Life of St Teresa of Jesus - Teresa of Avila (classic books for 11 year olds TXT) 📗
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seriously tried, and I do not see how I could imagine any one of
my virtues to be mine, for it is not long since I was for many
years without any at all; and now so far as I am concerned, I do
nothing but receive graces, without rendering any service in
return, being the most worthless creature in the world. And so
it is that I consider at times how all, except myself, make
progress; I am good for nothing in myself. This is not humility
only, but the simple truth; and the knowledge of my being so
worthless makes me sometimes think with fear that I must be under
some delusion. Thus I see clearly that all my gain has come
through the revelations and the raptures, in which I am nothing
myself, and do no more to effect them than the canvas does for
the picture painted on it. This makes me feel secure and be at
rest; and I place myself in the hands of God, and trust my
desires; for I know for certain that my desires are to die for
Him, and to lose all ease, and that whatever may happen.
16. There are days wherein I remember times without number the
words of St. Paul, [5]—though certainly they are not true of
me,—that I have neither life, nor speech, nor will of my own,
but that there is One in me by whom I am directed and made
strong; and I am, as it were, beside myself, and thus life is a
very grievous burden to me. And the greatest oblation I make to
God, as the highest service on my part, is that I, when I feel it
so painfully to be absent from Him, am willing to live on for the
love of Him. I would have my life also full of great
tribulations and persecutions; now that I am unprofitable, I
should like to suffer; and I would endure all the tribulations in
the world to gain ever so little more merit—I mean, by a more
perfect doing of His will.
17. Everything that I have learnt in prayer, though it may be two
years previously, I have seen fulfilled. What I see and
understand of the grandeurs of God, and of the way He has shown
them, is so high, that I scarcely ever begin to think of them but
my understanding fails me,—for I am as one that sees things far
higher than I can understand,—and I become recollected.
18. God so keeps me from offending Him, that I am verily amazed
at times. I think I discern the great care He takes of me,
without my taking scarcely any care at all, being as I was,
before these things happened to me, a sea of wickedness and sins,
and without a thought that I was mistress enough of myself to
leave them undone. And the reason why I would have this known is
that the great power of God might be made manifest. Unto Him be
praise for ever and ever! Amen.
Jesus.
This Relation here set forth, not in my handwriting, is one that
I gave to my confessor, and which he with his own hand copied,
without adding or diminishing a word. He was a most spiritual
man and a theologian: I discussed the state of my soul with him,
and he with other learned men, among whom was Father Mancio. [6]
They found nothing in it that is not in perfect agreement with
the holy writings. This makes me calm now, though, while God is
leading me by this way, I feel that it is necessary for me to put
no trust whatever in myself. And so I have always done, though
it is painful enough. You, my father, will be careful that all
this goes under the seal of confession, according to my request.
1. Addressed, it is believed, to her confessor, F. Pedro Ibañez.
This Relation corresponds with ch. xxxiv. of the Life (De
la Fuente).
2. See Life, ch. xxvii.
3. See Life, ch. xxxi. § 15.
4. The Saint is supposed to refer to the troubles she endured
during the foundation of the monastery of St. Joseph.
5. Gal. ii. 20: “Vivo autem, jam non ego; vivit vero in
me Christus.”
6. A celebrated Dominican, professor of theology in
Salamanca (Bouix).
Relation III.
Of Various Graces Granted to the Saint from the Year 1568 to
1571 Inclusive.
1. When I was in the monastery of Toledo, and some people were
advising me not to allow any but noble persons to be buried
there, [1] our Lord said to me: “Thou wilt be very inconsistent,
My daughter, if thou regardest the laws of the world. Look at
Me, poor and despised of men: are the great people of the world
likely to be great in My eyes? or is it descent or virtue that is
to make you esteemed?”
2. After Communion, the second day of Lent, in St. Joseph of
Malagon, our Lord Jesus Christ appeared to me in an imaginary
vision, as He is I wont to do; and when I was looking upon Him I
saw that He had on His head, instead of the crown of thorns, a
crown of great splendour, over the part where the wounds of that
crown must have been. And as I have a great devotion to the
crowning with thorns, I was exceedingly consoled, and began to
think how great the pain must have been because of the many
wounds, and to be sorrowful. Our Lord told me not to be sad
because of those wounds, but for the many wounds which men
inflict upon Him now. I asked Him what I could do by way of
reparation; for I was resolved to do anything. He replied: “This
is not the time for rest;” that I must hasten on the foundations,
for He would take His rest with the souls which entered the
monasteries; that I must admit all who offered themselves,
because there were many souls that did not serve Him because they
had no place wherein to do it; that those monasteries which were
to be founded in small towns should be like this; that the merit
of those in them would be as great, if they only desired to do
that which was done in the other houses; that I must contrive to
put them all under the jurisdiction of one superior, [2] and take
care that anxieties about means of bodily maintenance did not
destroy interior peace, for He would help us, so that we should
never be in want of food. Especial care was to be had of the
sick sisters; the prioress who did not provide for and comfort
the sick was like the friends of Job: He sent them sickness for
the good of their souls, and careless superiors risked the
patience of their nuns. I was to write the history of the
foundation of the monasteries. I was thinking how there was
nothing to write about in reference to the foundation of Medina,
when He asked me, what more did I want to see than that the
foundation there was miraculous? By this He meant to say that He
alone had done it, when it seemed impossible. [3] I resolved to
execute His commands.
3. Our Lord told me something I was to tell another, and as I was
considering how I did not understand it at all,—though I prayed
to Him, and was thinking it might be from Satan,—He said to me
that it was not, and that He Himself would warn me when the
time came.
4. Once, when I was thinking how much more purely they live who
withdraw themselves from all business, and how ill it goes with
me, and how many faults I must be guilty of, when I have business
to transact, I heard this: “It cannot be otherwise, My daughter;
but strive thou always after a good intention in all things, and
detachment; lift up thine eyes to Me, and see that all thine
actions may resemble Mine.”
5. Thinking how it was that I scarcely ever fell into a trance of
late in public, I heard this: “It is not necessary now; thou art
sufficiently esteemed for My purpose; we are considering the
weakness of the wicked.”
6. One Tuesday after the Ascension, [4] having prayed for awhile
after Communion in great distress, because I was so distracted
that I could fix my mind on nothing, I complained of our poor
nature to our Lord. The fire began to kindle in my soul, and I
saw, as it seemed to me, the most Holy Trinity [5] distinctly
present in an intellectual vision, whereby my soul understood
through a certain representation, as a figure of the truth, so
far as my dulness could understand, how God is Three and One; and
thus it seemed to me that all the Three Persons spoke to me, that
They were distinctly present in my soul, saying unto me “that
from that day forth I should see that my soul had grown better in
three ways, and that each one of the Three Persons had bestowed
on me a distinct grace,—in charity, in suffering joyfully, in a
sense of that charity in my soul, accompanied with fervour.”
I learnt the meaning of those words of our Lord, that the Three
Divine Persons will dwell in the soul that is in a state of
grace. [6] Afterwards giving thanks to our Lord for so great a
mercy, and finding myself utterly unworthy of it, I asked His
Majesty with great earnestness how it was that He, after showing
such mercies to me, let me go out of His hand, and allowed me to
become so wicked; for on the previous day I had been in great
distress on account of my sins, which I had set before me. I saw
clearly then how much our Lord on His part had done, ever since
my infancy, to draw me to Himself by means most effectual, and
yet, that all had failed. Then I had a clear perception of the
surpassing love of God for us, in that He forgives us all this
when we turn to Him, and for me more than for any other, for many
reasons. The vision of the Three Divine Persons—one God—made
so profound an impression on my soul, that if it had continued it
would have been impossible for me not to be recollected in so
divine a company. What I saw and heard besides is beyond my
power to describe.
7. Once, when I was about to communicate,—it was shortly before
I had this vision,—the Host being still in the ciborium, for It
had not yet been given me, I saw something like a dove, which
moved its wings with a sound. It disturbed me so much, and so
carried me away out of myself, that it was with the utmost
difficulty I received the Host. All this took place in
St. Joseph of Avila. It was Father Francis Salcedo who was
giving me the most Holy Sacrament. Hearing Mass another day, I
saw our Lord glorious in the Host; He said to me that his
sacrifice was acceptable unto Him.
8. I heard this once: “The time will come when many miracles will
be wrought in this church; it will be called the holy church.”
It was in St. Joseph of Avila, in the year 1571.
9. I retain to this day, which is the Commemoration of St. Paul,
the presence of the Three Persons of which I spoke in the
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