125 years ago today, on October 15, 1886, Marie Martin, the oldest sister of St. Therese, entered the Lisieux Carmel

It was on the feast of St. Teresa of Avila in 1886 that Marie Louise Martin, the oldest sister of St. Therese of Lisieux, entered the Carmelite monastery at Lisieux. 

Marie was a free spirit.  At first, she refused to consider the religious life, and also stated flatly that she would never marry.  As a young woman, she hated to take trouble with her dress.  She wrote that she detested the little white lace veils it was customary for young women to wear suspended from their hats.   "To put on a new dress was a genuine trial for me."  She said that she loathed the custom of wearing a medallion sewed to a ribbon around one's neck (seen in the photo at right).  She said  "I felt like a little parlor dog when I wore that velvet neckband."  After she received the Carmelite habit, she wrote "Every morning, it seemed, I put on a garment of liberty, and it was also a festive garment to me.  Even, as when I was a child, I could say 'I am quite free.'  To go to choir, the only toilette necessary was to let down one's sleeves.  My happiness was unbelievable!' 

Marie decided somewhat reluctantly to enter Carmel, acting at the  direction of Fr. Almire Pichon, her spiritual director.  She wrote later “The hour of sacrifice was about to strike.  I saw this hour approach without enthusiasm . . . While passing through the cloister to enter the choir, I cast a glance at the cloister courtyard.  It is indeed as I imagined, I thought.  How austere it is!  But after all, I did not come here to see cheerful things.  That was the extent of my enthusiasm! . . . Then with you, my Pauline of old, I was sent to make a tour of the garden.  I was still unimpressed.  The garden seemed so small to me after the immense enclosure of the Visitation at Mans [the Lisieux Carmel is one of the smallest Carmels in France], and, besides, everything seemed to me to be so poor.  I did not even think of the happiness of being with you.  I just wondered how I would succeed in spending my life within those four walls.

 Ah! Mother, I have found Jesus within these four walls and, in finding Him, I have found heaven!  Yes, it is here that I have passed the happiest years of my life.” 

Marie worked in the infirmary, the garden, and the kitchen during her life in Carmel.  She was deeply loved by all the sisters, and she helped take care of Mother Genevieve of St. Teresa, foundress of the Carmel, who called Marie "her ray of sunshine."  For these and other details, see "Marie, Sister of St. Therese," a short life written by her sister Pauline, Mother Agnes, translated by Roland Murphy. O. Carm. and Joachim Smet, O. Carm. and edited by Albert Dolan, O. Carm.  Carmelite Press, 1943.

Marie's life, like Therese's, was very hidden, but her visible part in the history of salvation is considerable, for it was she who asked her sister Pauline, Mother Agnes of Jesus, who was prioress, to instruct Therese to write the manuscript which became the first manuscript of "Story of a Soul" and she who asked Therese for a souvenir of her retreat.  That souvenir was Therese's beautiful manuscript "My vocation is love." 

"Saint Therese of Lisieux: A Gateway" opens a page on Facebook

 To reach more people who want to learn about St. Therese, the Web site "Saint Therese of Lisieux: A Gateway" has opened a page of the same name on Facebook.  Now that so many people spend much of their time online with Facebook, I want them to be able to be in touch with St. Therese there.  I will post status updates and links to the site and to other items of interest about Saint Therese there, as well as on this blog.  The Facebook page will deliver articles, videos, and photos about St. Therese and Blessed Louis and Zelie Martin to your news stream.  I hope it will attract new viewers to the Web site and will encourage conversation about the influence of the spirituality of St. Therese and of the Martin family in our lives.  Please visit us there!

The film "The Little Flower in South Africa" premieres on EWTN on October 1, 2011. See it on TV or online.

EWTN offers the premiere of their new film about the historic visit of the relics of St. Therese to South Africa in 2010, the first time the relics traveled to the continent of Africa.  View it tonight (Saturday, October 1) at 6 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.  You may view it on TV or online (live only) at http://www.ewtn.com/tv/index.asp

relicssttheresesouthafrica.jpg

Photo thanks to Archdiocesan News, Johannesburg

(http://sacns.scripturelink.net/2010/07/south-africa-st-thesese-relics-at.html)

The film is about 50 minutes long and is exceptionally well done.  I am glad I got up at 5:00 a.m. to see it.  It includes remarks by representatives of the Church in South Africa on St. Therese’s life and spirituality; a brief history of the Church in South Africa; footage of the reception of the reliquary all over South Africa; and personal reflections by Carmelites, Poor Clares, priests, and bishops on the influence of the visit of the reliquary and the significance of that powerful spiritual event for the people of South Africa.  It captures a unique moment in the recent history of the Theresian event.  I believe that reflecting on what Therese means to the people of South Africa is helping me to see more clearly what she means for me and for all of us. Watching it is a superb way to celebrate the feast of St. Therese and to be present to her mission today.

Please also note that at 10:00 p.m. tonight EWTN presents “Heart of the Matter, the Focus: The Relics of St. Therese of Lisieux Visit Great Britain.”   Various guests reflect on that phenomenon,  including “Mgr. Keith Barltrop, National Coordinator of the British tour of the relics of St. Therese of Lisieux – an attraction that has had an even greater draw than Pope John Paul's visit to Ireland in 1979 – [who] talks of the many graces received during the tour.” 

A gift from the Carmel of Lisieux for the feast of St. Therese of Lisieux

As a special gift for the feast of St.  Therese of Lisieux, the Archives of the Carmel of Lisieux graciously authorized me to share with you this contemporary photograph of the crown of roses Therese wore in death.

  This crown is visible in the photograph of Therese's body taken when it was laid out in the infirmary on October 1, 1897.  I thank the Carmelites of Lisieux for sharing this treasure with us.

To celebrate 100 years of Carmelite presence, the relics of St. Therese of Lisieux arrive in Peru

As part of the celebration of 100 years of the presence of the Order of Discalced Carmelites in Peru, the relics of St. Therese of Lisieux arrived in Peru on August 30, 2011.  They will remain in Peru until November 30, 2011.  This is the first time such an event has happened in Peru, a country with a missionary presence, and will be a time of pilgrimage for most of the country.  The visit of the relics is called “On a mission to Peru.”  The reliquary will embark on a great pilgrimage throughout Peru, visiting communities in the south in September, central Peru in October, and the north country in November.  The reliquary will be received by Carmelite communities and monasteries, the Institutes of Consecrated Life, and parishes in the areas of Abancay, Arequipa, Ayacucho Callao, Carabayllo, Chiclayo, Chimbote, Chosica, Chuquibamba, Cusco, Huacho, Huancayo, Huancavelica, Ica, Lima, Lurin, Piura, Trujillo, Puno, Tacna, Moquegua, and Yauyos.  "With her relics, Teresa is present: her person, her spirituality, her love for the Church, her spiritual message. Through this visit we try to get to know and rediscover the living Gospel of her doctrine, founded on love and trust.”  (adapted from Lima (Agenzia Fides), 8/13/11.

See photos.

Please see the national Web site (in Spanish) for the visit of the relics to Peru.