Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
of the Holy Face
"My Vocation is Love: A Novena to St. Therese of Lisieux - Day Three - Prayer"
The Carmelite Institute of North America invites you to participate in a novena led by Fr. Christopher LaRocca, O.C.D., "a pilgrimage along the 'Little Way' that leads to heaven." To hear this audio novena, click the image below.
Please visit the Web site of the Carmelite Institute of North America.
"My Vocation is Love: A Novena to St. Therese of Lisieux - Day Two - Humility"
The Carmelite Institute of North America invites you to participate in a novena led by Fr. Christopher LaRocca, O.C.D., "a pilgrimage along the 'Little Way' that leads to heaven." To hear this audio novena, click the image below.
Please visit the Web site of the Carmelite Institute of North America.
"My Vocation Is Love: A Novena to St. Therese of Lisieux - Day One - Heaven""
The Carmelite Institute of North America invites you to participate in a novena led by Fr. Christopher LaRocca, O.C.D., "a pilgrimage along the 'Little Way' that leads to heaven." To hear this audio novena, click the image below.
Please visit the Web site of the Carmelite Institute of North America.
The 130th anniversary of the religious profession of St. Therese of Lisieux on September 8, 1890
To relive St. Therese's profession with her in word and image, please see my article "The religious profession of St. Therese, September 8, 1890." Thank you.
125 years ago with St. Therese: Therese writes the poem "To my dear Mother, the Fair Angel of my Childhood" - September 7, 1895
September 7, 1895 was the 34th birthday of Therese's sister Pauline, Mother Agnes of Jesus. As a gift for her sister's birthday, Therese wrote "To my dear Mother, the Fair Angel of my Childhood."
Mother Agnes had been serving as prioress for two and a half years, years of grace for Therese, who wrote that on the day of her election "Pauline became my living Jesus." The tenderness and gratitude that overflow in this poem were undoubtedly evoked by the fact that since January 1895 Therese had been writing her childhood memoir, a long letter to Pauline, which brought vividly before her Pauline's delicate and vital role in her life.
Therese depicts herself as a child and Pauline as the angel "who guides my steps," assigning to her sister the role of guardian angel. This angel sang of "the charms of Jesus," "the joy of a pure heart," the "beautiful blue Heaven," "the God of childhood" (a phrase that appears only here in Therese's writing), "the Virgin Mary." Tactfully Therese alludes only with the word "alas!" to the acute distress Pauline's departure for Carmel caused her, and dwells instead on her present happiness: