St. Therese of Lisieux

Feast:
October 1. Generations of Catholics have adored this young saint, called her
the "Little Flower", and found in her short life more inspiration for
own lives than in volumes by theologians. Yet Therese died when she was 24,
after having lived as cloistered Carmelite for less than ten years. She never
went on missions, never founded a religious order, never performed great works.
The only book of hers, published after her death, was an brief edited version
of her journal called "Story of a Soul." (Collections of her letters
and restored versions of her journals have been published recently.) But within
28 years of her death, the public demand was so great that she was canonized.
Over the years, some modern Catholics have turned away from her because they
associate her with over- sentimentalized piety and yet the message she has for
us is still as compelling and simple as it was almost a century ago. Therese
was born in France in 1873, the pampered daughter of a mother who had wanted to
be a saint and a father who had wanted to be monk. The two had gotten married
but determined they would be celibate until a priest told them that was not how
God wanted a marriage to work! They must have followed his advice very well
because they had nine children. The five children who lived were all daughters
who were close all their lives. Tragedy and loss came quickly to Therese when
her mother died of breast cancer when she was four and a half years old. Her
sixteen year old sister Pauline became her second mother -- which made the
second loss even worse when Pauline entered the Carmelite convent five years
later. A few months later, Therese became so ill with a fever that people
thought she was dying. The worst part of it for Therese was all the people
sitting around her bed staring at her like, she said, "a string of
onions." When Therese saw her sisters praying to statue of Mary in her
room, Therese also prayed. She saw Mary smile at her and suddenly she was
cured. She tried to keep the grace of the cure secret but people found out and
badgered her with questions about what Mary was wearing, what she looked like.
When she refused to give in to their curiosity, they passed the story that she
had made the whole thing up. Without realizing it, by the time she was eleven
years old she had developed the habit of mental prayer. She would find a place
between her bed and the wall and in that solitude think about God, life,
eternity. When her other sisters, Marie and Leonie, left to joing religious
orders (the Carmelites and Poor Clares, respectively), Therese was left alone
with her last sister Celine and her father. Therese tells us that she wanted to
be good but that she had an odd way of going about. This spoiled little Queen
of her father's wouldn't do housework. She thought if she made the beds she was
doing a great favor! Every time Therese even imagined that someone was
criticizing her or didn't appreciate her, she burst into tears. Then she would
cry because she had cried! Any inner wall she built to contain her wild
emotions crumpled immediately before the tiniest comment. Therese wanted to
enter the Carmelite convent to join Pauline and Marie but how could she
convince others that she could handle the rigors of Carmelite life, if she
couldn't handle her own emotional outbursts? She had prayed that Jesus would
help her but there was no sign of an answer. On Christmas day in 1886, the
fourteen-year-old hurried home from church. In France, young children left
their shoes by the hearth at Christmas, and then parents would fill them with
gifts. By fourteen, most children outgrew this custom. But her sister Celine
didn't want Therese to grow up. So they continued to leave presents in
"baby" Therese's shoes. As she and Celine climbed the stairs to take
off their hats, their father's voice rose up from the parlor below. Standing
over the shoes, he sighed, "Thank goodness that's the last time we shall
have this kind of thing!" Therese froze, and her sister looked at her
helplessly. Celine knew that in a few minutes Therese would be in tears over
what her father had said. But the tantrum never came. Something incredible had
happened to Therese. Jesus had come into her heart and done what she could not
do herself. He had made her more sensitive to her father's feelings than her
own. She swallowed her tears, walked slowly down the stairs, and exclaimed over
the gifts in the shoes, as if she had never heard a word her father said. The
following year she entered the convent. In her autobiography she referred to
this Christmas as her "conversion." Therese be known as the Little
Flower but she had a will of steel. When the superior of the Carmelite convent
refused to take Therese because she was so young, the formerly shy little girl
wen to the bishop. When the bishop also said no, she decided to go over his
head, as well. Her father and sister took her on a pilgrimage to Rome to try to
get her mind off this crazy idea. Therese loved it. It was the one time when
being little worked to her advantage! Because she was young and small she could
run everywhere, touch relics and tombs without being yelled at. Finally they
went for an audience with Pope. They had been forbidden to speak to him but
that didn't stop Therese. As soon as she got near him, she begged that he let
her enter the Carmelite convent. She had to be carried out by two of the
guards! But the Vicar General who had seen her courage was impressed and soon
Therese was admitted to the Carmelite convent that her sisters Pauline and
Marie had already joined. Her romantic ideas of convent life and suffering soon
met up with reality in a way she had never expected. Her father suffered a
series of strokes that left him affected not only physically but mentally. When
he began hallucinating and grabbed for a gun as if going into battle, he was
taken to an asylum for the insane. Horrified, Therese learned of the
humiliation of the father she adored and admired and of the gossip and pity of
their so-called friends. As a cloistered nun she couldn't even visit her
father. This began a horrible time of suffering when she experienced such
dryness in prayer that she stated "Jesus isn't doing much to keep the
conversation going." She was so grief-stricken that she often fell asleep
in prayer. She consoled herself by saying that mothers loved children when they
lie asleep in their arms so that God must love her when she slept during
prayer. She knew as a Carmelite nun she would never be able to perform great
deeds. " Love proves itself by deeds, so how am I to show my love? Great
deeds are forbidden me. The only way I can prove my love is by scattering
flowers and these flowers are every little sacrifice, every glance and word,
and the doing of the least actions for love." She took every chance to
sacrifice, no matter how small it would seem. She smiled at the sisters she
didn't like. She ate everything she was given without complaining -- so that
she was often given the worst leftovers. One time she was accused of breaking a
vase when she was not at fault. Instead of arguing she sank to her knees and
begged forgiveness. These little sacrifices cost her more than bigger ones, for
these went unrecognized by others. No one told her how wonderful she was for
these little secret humiliations and good deeds. When Pauline was elected
prioress, she asked Therese for the ultimate sacrifice. Because of politics in
the convent, many of the sisters feared that the family Martin would taken over
the convent. Therefore Pauline asked Therese to remain a novice, in order to
allay the fears of the others that the three sisters would push everyone else
around. This meant she would never be a fully professed nun, that she would
always have to ask permission for everything she did. This sacrifice was made a
little sweeter when Celine entered the convent after her father's death. Four
of the sisters were now together again. Therese continued to worry about how
she could achieve holiness in the life she led. She didn't want to just be
good, she wanted to be a saint. She thought there must be a way for people
living hidden, little lives like hers. " I have always wanted to become a
saint. Unfortunately when I have compared myself with the saints, I have always
found that there is the same difference between the saints and me as there is
between a mountain whose summit is lost in the clouds and a humble grain of
sand trodden underfoot by passers-by. Instead of being discouraged, I told
myself: God would not make me wish for something impossible and so, in spite of
my littleness, I can aim at being a saint. It is impossible for me to grow
bigger, so I put up with myself as I am, with all my countless faults. But I
will look for some means of going to heaven by a little way which is very short
and very straight, a little way that is quite new. " We live in an age of
inventions. We need no longer climb laboriously up flights of stairs; in
well-to-do houses there are lifts. And I was determined to find a lift to carry
me to Jesus, for I was far too small to climb the steep stairs of perfection.
So I sought in holy Scripture some idea of what this life I wanted would be,
and I read these words: "Whosoever is a little one, come to me." It
is your arms, Jesus, that are the lift to carry me to heaven. And so there is
no need for me to grow up: I must stay little and become less and less."
She worried about her vocation: " I feel in me the vocation of the Priest.
I have the vocation of the Apostle. Martyrdom was the dream of my youth and
this dream has grown with me. Considering the mystical body of the Church, I
desired to see myself in them all. Charity gave me the key to my vocation. I
understood that the Church had a Heart and that this Heart was burning with
love. I understood that Love comprised all vocations, that Love was everything,
that it embraced all times and places...in a word, that it was eternal! Then in
the excess of my delirious joy, I cried out: O Jesus, my Love...my vocation, at
last I have found it...My vocation is Love!" When an antagonist was
elected prioress, new political suspicions and plottings sprang up. The concern
over the Martin sisters perhaps was not exaggerated. In this small convent they
now made up one-fifth of the population. Despite this and the fact that Therese
was a permanent novice they put her in charge of the other novices. Then in
1896, she coughed up blood. She kept working without telling anyone until she
became so sick a year later everyone knew it. Worst of all she had lost her joy
and confidence and felt she would die young without leaving anything behind.
Pauline had already had her writing down her memories for journal and now she
wanted her to continue -- so they would have something to circulate on her life
after her death. Her pain was so great that she said that if she had not had
faith she would have taken her own life without hesitation. But she tried to
remain smiling and cheerful -- and succeeded so well that some thought she was
only pretending to be ill. Her one dream as the work she would do after her
death, helping those on earth. "I will return," she said. "My
heaven will be spent on earth." She died on September 30, 1897 at the age
of 24 years old. She herself felt it was a blessing God allowed her to die at
exactly that age. she had always felt that she had a vocation to be a priest
and felt God let her die at the age she would have been ordained if she had
been a man so that she wouldn't have to suffer. After she died, everything at
the convent went back to normal. One nun commented that there was nothing to
say about Therese. But Pauline put together Therese's writings (and heavily
edited them, unfortunately) and sent 2000 copies to other convents. But
Therese's "little way" of trusting in Jesus to make her holy and
relying on small daily sacrifices instead of great deeds appealed to the
thousands of Catholics and others who were trying to find holiness in ordinary
lives. Within two years, the Martin family had to move because her notoriety
was so great and by 1925 she had been canonized. Therese of Lisieux is one of
the patron saints of the missions, not because she ever went anywhere, but
because of her special love of the missions, and the prayers and letters she
gave in support of missionaries. This is reminder to all of us who feel we can
do nothing, that it is the little things that keep God's kingdom growing.
With grateful thanks to Catholic
Online.