St. Therese of the Child Jesus

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Catholic Church celebrated the feast of St. Therese of the Child Jesus on October 01st. She was a Carmelite nun whose service to her Roman Catholic order was later recognized for its exemplary spiritual accomplishments. She was named a doctor of the church by Pope John Paul II in 1997. She is a patron saint of missionaries, florists, pilots and priests. She is also invoked on behalf of the sick.

 

Early Life

 

Thérèse Françoise Marie Martin Alençon was born on January 2, 1873 to a couple of jewelers and watchmakers. They were deeply devout believers. She was the last of eight children, three of whom died in childhood. Losing her mother at the age of four, she relived the drama of abandonment as each of her four sisters in turn entered Carmelite life. She received the particular affection of her father, who called her “Little Queen”.

 

She entered the Carmel of Lisieux at the age of 15, by special permission of Pope Leo XIII, whom Thérèse himself had begged in Rome. The girl’s desire was to “save souls,” and above all “to pray in aid of priests.” Sister Theresa of the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face is the name she took at her profession.

 

The “little way”

 

Positivist thinking was spreading in France at the end of the nineteenth century, encouraged by the multiplication of great inventions and supported by anti-clerical and atheistic tendencies.

 

For this reason, Thérèse elaborated a highly original and powerful spirituality, called the “theology of the little way” or “spiritual childhood”, which bases the practice of love for God not on great actions, but in everyday – seemingly insignificant acts.

 

In her autobiography, Thérèse wrote, “There is only one thing to do: throw the flowers of the small sacrifices to Jesus.” She has also said “I want to teach the little methods that have worked for me.”

 

In their original draft, this diary carries the subtitle, “The Story of the Springtime of a Little White Flower”. Beneath the whimsical appearance, however, there is actually a hard journey towards holiness marked by a strong response to God’s love for man.

 

Not understood by the sisters of the Carmel, Thérèse says she received “more thorns than roses” and that she accepted the injustices and persecutions, as well as the pain and fatigue of illness with patience offering everything “for the needs of the Church,” in order, “to cast roses on all, the just and sinners.”

 

For the Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI the specificity of her spirituality is its total openness to the invasion of God’s love. Thérèse was a sister to sinners, the fallen away, atheists, the desperate and for this, she was declared patron of missionaries.

 

Her death, and the “Story of a Soul”

 

After nine years of religious life, Thérèse died of tuberculosis at the age of only 24, on September 30, 1897. Knowing she was dying she promised, “I shall spend my heaven doing good on earth … I shall let fall a shower of roses”. Her last gasping words were, “My God! … I love Thee!” In 1923 she was beatified by Pope Pius XI, who considered her the “star of his pontificate” and then canonized in 1925.

 

In the 1950s, Abbé André Combes, theologian at the Institut Catholique, the Sorbonne of Paris, and the Lateran University, discovered manipulations that had been carried out in good faith on Thérèse’s Diary, by her Carmelite sisters, who were inclined to think of her as the their littlest sister and the darling of their house; the spiritual and theological doctrine of spiritual childhood, however, is not confined to a psychological and sentimental background made only of attention to small things. The heart of Thérèse’s spirituality resides in the awareness that man, even in his smallness, ends up divinized by Grace. In this Thérèse answers the “masters of suspicion” like Feuerbach, Marx, Freud, Nietzsche. The man-creature that lets the invasion of God’s love divinize him is not “alienated”: far from it. Christology and anthropology go hand in hand: Thérèse anticipated certain texts of the II Vatican Council and of Paul VI, as well as some passages of Benedict XVI’s Caritas in veritate, by nearly a century.

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