The Letters of Saint Thérèse, Pt. 2
Thérèse has much to teach our age of the image, the appearance, the “self.”
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Thérèse has much to teach our age of the image, the appearance, the “self.”
Mother Marie de Gonzague, the superior at the cloistered convent at Carmel, wrote this of Saint Thérèse of Lisieux: “Tall and strong, with the air of a child, with a tone of voice and an expression that hide in her the wisdom.”
If you’ve ever donated to Franciscan Media, chances are you received a beautiful, handwritten thank-you note from our own Sister Rose Lima, OSF. She’s such a blessing—and an important part of our mission to spread the Gospel in the spirit of Saint Francis. In this week’s Franciscan Spirit Video, Sister Rose shares with us how she embraced her religious name.
Jesus calls us to follow him on his own path of humiliation. When at certain moments in life we fail to find any way out of our difficulties, when we sink in the thickest darkness, it is the moment of our total humiliation, the hour in which we experience that we are frail and are sinners. It is precisely then, at that moment, that we must not deny our failure but rather open ourselves trustingly to hope in God, as Jesus did.
Paradise is not found on the beaches of a Caribbean island or in some mythic garden from the book of Genesis. Paradise is where God’s will is done. It is the very reality of our existence with God without the gloss of our own selfish desires, without our own obsessive need for control. It is the location—not so much in time and space, but in experience—where, like God, we live more and more as women and men for others.
One of the phrases most likely to be associated with Pope Francis is “Who am I to judge?”
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