Today we honor an amazing saint: Teresa of Avila! ✝️
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October 15, 2024

Dear John,

 

Today’s Saint of the Day, Teresa of Avila, takes me back to the time of my life when I first encountered her seminal work The Interior Castle. This was a transformational book for me, as I was coming from a spiritual background in which I was told not to trust my heart or mind, my emotions and thoughts—all these interior aspects of myself—for they were deemed “fallen” and “sinful.” But here was St. Teresa calling our interior world a “castle,” suggesting that our journey into this castle could help us awaken more deeply to our inherent union with God. A wonderful course on The Interior Castle from the Center for Action and Contemplation helped me gain a better understanding for this complex, beautiful work. 

 

I have learned over the years that this journey inward can be scary at times. It may require voyaging down dark hallways or opening doors that have been locked for decades. However, I have found St. Teresa’s metaphor to be very real in my life. When I dare journey inward, curiously and compassionately, I learn more about who I am and whose I am as I awaken to the truth of my identity in Christ. Sometimes this entails confronting the lies that are preventing me from stepping into this fullness. God is with us every step of the way as we venture into our own interior castles in search of our true selves.

 

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Blessings, 

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Stephen Copeland

Book Editor, Franciscan Media

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SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for October 15: Teresa of Avila

(March 28, 1515 – October 4, 1582)

 

Listen to Saint Teresa of Avila’s Story Here

Teresa lived in an age of exploration as well as political, social, and religious upheaval. It was the 16th century, a time of turmoil and reform. She was born before the Protestant Reformation and died almost 20 years after the closing of the Council of Trent.

 

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 herself, 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 and The 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.

 

Reflection

Ours is a time of turmoil, a time of reform, and a time of liberation. Modern women have in Teresa a challenging example. Promoters of renewal, promoters of prayer, all have in Teresa a woman to reckon with, one whom they can admire and imitate.

 

Saint Teresa of Avila is the Patron Saint of:

Relief from headaches

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MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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St. Teresa of Avila: Prayer Coach

 

St. Teresa’s prayer life did culminate in the “spiritual rain” of mystical union with Christ. Evidence of her celestial transports is present throughout her writings. She sometimes interrupted everything to converse with Jesus in the eloquent language of prayer. Yet she remained remarkably down-to-earth for a woman who experienced divine rapture on a regular basis. At her more advanced stages of spiritual life, Teresa’s union with Jesus was so profound that she was aware of his presence in her soul every minute.

 

This is why she thought nothing of pausing to speak with him every now and again. By sharing these intimate moments in her writings, St.Teresa has left us a beautiful testimony to the fruits of loving Jesus with the whole soul.

 

—from St. Anthony Messenger‘s “St. Teresa of Avila on Prayer“
by Gina Loehr

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Teresa, the Tenacious, Pray for Me!

 

Reflect

If I had one word to describe St. Teresa of Avila it would be tenacious. There is a well-known story of her traveling once back to her convent during a heavy rainstorm. She slipped down an embankment and fell into the mud where begrudgingly she mumbled, “If this is how you treat your friends, no wonder why you have so few them!” On a much deeper level, Teresa was a mystic, counter-Reformation author, and a mystical theologian of the contemplative life through mental prayer.

 

Pray

Jesus my friend,
Fill me with some of the holy tenacity that you infused on your daughter Teresa.
Through her words and actions,
she helped reform the Church at a time it was most needed.
Show me where you want me to help bring about reform
in my community, my family, or the Church.
Amen.

 

Act

Spend some time reflecting on this prayer attributed to St. Teresa of Avila: “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.” Where do you need these words most in your life right now? How might they be a blessing to you?

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Patricia Breen. Learn more here!

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