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St. Teresa Margaret |
Quotes from and about Saint
Teresa Margaret. [1]
“Lord,
I shall be yours, whatever the cost, despite all repugnance.” Page 41.
Preparing to
enter Carmel
...
the Prioress suggested that, for one intending to
enter Carmel, she could think of no better practice than “to accustom herself
to mortify her own will in all things, however trifling, and to yield willingly
her own rights in order to convenience others, pleasantly agreeing with their
opinions, treating all with a genuine kindness, thus making a continual and
entire sacrifice of the self to God.” ... Anna Maria (St. Teresa
Margaret) had now, from an authoritative source, the secret of the essential
spirit of Carmel: the holocaust of one’s will, rather than the rigid adherence
to exterior acts and mortifications... Page
42
She
who is silent everywhere finds peace. Page 74
She
who desires peace must see, suffer and be silent.
Pages 74 & 109.
Rather
than continually dwelling on her misery and worthlessness, she merely let
all thought of self fall away before the infinite majesty of God; and truly
the most profitable and genuine way of despising self is to forget oneself
altogether. Page 79.
However, self-knowledge
unlike self-love does not depress with the sight of one’s imperfections. “I
can do all things in Him who gives me strength,” she repeated with St. Paul,
refusing to be downcast. God could and would supply all she lacked, and Father
Ildefonse testified: “The effect of self-knowledge did not discourage her, but
rather forced her to throw herself on the goodness and mercy of God. She said to
me once, ‘From myself, nothing; from God, everything ... the smaller and weaker
I am in myself, the richer and stronger I shall be in Him ... He shall be the
more glorious in His mercy as I am more despicable in my sins and
nothingness.’” Page 80
On
her practice of poverty and detachment, Teresa Margaret framed the following
counsel: “Always receive with equal contentment from God’s hand either
consolations or sufferings, peace or distress, health or illness. Ask nothing,
refuse nothing, but always be ready to do and to suffer anything that comes from
His Providence.” Page 81
She
who does not know how to conform her will to that of others will never be
perfect. Page 83
Let
the nuns take great care not to excuse themselves for their faults except
when absolutely necessary. By
acting in this way they will make great progress in humility.
Page 84.
“Knowing
that a bride cannot be pleasing to her spouse unless she endeavors to become
what he wishes her to be ... I will always think of my neighbors as beings
made in your likeness, produced by your divine love, redeemed at the price
of your precious Blood, looking upon them with true Christian charity, which
you command. I will sympathize with their troubles, excuse their faults,
always speak well of them, and never willingly fail in charity towards them
in thought, word, or deed.” Page 97
I
am resolved to give complete obedience in everything without exception, not
only to my superiors, but also to my equals and inferiors, so as to learn
from you, my God, who made yourself obedient in far more difficult
circumstances than those in which I find myself.” Page 97
“Habitual examination of
conscience”
“I propose to have no other purpose in all my activities,
either interior or exterior, than the motive of love alone, by constantly
asking myself: ‘Now what am I doing in this action? Do I love God?’ If I
should notice any obstacle to pure love, I shall take myself in hand and recall
that I must seek to return my love for His love.”
Page 131
“Since
nature resists good, even though the spirit may be willing, I resolve to enter
upon a continual warfare against self. The arms with which I shall do battle are
prayer, the presence of God, silence; yet I am aware how little I am able to use
these weapons. Nevertheless I shall arm myself with complete confidence in you,
patience, humility and conformity with your divine will ... but who shall help
me to fight a continual battle against enemies such as those which make war on
me? You, my God, have declared yourself my captain; you have raised the standard
of the Cross, saying: ‘Take up the cross and follow in my footsteps.’ To
correspond with this invitation, I promise to resist your love no longer;
rather, I will follow you to Calvary without hesitation.” Page 132
On
the Hidden Life
St. Teresa Margaret can almost be named "the saint of the hidden
life," so
thoroughly did she absorb its meaning and mystery. The life of Jesus and
Mary at Nazareth is indeed the model par excellence for all religious, but
this silent and self-effacing saint penetrated deeply into it, and gave its
application such wide horizons that she can really be said to have proposed
something essentially original.
It is a commonplace to use the life at Nazareth as a type of the Hidden
Life, because the enclosed religious is completely withdrawn from the world.
But in this sense Jesus, Mary, and Joseph were not "hidden," at
least not
from their neighbors and the inhabitants of Nazareth and its environs.
Probably, like small country towns the world over, everybody knew and
discussed the least event around the village well, and anything that happened in Joseph's house would be common knowledge, as with everybody
else. But where one can claim that their hiddenness was absolute was that
while all their exterior activities were watched, and every visitor noted,
so well was their interior life concealed from all eyes, that they passed
for the most ordinary and unremarkable among a community that was in itself
insignificant. The revelation of miraculous powers in Jesus was received
with shocked disbelief. They had known him since childhood and could vouch
for his likeableness, kindness, generosity, no doubt - but not sanctity, let
alone divinity!
This was Teresa Margaret's method of practicing the "hidden life."
Everyone
in the community saw all she did, talked with her, worked with her, and were
warm in their praise of her goodness and charity. But the real depths of her
interior life were completely hidden and were one day to prove a revelation
and surprise to these intimate daily companions. She passed every minute
under their very noses, so to speak, but managed to remain unnoticed, keeping her soul's secret for God alone. Page 75
“Obedience,”
said St. Gregory the Great, “is rightly placed before all other sacrifices,
for in offering a victim as sacrifice, one offers a life that is not one’s
own; but when one obeys one is immolating one’s own will.”… One may leave home, family, friends, renounce social position
and material possessions, detach oneself from every created thing, but unless he
dispossesses himself of his own will, the sacrifice is worthless … [and Teresa
Margaret] developed what one biographer described as “the art of never doing
her own will.” …
She
had a strong character and a warm, ardent nature, and she seemed to sense that
the conflict between her own rebellious temperament and her desire for
sanctity would be resolved by the perfection of her submission.
Pages 85-86
“At the foot of the Cross,” wrote Father Gabriel of St. Mary
Magdalene, O.C.D., “suffering becomes more a proof of love than a punishment.
Teresa Margaret became a saint not through multiplying penitential exercise, but
by having effected an uninterrupted adhesion of her will to the crucified
Redeemer.” Page 135
Lest the fact that sympathy might provide some consolation - for it is
well-known that a trial shared loses much of its cutting edge - she endeavored
to conceal from those around her any pain or sorrow she endured, or the
discomfort of fatigue, the weather, minor indispositions, or the small
misunderstandings and inevitable frictions of community life. She continued to
practice the incessant mortification of consistently presenting a smiling and
serene exterior no matter how harassed she might be by interior sufferings or
trials. Page 136
The grace
of Deus caritas est
One Sunday after Pentecost, on the 28th of June, 1767, when
Sister Teresa Margaret was officiating in choir, she read out the little chapter
at Terce: “Deus caritas est.” She had heard these words repeatedly, Sunday
after Sunday, for the past three years, but now it seemed as though she
understood them for the first time - or rather, her understanding of them was
raised to an entirely different plane. The verse struck her with the force of a
revelation: “God is love; he who dwells in love dwells in God, and God in
him.” This dwelling had been the goal of all her striving, seeking as she did
to imitate the interior life and hidden operations of Christ. From that day
onwards the necessity of proving her love by deeds became so compelling a force
that it was obvious to her sisters that some special grace had been given her.
“Nobody comes to the Father except through Jesus,” she said. “To come to
God who is everything and consequently all good, no fatigue must seem to us too
great; we must not be put off either by the difficulties we meet on the way, but
accept bitterness and welcome every kind of cross with eagerness. By these
means, which are precisely those of Jesus Christ, it is not difficult to come to
the true God, to live in charity, to walk in love.”
Despite her customary reticence and assiduity in concealing any graces or
spiritual favors, the fact that something out of the ordinary had taken place on
that Sunday morning was apparent to all. For days the young nun seemed quite out
of herself, and the sudden illumination that the words had sent flooding into
her soul is difficult to explain, because of the seeming triviality of the
incident and her own habitual silence about such things. It marked the beginning
of a new stage in her spiritual life, as Father Ildefonse was quick to observe.
From this time, he noticed that the quiet, self-possessed and reserved sister
appeared to withdraw even more into herself, becoming engrossed in a silent,
determined, and conscious awareness of the presence within her, and her
endeavors to attain to perfect union with Him. However, this withdrawal was a
purely spiritual matter, and there was no suggestion of cutting herself adrift
from the community, for she continued to give herself wholeheartedly to all, in
her services as infirmarian, in companionship and sympathy at recreation, and in
never avoiding her share of work on the grounds of seeking more solitude.
Speaking to Father Ildefonse one day, she tried to express to him something of
the significance those words God is love now held for her, but she became almost
incoherent in her emotion. “Just as the soul in the state of grace (which is
charity) is in God, God is in her. Just as the soul lives the life of God, so
does God in a certain way live IN her. And so it is that between them there is
but a single life, a single love ... God alone! The difference is that God has
all by essence, whereas the creature has it only by participation and grace.”
And, adds Father Ildefonse, “Note that these words came from a simple child
who had never studied and knew no theology apart from what her instinct taught
her.” page 128
Father
Ildephonse reflecting on her death remarked “she could not have lived very
much longer so great was the strength of the love of God in
her”. Page 73*
[1] All quotes
are taken from God is Love
(1964 edition)
unless marked with an '*' in which case they are taken from From
the Sacred Heart to the Trinity.
last
edited on 13 Nov 2004 |