Monday 15 October 2018

# Saints

Saint Teresa of Ávila


The 15th of October is the feast day of Saint Teresa of Ávila (28 March 1515 – 4 October 1582). She is also known as Saint Teresa of Jesus, and was baptised as Teresa Sánchez de Cepeda y Ahumada. She is the patron saint against bodily illnesses; headaches; chess; lacemakers; of laceworkers; loss of parents; people in need of grace; people in religious orders; people ridiculed for their piety; Požega, Croatia; sick people; sickness; Spain; and Talisay City, Cebu.

The following is from Butler’s Lives of the Saints:

WHEN a child of seven years, Teresa ran away from her home at Avila in Spain, in the hope of being martyred by the Moors. Being brought back and asked the reason of her flight, she replied, “I want to see God, and I must die before I can see Him.” She then began with her brother to build a hermitage in the garden, and was often heard repeating “Forever, forever” Some years later she became a Carmelite nun. Frivolous conversations checked her progress towards perfection, but at last, in her thirty-first year, she gave herself wholly to God. A vision showed her the very place in hell to which her own light faults would have led her, and she lived ever after in the deepest distrust of self. She was called to reform her Order, favored with distinct commands from Our Lord, and her heart was pierced with divine love; but she dreaded nothing so much as delusion, and to the last acted only under obedience to her confessors, which both made her strong and kept her safe. She died on October 4, 1582.

Reflection.—”After all I die a child of the Church.” These were the Saint’s last words. They teach us the lesson of her life—to trust in humble, childlike obedience to our spiritual guides as the surest means of salvation.

Image: Saint Teresa of Ávila by Peter Paul Rubens

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