The Life of Saint Thérèse of
Lisieux
THÉRÈSE MARTIN was born at Alençon, France on 2 January 1873.
Two days later, she was baptized Marie Frances Thérèse at Notre Dame Church. Her
parents were Louis Martin and Zélie Guérin. After the death of her mother on 28
August 1877, Thérèse and her family moved to Lisieux.
Towards the end of 1879, she went to confession for the first
time. On the Feast of Pentecost 1883, she received the singular grace of being
healed from a serious illness through the intercession of Our Lady of Victories.
Taught by the Benedictine Nuns of Lisieux and after an intense immediate
preparation culminating in a vivid experience of intimate union with Christ, she
received First Holy Communion on 8 May 1884. Some weeks later, on 14 June of the
same year, she received the Sacrament of Confirmation, fully aware of accepting
the gift of the Holy Spirit as a personal participation in the grace of
Pentecost.
She wished to embrace the contemplative life, as her sisters
Pauline and Marie had done in the Carmel of Lisieux, but was prevented from
doing so by her young age. On a visit to Italy, after having visited the House
of Loreto and the holy places of the Eternal City, during an audience granted by
Pope Leo XIII to the pilgrims from Lisieux on 20 November 1887, she asked the
Holy Father with childlike audacity to be able to enter the Carmel at the age of
fifteen.
On 9 April 1888 she entered the Carmel of Lisieux. She received
the habit on 10 January of the following year, and made her religious profession
on 8 September 1890 on the Feast of the Birth of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
In Carmel she embraced the way of perfection outlined by the
Foundress, Saint Teresa of Jesus, fulfilling with genuine fervour and fidelity
the various community responsibilities entrusted to her. Her faith was tested by
the sickness of her beloved father, Louis Martin, who died on 29 July 1894.
Thérèse nevertheless grew in sanctity, enlightened by the Word of God and
inspired by the Gospel to place love at the centre of everything. In her
autobiographical manuscripts she left us not only her recollections of childhood
and adolescence but also a portrait of her soul, the description of her most
intimate experiences. She discovered the little way of spiritual childhood and
taught it to the novices entrusted to her care. She considered it a special gift
to receive the charge of accompanying two "missionary brothers" with prayer and
sacrifice. Seized by the love of Christ, her only Spouse, she penetrated ever
more deeply into the mystery of the Church and became increasingly aware of her
apostolic and missionary vocation to draw everyone in her path.
On 9 June 1895, on the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity, she
offered herself as a sacrificial victim to the merciful Love of God. At this
time, she wrote her first autobiographical manuscript, which she presented to
Mother Agnes for her birthday on 21 January 1896.
Several months later, on 3 April, in the night between Holy
Thursday and Good Friday, she suffered a haemoptysis, the first sign of the
illness which would lead to her death; she welcomed this event as a mysterious
visitation of the Divine Spouse. From this point forward, she entered a trial of
faith which would last until her death; she gives overwhelming testimony to this
in her writings. In September, she completed Manuscript B; this text gives
striking evidence of the spiritual maturity which she had attained, particularly
the discovery of her vocation in the heart of the Church.
While her health declined and the time of trial continued, she
began work in the month of June on Manuscript C, dedicated to Mother Marie de
Gonzague. New graces led her to higher perfection and she discovered fresh
insights for the diffusion of her message in the Church, for the benefit of
souls who would follow her way. She was transferred to the infirmary on 8 July.
Her sisters and other religious women collected her sayings. Meanwhile her
sufferings and trials intensified. She accepted them with patience up to the
moment of her death in the afternoon of 30 September 1897. "I am not dying, I am
entering life", she wrote to her missionary spiritual brother, Father M.
Bellier. Her final words, "My God..., I love you!", seal a life which was
extinguished on earth at the age of twenty-four; thus began, as was her desire,
a new phase of apostolic presence on behalf of souls in the Communion of Saints,
in order to shower a rain of roses upon the world.
She was canonized by Pope Pius XI on 17 May 1925. The same Pope
proclaimed her Universal Patron of the Missions, alongside Saint Francis Xavier,
on 14 December 1927.
Her teaching and example of holiness has been received with
great enthusiasm by all sectors of the faithful during this century, as well as
by people outside the Catholic Church and outside Christianity.
On the occasion of the centenary of her death, many Episcopal
Conferences have asked the Pope to declare her a Doctor of the Church, in view
of the soundness of her spiritual wisdom inspired by the Gospel, the originality
of her theological intuitions filled with sublime teaching, and the universal
acceptance of her spiritual message, which has been welcomed throughout the
world and spread by the translation of her works into over fifty languages.
Mindful of these requests, His Holiness Pope John Paul II asked
the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, which has competence in this area, in
consultation with the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith with regard to
her exalted teaching, to study the suitability of proclaiming her a Doctor of
the Church.
On 24 August, at the close of the Eucharistic Celebration at
the Twelfth World Youth Day in Paris, in the presence of hundreds of bishops and
before an immense crowd of young people from the whole world, Pope John Paul II
announced his intention to proclaim Thérèse of the Child Jesus and of the Holy
Face a Doctor of the Universal Church on World Mission Sunday, 19 October
1997.
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