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15 Oct - Memorial St Teresa of Avila


BarbTherese

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HAPPY FEAST DAY TO ALL CARMELITES :like2:

St. Teresa of Avila: October 15. 1515 - 82.

 

The gift of God to Teresa in and through which she became holy and left her mark on the Church and the world is threefold: She was a woman; she was a contemplative; she was an active reformer.


As a woman, Teresa stood on her own two feet, even in the man’s world of her time. She was “her own woman,” entering the Carmelites despite strong opposition from her father. She is a person wrapped not so much in silence as in mystery. Beautiful, talented, outgoing, adaptable, affectionate, courageous, enthusiastic, she was totally human. Like Jesus, she was a mystery of paradoxes: wise, yet practical; intelligent, yet much in tune with her experience; a mystic, yet an energetic reformer; a holy woman, a womanly woman.


Teresa was a woman “for God,” a woman of prayer, discipline, and compassion. Her heart belonged to God. Her ongoing conversion was an arduous lifelong struggle, involving ongoing purification and suffering. She was misunderstood, misjudged, and opposed in her efforts at reform. Yet she struggled on, courageous and faithful; she struggled with her own mediocrity, her illness, her opposition. And in the midst of all this she clung to God in life and in prayer. Her writings on prayer and contemplation are drawn from her experience: powerful, practical, and graceful. She was a woman of prayer; a woman for God.


Teresa was a woman “for others.” Though a contemplative, she spent much of her time and energy seeking to reform herself and the Carmelites, to lead them back to the full observance of the primitive Rule. She founded over a half-dozen new monasteries. She traveled, wrote, fought—always to renew, to reform. In her self, in her prayer, in her life, in her efforts to reform, in all the people she touched, she was a woman for others, a woman who inspired and gave life.


Her writings, especially the Way of Perfection andThe Interior Castle, have helped generations of believers.


In 1970, the Church gave her the title she had long held in the popular mind: Doctor of the Church. She and St. Catherine of Siena were the first women so honored.  (From Dominican Sisters of Peace)

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Alberto Guimaraes

Peace and good!
What a great lady Saint Teresa was!
I have read most of his works, and they are truly admirable.
When I was still a teenager and started my true spiritual life I wanted to be a Discalced Carmelite, because in a small devotionary of the Little Jesus of Prague I got to know a little about Carmelite spirituality.
By grace of God I married a girl named ... Teresa!
Jesus, Mary, Francis and Teresa of Jesus bless you!
Br. Alberto Guimaraes OFS
Braga ─ Portugal

 

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