Homily for Oct. 1st, 2019: A spiritual prodigy.
The young
woman whom we commemorate today – she died at only 24 – was a spiritual child
prodigy. Born Thérèse Martin on the 2nd of January 1873 to
deeply devout Catholic parents in northwestern France , she was the youngest of
five sisters and her father’s little “queen.” Her mother’s death when Thérèse
was only 4 plunged her into terrible grief which would last into adolesence. At
age 9 Thérèse received a second blow, when her older sister Pauline, who had been
a second mother to her, entered the Carmelite convent at Lisieux, where the
family was living. Thérèse decided that Carmel
was the place she too wanted to be – “but not for Pauline, for Jesus.” So
certain was Thérèse of her vocation, that she started to ask permission to
enter Carmel
when she was only 14. It finally came, in a letter from her bishop, on January
1st, 1888, a day before her fifteenth birthday. Three months later
she was received into the community where she had longed to be from age 9.
Thérèse
soon discovered the shadow side of Carmelite life. “Of course one does not have
enemies in Carmel ,”
she wrote, “but still there are natural attractions, one feels drawn towards a
certain sister, whereas you go a long way round to avoid meeting another.”
Thérèse resolved to counter these difficulties by going out of her way to be
kind to the Sisters who
most irritated her. Over time this would become what she called her “little way.”
Since she could not do great things, she would do little things as an offering
to God. One of those little things was her request to remain a novice. To her
life’s end she had to ask permission to do things her fellow Sisters could do
on their own.
For the last 18 months of her short
life, Thérèse was suffering from tuberculosis, for which there was
then no real treatment. She
also suffered spiritual darkness, like a later sister with her name, St. Teresa
of Kolkata. Death came on the evening of Sept. 30th, 1897.
A year later the account of her short
life which she had been commanded to write was published in a limited edition
of 2000 copies, under the title, The
Story of a Soul. Translated over time into 40 languages, it would produce
what Pope Pius XI said at Thérèse’s canonization in 1925, before half a million
people “a storm of glory.” People read Thérèse’s story, invoked her
intercession, and found their prayers answered. Words she had spoke toward the
end of her life came true: “I will spend my heaven doing good on earth.” Today
we pray, therefore: “Ste. Thérèse, pray for us. Amen.”
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