5.
In this context I am pleased to recall
briefly some events in the life of Thérèse of the Child Jesus.
Born in Alençon, France, on 2 January 1873, she is baptized two days
later in the Church of NotreDame, receiving the name
Marie-Françoise-Thérèse. Her parents are Louis Martin and
Zélie Guérin, whose heroic virtues I recently recognized. After
her mother's death on 28 August 1877, Thérèse moves with her
whole family to the town of Lisieux where, surrounded by the affection of her
father and sisters, she receives a formation both demanding and full of
tenderness.
Towards the end of 1879 she receives the
sacrament of Penance for the first time. On the day of Pentecost in 1883 she
has the extraordinary grace of being healed from a serious illness through the
intercession of Our Lady of Victories. Educated by the Benedictines of Lisieux,
she receives First Communion on 8 May 1884, after an intense preparation
crowned with an exceptional experience of the grace of intimate union with
Jesus. A few weeks later, on 14 June of that same year, she receives the
sacrament of Confirmation with a vivid awareness of what the gift of the Holy Spirit
involves in her personal sharing in the grace of Pentecost. On Christmas Day of
1886 she has a profound spiritual experience that she describes as a
"complete conversion". As a result, she overcomes the emotional
weakness caused by the loss of her mother and begins "to run as a
giant" on the way of perfection (cf. Ms A, 44v45v).
Thérèse wishes to embrace the
contemplative life, like her sisters Pauline and Marie in the Carmel of
Lisieux, but is prevented from doing so by her young age. During a pilgrimage
to Italy, after visiting the Holy House of Loreto and places in the Eternal
City, at an audience granted by the Pope to the faithful of the Diocese of
Lisieux on 20 November 1887, she asks Leo XIII with filial boldness to be able
to enter Carmel at the age of 15 years.
On 9 April 1888 she enters the Carmel of
Lisieux, where she receives the habit of the Blessed Virgin's order on 10
January of the following year and makes her religious profession on 8 September
1890, the feast of the Birth of the Virgin Mary. At Carmel she undertakes the
way of perfection marked out by the Mother Foundress, Teresa of Jesus, with
genuine fervour and fidelity in fulfilling the various community tasks
entrusted to her. Illumined by the Word of God, particularly tried by the
illness of her beloved father, Louis Martin, who dies on 29 July 1894,
Thérèse embarks on the way of holiness, insisting on the
centrality of love. She discovers and imparts to the novices entrusted to her
care the little way of spiritual childhood, by which she enters more and more
deeply into the mystery of the Church and, drawn by the love of Christ, feels
growing within her the apostolic and missionary vocation which spurs her to
bring everyone with her to meet the divine Spouse.
On 9 June 1895, the feast of the Most Holy
Trinity, she offers herself as a sacrificial victim to the merciful Love of
God. On 3 April of the following year, on the night between Holy Thursday and
Good Friday, she notices the first symptoms of the illness which will lead to her
death. Thérèse welcomes it as a mysterious visitation of the
divine Spouse. At the same time she undergoes a trial of faith which will last
until her death. As her health deteriorates, she is moved to the infirmary on 8
July 1897. Her sisters and other religious collect her sayings, while her
sufferings and trials, borne with patience, intensify to the moment of her
death on the afternoon of 30 September 1897. "I am not dying; I am
entering life", she had written to one of her spiritual brothers, Fr
Bellière (Lettres 244). Her last words, "My God, I love
you", are the seal of her life.
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