelical
doctrine. Was it not from prayer that St Paul, St Augustine, St John of
the Cross, St Thomas Aquinas, Francis, Dominic, and so many other
friends of God drew thatwonderful science which has enthralled
the loftiest minds?” (cf. Ms C 36r). Inseparable from the Gospel, for
Thérèse the Eucharist was the sacrament of Divine Love that stoops to
the extreme to raise us to him. In her last Letter, on an image
that represents Jesus the Child in the consecrated Host, the Saint
wrote these simple words: “I cannot fear a God who made himself so small
for me! […] I love him! In fact, he is nothing but Love and Mercy!” (LT
266).
In the Gospel Thérèse discovered above all the Mercy of
Jesus, to the point that she said: “To me, He has given his Infinite
Mercy, and it is in this ineffable mirror that I contemplate his other
divine attributes. Therein all appear to me radiant with Love. His
Justice, even more perhaps than the rest, seems to me to be clothed with
Love” (Ms A, 84r).
In these words she expresses herself in the last lines of The Story of a Soul:
“I have only to open the Holy Gospels and at once I breathe the perfume
of Jesus’ life, and then I know which way to run; and it is not to the
first place, but to the last, that I hasten…. I feel that even had I on
my conscience every crime one could commit… my heart broken with sorrow,
I would throw myself into the arms of my Saviour Jesus, because I know
that he loves the Prodigal Son” who returns to him. (Ms C, 36v-37r).
“Trust and Love” are therefore the final point of the
account of her life, two words, like beacons, that illumined the whole
of her journey to holiness, to be able to guide others on the same
“little way of trust and love”, of spiritual childhood (cf. Ms C, 2v-3r;
LT 226).
Trust, like that of the child who abandons himself in
God’s hands, inseparable from the strong, radical commitment of true
love, which is the total gift of self for ever, as the Saint says,
contemplating Mary: “Loving is giving all, and giving oneself” (Why I love thee, Mary,
P 54/22). Thus Thérèse points out to us all that Christian life
consists in living to the full the grace of Baptism in the total gift of
self to the Love of the Father, in order to live like Christ, in the
fire of the Holy Spirit, his same love for all the others.
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