Her Life at Lisieux Carmel
Marie
Martin, the oldest daughter of the family,
joined her sister Pauline at the Lisieux
Carmel in 1886. Leonie Martin entered the
Visitation Convent at Caen the following
year. Therese then sought permission from
her father to join Marie and Pauline at the
Lisieux Convent.
Louis was probably expecting the request,
but it saddened him nevertheless. Three of
his girls had already entered religious
life. But, characteristically generous, he
not only granted Therese's request, but
worked zealously to help her realize it.
She was
not yet fifteen when she approached the
Carmelite authorities again for permission
to enter. Again she was refused. The
priest-director advised her to return when
she was twenty-one. "Of course," he added,
"you can always see the bishop. I am only
his delegate." The priest did not realize
what kind of girl he was dealing with.
To his
dying day, Bishop Hugonin of Bayeux never
forgot her. She came to his office with her
father one rainy day and put her surprising
request before him. "You are not yet fifteen
and you wish this?" the bishop questioned.
"I wished it since the dawn of reason,"
young Therese declared. Louis' support of
her request amazed the bishop. His
Excellency had never seen this type of
support before. "A father as eager to give
his child to God," he remarked, "as this
child was eager to offer herself to him."
Just before the interview, Therese had put
up her hair, thinking this would make her
look older. This amused the bishop, and he
never spoke about Therese in later years
without recounting her ploy. Although
charmed by her, Bishop Hugonin did not
immediately grant Therese's request. He
wanted time to consider it, and advised
Therese and her father that he would write
them regarding his decision.
Therese
had planned that, should the Bayeux trip
fail, she would go to the Pope himself. Thus
in November, 1887, Louis took his daughters,
Therese and Celine, to Italy with a group of
French pilgrims. Catholics from all over the
world were journeying to the Eternal City,
to celebrate Leo XIII's Golden Jubilee as a
priest. In her autobiography, Therese
sketched a charming picture of her travels
through Southern Europe. In Rome she was
enamored of the Coliseum. Its history of
Christian martyrdom stirred the very roots
of her being. Once inside the Coliseum, the
two sisters ignored regulations prohibiting
visitors from descending through the ruined
structure to the arena floor, sneaked away
from the tour group, climbed across barriers
and down the ruins to kneel and pray on the
Coliseum floor. Gathering up a few stones as
relics, they slipped back to the tour. No
one, except their father, noted their
absence.
The great
day of the audience with Pope Leo XIII came
at the end of their week in Rome. On Sunday,
November 20, 1887, "they told us on the
Pope's behalf that it was forbidden to speak
as this would prolong the audience too much.
I turned toward my dear Celine for advice:
'Speak!' she said. A moment later I was at
the Holy Father's feet....Lifting
tear-filled eyes to his face I cried out:
'Most Holy Father, I have a great favor to
ask you!....Holy Father, in honor of your
jubilee, permit me to enter Carmel at the
age of fifteen.'"
Father
Reverony, the leader of the French
pilgrimage, stared stonily at this bold
little girl, in surprise and displeasure.
"Most Holy Father," the priest said coldly,
"this is a child who wants to enter Carmel
at the age of fifteen. The superiors are
considering the matter at the moment."
"Well, my child," the Holy Father replied,
"do what the superiors tell you." "Resting
my hands on his knees," Therese continued,
"I made a final effort, saying, 'Oh, Holy
Father, if you say yes, everybody will
agree!' He gazed at me speaking these words
and stressing each syllable: 'Go - go - you
will enter if God wills it.'"
Therese
did not want to leave the Holy Father's
presence, so the papal guards had to lift
her up and carry the tearful young girl to
the door. There they gave her a medal of Leo
XIII. Her old nurse, Victoire, probably
could have told the Pope he should not have
been surprised. Victoire had seen Therese in
some rare displays of determination.
CARMEL
On
New Year's day, 1888, the prioress of the
Lisieux Carmel advised Therese she would be
received into the monastery, but that she
had to be patient and wait a little bit
longer. On April 9, 1888, an emotional and
tearful, but determined Therese Martin said
good-bye to her home and her family. She was
going to live "for ever and ever" in the
desert with Jesus and twenty-four enclosed
companions: she was fifteen years and three
months old. The only cloud on her horizon
was the worsening condition of her father,
Louis, who had developed cerebral
arteriosclerosis. Celine remained at home to
care for their father during his long and
final illness. The good father was growing
senile. Once in June of 1888, he wandered
from his home at Lisieux and was lost for
three days, eventually turning up at Le
Havre. In August, after a series of strokes,
Louis became paralyzed.
Many years
earlier, when Therese was a little girl, she
would peer out of an attic window. Therese
loved reveling in the glory of the day. One
day however, while her father was in Alencon
on business, she suddenly saw in the garden
below the stooped and twisted figure of a
man. She froze in terror. "Papa, Papa" she
cried out. Her sister, Marie, who was
nearby, heard the unmistakable note of panic
in Therese's cry and ran to her. The figure
in the garden disappeared. Marie assured her
it was nothing and told her to forget
everything that had happened. But the vision
continued to cling like a sad portent in the
corner of Therese's mind for the next
fourteen years. Now, with her father
paralyzed, the meaning of Therese's vision
in the garden so long ago had became
apparent at last.
Louis
however, rallied his strength, and managed
to attend the ceremonies of Therese's
clothing in the Carmelite habit on January
10, 1889. Shortly thereafter, on February
12th, Louis was taken to the hospital after
an attack of dementia. Seeing her father's
humiliation hurt Therese deeply. "Oh, I do
not think I could have suffered more than I
did on that Day!!!" With that, Therese began
to understand the sufferings of the mocked
Christ, the Suffering Servant foretold by
Isaiah. Therese's father made one last visit
to the Carmel in May, 1892. He died
peacefully two years later, in 1894, with
Celine at his side. Celine then joined her
three sisters at Carmel in September of
1894.

Pictured above standing: Therese' sisters
Celine and Pauline; seated are Mother Marie
de Gonzague, Marie, and Therese. Photograph
taken in the Courtyard at Carmel Lisieux,
early 1895.
Therese
spent the last nine years of her life at the
Lisieux Carmel. Her fellow Sisters
recognized her as a good nun, nothing more.
She was conscientious and capable. Sister
Therese worked in the sacristy, cleaned the
dining room, painted pictures, composed
short pious plays for the Sisters, wrote
poems, and lived the intense community
prayer life of the cloister. Superiors
appointed her to instruct the novices of the
community. Externally, there was nothing
remarkable about this Carmelite nun.
Therese
was affected by the spiritual atmosphere in
the community, which was still tainted by
Jansenism and the vision of an avenging God.
Some of the sisters feared divine justice
and suffered badly from scruples. Even after
her general confession in May 1888 to Father
Pichon, her Jesuit spiritual director,
Therese was still uneasy. But a great peace
came over her when she made her profession
on September 8, 1890. It was the reading of
St. John of the Cross, an unusual choice at
the time, which brought her relief. In the
"Spiritual Canticle" and the "Living Flame
of Love", she discovered "the true Saint of
Love." This, she felt, was the path she was
meant to follow. During a community retreat
in October, 1891, a Franciscan, Father
Alexis Prou, launched her on those "waves of
confidence and love", on which she had
previously been afraid to venture.
The harsh winter of 1890-1891 and a severe
influenza epidemic killed three of the
sisters, as well as Mother Geneviere, the
Lisieux Carmel's founder and "Saint".
Therese was spared, and her true energy
strength began to show themselves. Therese
was delighted when her sister, Agnes of
Jesus (Pauline) was elected prioress in
succession to Mother Marie de Gonzague in
February of 1893. Pauline asked Therese to
write verses and theatrical entertainment
for liturgical and community festivals.
Included were two plays about Saint Joan of
Arc, "her beloved sister", which she
performed herself with great feeling and
conviction. When Celine joined Therese at
Lisieux Carmel in September of 1894, she
brought her camera. Through this, they were
able to enliven their recreation periods,
and leave Therese's picture to posterity.
THERESE
DEVELOPS HER "LITTLE WAY"
Therese
was aware of her littleness. "It is
impossible for me to grow up, so I must bear
with myself such as I am with all my
imperfections. But I want to seek out a
means of going to heaven by a little way, a
way that is very straight, very short and
totally new." Therese went on to describe
the elevator in the home of a rich person.
And she continued: "I wanted to find an
elevator which would raise me to Jesus, for
I am too small to climb the rough stairway
of perfection. I searched then in the
Scriptures for some sign of this elevator,
the object of my desires and I read these
words coming from the mouth of Eternal
Wisdom: 'Whoever is a little one let him
come to me.' The elevator which must raise
me to heaven is your arms, O Jesus, and for
this I have no need to grow up, but rather I
have to remain little and become this more
and more," And so she abandoned herself to
Jesus and her life became a continual
acceptance of the will of the Lord.
The Lord,
it seems, did not demand great things of
her. But Therese felt incapable of the
tiniest charity, the smallest expression of
concern and patience and understanding. So
she surrendered her life to Christ with the
hope that he would act through her. She
again mirrored perfectly the words of St.
Paul, "I can do all things in him who
strengthens me." "All things" consisted of
almost everything she was called upon to do
in the daily grind of life.
Life
in the Carmel had its problems too: the
clashes of communal life, the cold, the new
diet and the difficulties of prayer (two
hours' prayer and four and a half hours of
liturgy). One day, she leaned over the wash
pool with a group of Sisters, laundering
handkerchiefs. One of the Sisters splashed
the hot, dirty water into Therese's face,
not once, not twice, but continually.
Remember the terrible temper that Therese
had? She was near to throwing one of her
best tantrums, but said nothing! Christ
helped her to accept this lack of
consideration on the part of her fellow
Sister, and she found a certain peace.
Again, in
the daily grind of convent life, she was
moved by her youthful idealism to help
Sister St. Pierre, a crotchety, older nun
who refused to let old age keep her from
convent activities. Therese tried to help
her along the corridors. "You move too
fast," the old nun complained. Therese
slowed down. "Well, come on," Sister urged.
"I don't feel your hand. You have let go of
me and I am going to fall." And as a final
judgment, old Sister St. Pierre declared: "I
was right when I said you were too young to
help me." Therese took it all and managed to
smile. This was her "little way."
Another
nun made strange, clacking noises in chapel.
Therese did not say, but the good lady was
probably either toying with her rosary or
was afflicted by ill-fitting dentures. The
clacking sound really got to Therese. It
ground into her brain. Terrible-tempered
Therese was pouring sweat in frustration.
She tried to shut her ears, but was
unsuccessful. Then, as an example of her
'little ways', she made a concert out of the
clacking and offered it as a prayer to
Jesus. "I assure you," she dryly remarked,
"that was no prayer of Quiet."
Therese,
the great mystic, fell asleep frequently at
prayer. She was embarrassed by her inability
to remain awake during her hours in chapel
with the religious community. Finally, in
perhaps her most charming and accurate
characterization of the "little way," she
noted that, just as parents love their
children as much while asleep as awake, so
God loved her even though she often slept
during the time for prayers.
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