Let nothing disturb you, Let nothing frighten you, All things are passing away: God never changes. Patience obtains all things Whoever has God lacks nothing; God alone suffices. -- St. Teresa of Avila

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Teresa de Avila: an endearing saint




What are saints made of?  Are they brought up with eyes cast downward and mumbling prayers non-stop?  You’d be surprised in getting to know St. Teresa of Avila, Doctor of the Church and Teacher of Prayer who was born to Don Alonso Sanchez de Cepeda and Doña Beatriz Davila y Ahumada on March 28, 1515, in Avila, Spain, at a time when women were raised to become perfect homemakers.
Before she even turned seven, the little Teresa had desired to see God.  She had heard from pious elders that martyrs go to heaven, and therefore see God, and one way to become a martyr was to be beheaded by the Moors.  What was she to do but persuade her younger brother Rodrigo to join him in her quest for martyrdom?  So they ran away from home to go to the land of the Moors to offer their necks.  Missing the children, their mother set up a search party, and as the siblings barely left Avila’s walls, an uncle found them and brought them back to their anxious parents.
With her plan thwarted, Teresa settled for a less drastic way to see God: she again convinced her kid brother, this time to become hermits instead.  They gathered stones in the garden and piled them up to build quaint “hermitages” where they could pray all they wanted.  This future Master of Prayer indeed manifested pluck and uncommon fervor at such a tender age.     
Playing hermits was not to be a lifetime preoccupation, however. Teresa’s mother died when she was barely 14, and she later wrote of her sorrow in these words: “As soon as I began to understand how great a loss I had sustained by losing her, I was very much afflicted; and so I went before an image of our Blessed Lady and besought her with many tears that she would be gracious enough to be my mother.”
Despite her loss, Teresa grew into a charming teenager, a magnet for attention. At 15, she was vivacious, pretty, fond of clothes, jewelry and perfume.  She adored romantic novels of knights and chivalry—a passion she shared secretly with her mother.  She liked people who liked her, one of them an older female cousin who was fond of gossip and vanities.  This cousin’s influence would sooner than later get Teresa involved in a flirtation which sent the town abuzz with gossip, and caused her father sleepless nights.
Convinced that the budding woman would not be safe without some female watchdog tethered to her, her father sent her off to a nearby Augustinian convent that ran a kind of finishing school where young women of her class were being educated—on social graces, home arts, and things like embroidery, cooking, child care, etc.—and really being prepared for a devout domestic life.
This period showed some change in the self-centered teenager, due perhaps to Teresa’s deep and abiding affection for the nuns of Our Lady of Grace, notably the novice mistress, Sr. Maria Briceño, who impressed the young Teresa with her piety and goodness.   Little by little, in that prayerful environment, her thoughts turned towards God.  She was to write later, however, that while she feared marriage, she also asked God not to make her a nun.    
Then Teresa succumbed to a mysterious illness, one of the many that would accompany her throughout her life.  Long story short, she decided on her vocation and sought her father’s permission.  Don Alonso said she could become a nun only over his dead body.  But Teresa would not hear of it, confided to her brother Antonio her desire, and one November night secretly left home with him to enter the Carmelite convent of the Incarnation in Avila.  She took the habit in 1536.
From an early age she suffered from debilitating physical illnesses.  Although famous for her supernatural mystical experiences and her writings on mystical prayer and the spiritual, she spent 18 years struggling to pray.
She would write:  “Over a period of several years, I was more occupied in wishing my hour of prayer were over, and in listening whenever the clock struck, than in thinking of things that were good. Again and again I would rather have done any severe penance that might have been given me than practice recollection as a preliminary to prayer. Whenever I entered the oratory I used to feel so depressed that I had to summon up all my courage to make myself pray at all.”
She gave up her habit of mental prayer, using as a pretext the poor state of her health.  “This excuse of bodily weakness,” she wrote afterwards, “was not a sufficient reason why I should abandon so good a thing, which required no physical strength, but only love and habit.  In the midst of sickness the best prayer may be offered, and it is a mistake to think it can only be offered in solitude.”
Despite her experiences of extraordinary ecstatic states she never saw these as the objective of the spiritual life. They were by-products, not something to be sought after.  She was greatly troubled by them at first and sought advice from her spiritual directors. As she wrote, “the pain was so sharp that it made me utter several moans; and so excessive was the sweetness caused me by this intense pain that one can never wish to lose it.”  Some acknowledged the experiences to be of the Holy Spirit.  Others didn’t, and one ordered her to repel them as if from the devil.  She obeyed.  She was subjected to much ridicule.  She was ordered to destroy one of her books; she obeyed. 
Eventually both she and her superiors accepted the experiences as being of God.  As Pope Gregory XV would say of Teresa on her canonization on March 12, 1662, “She was wont to say that she might be deceived in discerning visions and revelations, but could not be in obeying superiors.”
Teresa was an immensely practical, down to earth person, advising hard physical labor and household chores as a remedy for spiritual blight and spiritual pretentiousness.  She had no time for spiritual pretensions.  “God deliver us from anybody who wishes to serve Him and thinks about her own dignity and fears to be disgraced…. No poison in the world so slays perfection as these things do….”  She was deeply aware of her own sin and character defects.
It was not until her fifties that she began to found a reformed order of Carmelite nuns, finding the Order she was in too lax in its disciplines.  Despite much controversy and opposition she went on to found 16 more convents before illness drained her.  She met St. John of the Cross, a holy man 27 years her junior, and formed a close spiritual bond and personal friendship with him that would lead to their collaboration in reforming the Order and the running of the new convents.
To found reformed convents Teresa would often ride on mule carts and travel extremely  difficult conditions that she would one day say, “There is no such thing as bad weather. All weather is good because it is God’s.”  Once during a thunderstorm when her coach overturned into a ditch she said, “It is no wonder Lord that you have so few friends when this is how you treat them.”
St. Teresa of Avila, also known by her religious name “Teresa of Jesus” was proclaimed Doctor of the Church on September 27, 1970 by Pope Paul VI, a distinction given to those whose writings, being in accord with the doctrine of the Church, may be used universally as Church teachings.
Never had it occurred to Teresa that she would one day be given the distinction of being the “first woman Doctor of the Church”, but she once wrote, “About the injunction of the Apostle Paul that women should keep silent in church? Don’t go by one text only…..ask them if they can by any chance tie my hands.”  This reflects a “holy stubbornness” that spurred the plucky little girl to long ago dare to be beheaded to become a martyr—but that is Teresa, a woman for all seasons.
Present-day searchers for God would find endearing both the common sense and the wisdom in Teresa’s words:
“It is true that we cannot be free from sin, but at least let our sins not be always the same.”
“For my own part, I believe that love is the measure of our ability to bear crosses, whether great or small.”
“Be gentle to all, and stern with yourself.”
“To reach something good it is very useful to have gone astray, and thus acquired experience.”
Her most famous books are The Way of Perfection, Life, and The Interior Castle, most quoted works on prayer by theologians of any Order or religion.   March 28, 2015 will mark the 500th birth anniversary of this remarkable woman.




Poem IX

Let nothing disturb thee;
Let nothing dismay thee:
All things pass;
God never changes.
Patience attains
All that it strives for.
He who has God
Finds he lacks nothing:
God alone suffices.
Poem IX, in Complete Works St. Teresa of Avila (1963) edited by E. Allison Peers, Vol. 3, p. 288

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