"The Teaching of St. Therese of Lisieux on Purgatory," by Father Hubert Van Dijk, ORC

In honor of the feast of All Souls, please visit "The Teaching of St. Therese of Lisieux on Purgatory," translated from the German.  This article was posted in English thanks to the Web site of the Secular Franciscan Order, and, of course, St. Therese's mother, Zelie Martin, was a secular Franciscan.  Read about Therese's belief that it was not necessary to pass through purgatory; she believed that the purifying fires of divine love were all-sufficient. 

A new monthly newsletter from "Saint Thérèse of Lisieux: A Gateway"

I am happy to announce the introduction of a new monthly newsletter from "Saint Therese of Lisieux: A Gateway."  The newsletter will highlight various "buried treasures" from the Web site, give news of events and publications about St. Therese and about the Martin family, and explore different themes.  Three issues have been published: one to promote the news of the publication in English of the letters of St. Therese's mother and father; one for the feast of St. Therese on October 1; and a special anniversary issue for October 19th, the third anniversary of the beatification of Louis and Zélie Martin and the fourteenth annniversary of Pope John Paul II's proclaiming St. Therese a Doctor of the Church.  To see these issues, visit the newsletter archive, and, if you want to subscribe, complete the form below.  Thank you.

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"St. Therese Touching Lives:" a short film of the 2008 visit of the relics of St. Therese to the Philippines

This less than five-minute film captures many vignettes of persons praying near the relics of St. Therese in 2008 in the Philippines, a country where she is very much loved.  The photos are set to the sound of Josh Groban singing "You Raise Me Up."  Unlike many such films, this one does not merely film crowds but concentrates on showing how individuals are moved by the visit of the reliquary. 

A Carmelite of Lisieux shares the story of her vocation

The Carmel of Lisieux, at its Web site, http://www.carmeldelisieux.fr.,  is posting each week the story of the vocation of one of the nuns who lives there now.  I thank the Carmel for permission to translate this story into English and to post it.  It is the story of an extern sister:

A life at the service of the pilgrims of Therese

I come from a Catholic family; my father had three sisters who were nuns, so, when his daughter also wanted to enter an order, it did not make him cry!  Since I was very little I wanted to be a nun.  It is on account of little Thérèse that I entered here, and then I had an aunt who was an extern sister here, that is to say a Cramelite who does not live within the enclosure and who is responsible for the monastery’s relations with the world outside.  When I was very little I heard my aunt speaking of Thérèse .  That is how I received the vocation of being an extern sister.

I have had this vocation since I was eighteen months old!  In 1927 my parents took me to the speakroom to see Mother Agnès, the older sister of Thérèse.  When I saw the grilles, I was so afraid of them that I rolled on the floor!  Mother Agnès said to my parents:  “Don’t worry, she will come back to us; she will come back to us!”  And 22 years later, I came as an extern sister, for I want to be at the service of the pilgrims of little Thérèse.  To welcome them at the door, to accompany them at the big ceremonies, to pray in the chapel with them, it is my joy  to receive whole pilgrimages.  I entered the Carmel of Lisieux for little Thérèse, but, before all else, it is to love Jesus and to make him loved.

Thérèse

For me Thérèse is a big sister who has always accompanied me.  Since I was born: my delivery was very difficult and they feared losing me; my father entrusted me to Thérèse  and made a vow to her to give me her name if I survived.  She has always been everything for me.

My favorite saint:

Saint Joseph! I would like all the little boys to be called Joseph as I have a great devotion for him.

Sentence of the Bible:

"As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you .  Remain in my love" (Jn 15: 9).  To remain in his love, to feel oneself loved by Jesus, to have the desire to love him also, that’s what brought me here.  To remain in his love, this is my vocation as a Carmelite.

My great desire, it is to die for love.  I often repeat the last verse of  Thérèse’s poem “Vivre d’Amour” (“To Live by Love”):

 

Dying of Love is what I hope for.

When I shall see my bonds broken,

My God will be my Great Reward.

I don’t desire to possess any other goods.

I want to be set on fire with his Love.

I want to see Him, to unite myself to Him forever.

That is my Heaven . . . . that is my destiny:

Living on Love!!! . . . . . .

Three years ago today Zelie and Louis Martin were declared blessed, and 14 years ago St. Therese of Lisieux was named a Doctor of the Universal Church

On October 19 the world received two special graces through the Martin family.  On that date in 2008, Louis and Zelie Martin were declared "blessed" as a couple.  And on October 19, 1997, their daughter  Therese was proclaimed a doctor of the Church.  Please join me in thanking God for these graces.

It is hard to believe that, three years ago today, I was in France to celebrate the beatification.  I spent the day of the vigil with other pilgrims in Alencon, ending with a Pontifical Mass in the church in which Louis and Zelie were married.  For a short account of that deeply graced pilgrimage please read "Tracing the Lives of Zelie Guerin and Louis Martin," published in the Carmelite Review.

Now, only three years after the beatification, we have the joy of being able to distribute the letters of Louis and Zelie, "A Call to a Deeper Love," in English!  The need for married saints is so great that I hope this book will make it possible for the English-speaking world to take Zelie and Louis to their hearts and to see how much they have to say to spouses, working couples, business owners, parents, caregivers, the bereaved, the dying, and all those engaged in the struggle to "serve God first." 

Read more about the beatification of Louis and Zelie. And read more about Therese as a Doctor of the Church.