Homily for Oct. 15th, 2018: St. Teresa of Avila
We celebrate
today one of the great women of the 16th century, Teresa of Avila in
central Spain .
Born in 1515 as her mother’s third child and first daughter, she was, in the
words of a modern biographer, “a vain and vivacious
girl, with a divine agenda.” When she was thirteen, her mother died while
giving birth to her tenth child. Devastated, Teresa prayed that henceforth Mary
might be her mother. Despite this early piety, Teresa says herself that she was a frivolous teenager, “wearing fancy things, and silly
baubles.” This was likely why her father sent Teresa to a convent school at age
16.
She
got on well in the convent. But after 19 months she fell ill and was sent to a
deeply pious uncle in the country to recuperate. Conversations with him
convinced Teresa that the world would soon end and that if she did not change, she
would go to hell. To avoid this, she decided to “bully herself” into becoming a
nun. Lacking her father’s permission for this, she stole away at age 20, with
the help of an older brother, to the Carmelite convent in Avila . She would remain there for the next
quarter-century. It was a relaxed life, with nuns from wealthy families
enjoying comfortable suites, pets, and even servants. “Everything about God
gave me tremendous pleasure,” Teresa writes, “but the things of the world
captivated me. I spent almost twenty years on this stormy sea, falling and
rising, then falling again.”
When
she was not quite 40, she had a conversion experience. Her prayer deepened and
she began to think of what more she could do for the Lord. Reform of orders for
men and women was in the air, and in 1562 Teresa, with only 4 companions, but
with the support of her 17 years younger friend and Confessor, St. John of the Cross, founded a new convent
with a far more austere life than the one she had left. Teresa would found almost
20 other such convents in the 20 years which remained to her. Exhausted by the
travels all over Spain
which these foundations required, Teresa died in 1581. She left classic writings
on prayer which fill 3 volumes in English translation. They formed the basis
for Pope Paul VI’s declaration in 1970 of Teresa of Avila as a Doctor or
official teacher of the Church, the first woman to be so honored.
The modern
English Carmelite, Ruth Burrows, writes: “Teresa’s will was identified with our
Lord’s. So everything she was, her many gifts and her weaknesses too, were
brought into the orbit of her love and dedication. Union
with Christ does not mean becoming someone different, renouncing our gifts,
changing our temperament; but putting everything we have into our love for God
and opening everything we have to his transforming influence. Teresa reached
the full potential of personhood: what she was meant to be she became. This is
holiness.”
How wonderful,
if something like that could be said of us, when the Lord sends his angel to
call us home. To that end, then, we pray:
St. Teresa of Avila , pray for us
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