7.
From careful study of the writings of St
Thérèse of the Child Jesus and from the resonance they have had
in the Church, salient aspects can be noted of her "eminent
doctrine", which is the fundamental element for conferring the title of
Doctor of the Church.
First of all, we find a special charism of
wisdom. This young Carmelite, without any particular theological training, but
illumined by the light of the Gospel, feels she is being taught by the divine
Teacher who, as she says, is "the Doctor of Doctors" (Ms A, 83v),
and from him she receives "divine teachings" (Ms B, 1r). She
feels that the words of Scripture are fulfilled in her: "Whoever is a
little one, let him come to me.... For to him that is little, mercy shall be
shown" (Ms B, 1v; cf. Prv 9:4; Wis 6:6) and she knows she is being
instructed in the science of love, hidden from the wise and prudent, which the
divine Teacher deigned to reveal to her, as to babes (Ms A, 49r; cf. Lk
10:21-22).
Pius XI, who considered
Thérèse of Lisieux the "Star of his pontificate", did
not hesitate to assert in his homily on the day of her canonization, 17 May
1925: "The Spirit of truth opened and made known to her what he usually
hides from the wise and prudent and reveals to little ones; thus she enjoyed
such knowledge of the things above - as Our immediate Predecessor attests -
that she shows everyone else the sure way of salvation" (AAS 17
[1925], p. 213).
Her teaching not only conforms to Scripture
and the Catholic faith, but excels ("eminet") for the depth and
wise synthesis it achieved. Her doctrine is at once a confession of the
Church's faith, an experience of the Christian mystery and a way to holiness.
Thérèse offers a mature synthesis of Christian spirituality: she
combines theology and the spiritual life; she expresses herself with strength
and authority, with a great ability to persuade and communicate, as is shown by
the reception and dissemination of her message among the People of God.
Thérèse's teaching expresses
with coherence and harmonious unity the dogmas of the Christian faith as a
doctrine of truth and an experience of life. In this regard it should not be
forgotten that the understanding of the deposit of faith transmitted by the
Apostles, as the Second Vatican Council teaches, makes progress in the Church
with the help of the Holy Spirit: "There is growth in insight into the
realities and words that are passed on... through the contemplation and study
of believers who ponder these things in their hearts (cf. Lk 2:19 and 51). It
comes from the intimate sense of spiritual realities which they experience. And
it comes from the preaching of those who have received, along with their right
of succession in the episcopate, the sure charism of truth" (Dei
Verbum, n. 8).
In the writings of Thérèse of
Lisieux we do not find perhaps, as in other Doctors, a scholarly presentation
of the things of God, but we can discern an enlightened witness of faith which,
while accepting with trusting love God's merciful condescension and salvation
in Christ, reveals the mystery and holiness of the Church.
Thus we can rightly recognize in the Saint
of Lisieux the charism of a Doctor of the Church, because of the gift of the
Holy Spirit she received for living and expressing her experience of faith, and
because of her particular understanding of the mystery of Christ. In her are
found the gifts of the new law, that is, the grace of the Holy Spirit, who
manifests himself in living faith working through charity (cf. St Thomas
Aquinas, Summa Theol., I-II, q. 106, art. 1; q. 108, art. 1).
We can apply to Thérèse of
Lisieux what my Predecessor Paul VI said of another young Saint and Doctor of
the Church, Catherine of Siena: "What strikes us most about the Saint is
her infused wisdom, that is to say, her lucid, profound and inebriating
absorption of the divine truths and mysteries of faith.... That assimilation
was certainly favoured by the most singular natural gifts, but it was also
evidently something prodigious, due to a charism of wisdom from the Holy
Spirit" (AAS 62 [1970], p. 675).
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