Life of St Teresa of Jesus - Teresa of Avila (classic books for 11 year olds TXT) 📗
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and told him everything. He replied, that there was nothing in
all this that concerned his office, because everything that she
saw and heard confirmed her the more in the Catholic faith, in
which she always was, and is, firm, with most earnest desires for
the honour of God and the good of souls, willing to suffer death
many times for one of them.
9. He told her, when he saw how distressed she was, to give an
account of it all, and of her whole life, without omitting
anything, to the Master Avila, who was a man of great learning in
the way of prayer, and to rest content with the answer he should
give. She did so, and described her sins and her life. He wrote
to her and comforted her, giving her great security. The account
I gave was such that all those learned men who saw it—they were
my confessors—said that it was very profitable for instruction
in spiritual things; and they commanded her to make copies of it,
and write another little book [6] for her daughters,—she was
prioress,—wherein she might give them some instructions.
10. Notwithstanding all this, she was not without fears at times,
for she thought that spiritual men also might be deceived like
herself. She told her confessor that he might discuss these
things with certain learned men, though they were not much given
to prayer, for she had no other desire but that of knowing
whether what she experienced was in conformity with the sacred
writings or not. Now and then she took comfort in thinking
that—though she herself, because of her sins, deserved to fall
into delusions—our Lord would not suffer so many good men,
anxious to give her light, to be led into error.
11. Having this in view, she began to communicate with fathers of
the Order of the glorious St. Dominic, to which, before these
things took place, she had been to confession—she does not say
to them, but to the Order. [7] These are they with whom she
afterwards had relations. The Father Fra Vicente Barron, at that
time Consultor of the Holy Office, heard her confessions for
eighteen months in Toledo, and he had done so very many years
before these things began. He was a very learned man.
He reassured her greatly, as did also the fathers of the Society
spoken of before. All used to say, If she does not sin against
God, and acknowledges her own misery, what has she to be afraid
of? She confessed to the Father Fra Pedro Ibañez, who was reader
in Avila; to the Father-Master Fra Dominic Bañes, who is now in
Valladolid as rector of the college of St. Gregory, I confessed
for six years, and whenever I had occasion to do so communicated
with him by letter; also to the Master Chaves; to the
Father-Master Fra Bartholomew of Medina, professor in Salamanca,
of whom she knew that he thought ill of her; for she, having
heard this, thought that he, better than any other, could tell
her if she was deceived, because he had so little confidence in
her. This was more than two years ago. She contrived to go to
confession to him, and gave him a full account of everything
while she remained there; and he saw what she had written, [8]
for the purpose of attaining to a better understanding of the
matter. He reassured her so much, and more than all the rest,
and remained her very good friend.
12. She went to confession also to Fra Philip de Meneses, when
she founded the monastery of Valladolid, for he was rector of the
college of St. Gregory. He, having before that heard of her
state, had gone to Avila, that he might speak to her,—it was an
act of great charity,—being desirous of ascertaining whether she
was deluded, so that he might enlighten her, and, if she was not,
defend her when he heard her spoken against; and he was
much satisfied.
13. She also conferred particularly with Salinas, Dominican
Provincial, a man of great spirituality; with another licentiate
named Lunar, who was prior of St. Thomas of Avila; and, in
Segovia, with a reader, Fra Diego de Yangües.
14. Of these Dominicans some never failed to give themselves
greatly to prayer, and perhaps all did. Some others also she
consulted; for in so many years, and because of the fear she was
in, she had opportunities of doing so, especially as she went
about founding monasteries in so many places. Her spirit was
tried enough, for everybody wished to be able to enlighten her,
and thereby reassured her and themselves. She always, at all
times, wished to submit herself to whatever they enjoined her,
and she was therefore distressed when, as to these spiritual
things, she could not obey them. Both her own prayer, and that
of the nuns she has established, are always carefully directed
towards the propagation of the faith; and it was for that
purpose, and for the good of her Order, that she began her
first monastery.
15. She used to say that, if any of these things tended to lead
her against the Catholic faith and the law of God, she would not
need to seek for learned men nor tests, because she would see at
once that they came from Satan. She never undertook anything
merely because it came to her in prayer; on the contrary, when
her confessors bade her do the reverse, she did so without being
in the least troubled thereat, and she always told them
everything. For all that they told her that these things came
from God, she never so thoroughly believed them that she could
swear to it herself, though it did seem to her that they were
spiritually safe, because of the effects thereof, and of the
great graces which she at times received; but she always desired
virtues more than anything else; and this it is that she has
charged her nuns to desire, saying to them that the most humble
and mortified will be the most spiritual.
16. All that is told and written she communicated to the
Father-Master Fra Dominic Bañes, who is now in Valladolid, and
who is the person with whom she has had, and has still, the most
frequent communications. He sent her writings to the Holy Office
in Madrid, so it is said. In all this she submits herself to the
Catholic faith and the Roman Church. Nobody has found fault with
them, because these things are not in the power of any man, and
our Lord does not require what is impossible.
17. The reason why so much is known about her is that, as she was
in fear about herself, and described her state to so many, these
talked to one another on the subject and also the accident that
happened to what she had written. [9] This has been to her a
very grievous torment and cross, and has cost her many tears.
She says that this distress is not the effect of humility, but of
the causes already mentioned. Our Lord seems to have given
permission [10] for this torture for if one spoke more harshly of
her than others, by little and little he spoke more kindly
of her.
18. She took the greatest pains not to submit the state of her
soul to any one who she thought would believe that these things
came from God, for she was instantly afraid that the devil would
deceive them both. If she saw any one timid about these things,
to him she laid bare her secrets with the greater joy; though
also it gave her pain when, for the purpose of trying her, these
things were treated with contempt, for she thought some were
really from God, and she would not have people, even if they had
good cause, condemn them so absolutely; neither would she have
them believe that all were from God; and because she knew
perfectly well that delusion was possible, therefore it was that
she never thought herself altogether safe in a matter wherein
there might be danger.
19. She used to strive with all her might never in any way to
offend God, and was always obedient; and by these means she
thought she might obtain her deliverance, by the help of God,
even if Satan were the cause.
20. Ever since she became subject to these supernatural
visitations, her spirit is always inclined to seek after that
which is most perfect, and she had almost always a great desire
to suffer; and in the persecutions she underwent, and they were
many, she was comforted, and had a particular affection for her
persecutors. She had a great desire to be poor and lonely, and
to depart out of this land of exile in order to see God.
Through these effects, and others like them, she began to find
peace, thinking that a spirit which could leave her with these
virtues could not be an evil one, and they who had the charge of
her soul said so; but it was a peace that came from diminished
weariness, not from the cessation of fear.
21. The spirit she is of never urged her to make any of these
things known, but to be always obedient. [11] As it has been
said already, [12] she never saw anything with her bodily eyes,
but in a way so subtile and so intellectual that at first she
sometimes thought that all was the effect of imagination; at
other times she could not think so. These things were not
continual, but occurred for the most part when she was in some
trouble: as on one occasion, when for some days she had to bear
unendurable interior pains, and a restlessness of soul arising
out of the fear that she was deluded by Satan, as it is described
at length in the account she has given of it, [13] and where her
sins, for they have been so public, are mentioned with the rest:
for the fear she was in made her forget her own good name.
22. Being thus in distress such as cannot be described, at the
mere hearing interiorly these words, [14] “It is I, be not
afraid,” her soul became so calm, courageous, and confident, that
she could not understand whence so great a blessing had come; for
her confessor had not been able—and many learned men, with many
words, had not been able—to give her that peace and rest which
this one word had given her. And thus, at other times, some
vision gave her strength, for without that she could not have
borne such great trials and contradictions, together with
infirmities without number, and which she still has to bear,
though they are not so many,—for she is never free from some
suffering or other, more or less intense. Her ordinary state is
constant pain, with many other infirmities, though since she
became a nun they are more troublesome, if she is doing anything
in the service of our Lord. And the mercies He shows her pass
quickly out of memory, though she often dwells on those
mercies,—but she is not able to dwell so long upon these as upon
her sins; these are always a torment to her, most commonly as
filth smelling foully.
23. That her sins are so many, and her service of God so scanty,
must be the reason why she is not tempted to vainglory.
There never was anything in any of these spiritual visitations
that was not wholly pure and clean, nor does she think it can be
otherwise if the spirit be good and the visitations supernatural,
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