Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
of the Holy Face
Entries in relics of St. Therese (19)
June 6, 2023: the English text of Pope Francis's speech about St. Therese in the presence of her relics at St. Peter's Square
To read the full English text of Pope Francis's speech about St. Therese, courtesy of America magazine, please visit https://tinyurl.com/popefrancisjune62023




For the feast of St. Therese, the documentary "In Search of the Little Flower: Saint Therese of Lisieux" by Sancta Familia Media. October 1, 2019
For the feast of St. Therese, I have the pleasure of sharing with you the documentary "In Search of the Little Flower: Therese of Lisieux," produced for the September 2019 visit of the relics of St. Therese to Scotland by two brilliant young filmmakers, Brian Anthony Timmons and J. P. Mallon, of Sancta Familia Media in Scotland. This free documentary, an hour long, fulfills a dream I have had for many years.
In the bleak days of February, I suddenly learned from their post that Fr. Grant and Brian and J. P. had just arrived in France to film a documentary about the Martin family and about St. Therese as a tool to help the people prepare for the historic first visit of the relics of St. Therese to Scotland in September. Inspired by their bold vision and their willingness to post the documentary online for all to view for free, I had the joy of writing to them throughout their stay in France with suggestions for sites to visit and what to film there. The generous cooperation of the staffs of the Shrines at Alencon and Lisieux allowed them to capture all the footage needed for an outstanding film. Their later work in Scotland produced it.
On this feast day, being occupied with caring for a beloved family member who is seriously ill (for whom I ask your prayers), I can write no more. But, thanks to God; Fr. Jim; Brian and J. P.; and all their collaborators (some of whom you will meet in the film), I have the joy of sharing their gift with you. May St. Therese bless you on her feast.




The Solemn Translation of St. Therese's Relics from the Town Cemetery to the Lisieux Carmel, March 26, 1923
[On March 26, 1923, in view of the approaching beatification of the Venerable Therese of the Child Jesus, her relics were transferred ("translated") from the Carmelite plot in the municipal cemetery at Lisieux to the shrine which had been prepared for them in the chapel of the Carmelite monastery of Lisieux, where they remain to this day. We thank the Archives of the Lisieux Carmel, which graciously permitted us to translate this contemporaneous account of the events of that day into English and to publish it].
Extracted from a brown leather-edged, but very thin top, bound book stored in the Glorification cabinet. Title on the edge: St. Th EJ her beatification [1]
Across the City
LISIEUX had never before known such excitement as existed within its walls on the morning of March 26, 1923, Monday of Holy Week. Since yesterday, travelers from every direction had been pouring relentlessly out of the train station . . . Read more

Note that the exhumation had to be authorized by the Mayor of Lisieux, who tried to charge the Carmel a vast sum of money in exchange:
THE MAYOR OF LISIEUX AND SISTER TERESA.
"The body of the Venerable Sister Teresa was solemnly transferred on March 26 from the cemetery of Lisieux," says a writer in the "Journal des Debats," "to the chapel of the convent, where she gave so much edification and of which she will remain the glory." This translation, continues the writer, nearly caused a revolution at Lisieux. The Mayor, whose authorisation for the transference of the body of the venerable Sister was necessary, does not share the sentiments of his colleagues for Sister Teresa. He has only seen the mercantile side of the great fetes for which the beatification has been the occasion. For his signature he tried to obtain a price which defied all competition. Never before has the decree which authorised exhumations been so ingeniously turned to account. A petition was presented to the municipal council, the Mayor was cross-examined, and, after replying in mystic language, he capitulated. Finally, all was arranged on reasonable terms and the translation took place at the appointed time.
THE MAYOR OF LISIEUX AND SISTER TERESA. (1923, July 13). Southern Cross (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1954), p. 3. Retrieved April 2, 2017, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article167741770




Saint Therese of Lisieux and the Blessed Sacrament: for the feast of Corpus Christi, May 29, 2016
In 1887, St. Therese visited the crypt of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at Montmartre in Paris. Later she sent her gold bracelet to be melted down to form part of this monstrance
St. Therese of Lisieux shared with her whole family a passionate love for Jesus in the Eucharist.
- At age 22 Therese recalled in the language of mystical union the experience of her First Holy Communion. (Web site of the archives of the Carmel of Lisieux)
- She remembered participating in religious processions on the great feasts:
"I loved especially the processions in honor of the Blessed Sacrament. What a joy it was for me to throw flowers beneath the feet of God! Before allowing them to fall to the ground, I threw them as high as I could, and I was never so happy as when I saw my roses touch the sacred monstrance."
(Read more about Therese's childhood experience of the great feasts of the Church at the Web site if the archives of the Carmel of Lisieux).
- In 1887, before leaving on the pilgrimage to Rome, 14-year-old Therese spent a few days in Paris with her father, St. Louis Martin, and her sister Celine. Before departing from Paris, all the pilgrims were consecrated to the Sacred Heart in the crypt of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at Montmartre. Later Therese sent her gold bracelet to be melted down to form part of the monstrance pictured above, which was used for the perpetual adoration of the Eucharist. How happy she must have been to think that the substance of the little bracelet that once touched her wrist was so near her Eucharistic Lord. I thank the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at Montmartre for permitting "Saint Therese of Lisieux: A Gateway" to display this photograph, which was taken in 2012 when, to commemorate the 125th anniversary of Therese's visit in 1887, her reliquary was venerated at Montmartre for several days.
- Although Therese's understanding, experience, and theology of the Eucharist continued to grow and develop throughout her short life, it was already well formed when she was only sixteen. In May 1889, during her novitiate, she received a letter from her nineteen-year-old cousin, Marie Guerin (later Sister Marie of the Eucharist). In Paris to visit the great 1889 Exposition, Marie, a young girl from the provinces, was troubled by her reaction to the nude statues in the exposition, and wrote to Therese suggesting that she could not receive Communion in that condition. On May 30, 1889, the 16-year-old novice answered with the prophetic wisdom given by the Holy Spirit:
Oh, my darling, think, then, that Jesus is there in the Tabernacle expressly for you, for you alone; He is burning with the desire to enter your heart ... so don't listen to the devil, mock him, and go without any fear to receive Jesus in peace and love!. . . ,
Your heart is made to love Jesus, to love Him passionately; pray so that the beautiful years of your life may not pass by in chimerical fears.We have only the short moments of our life to love Jesus, and the devil knows this well, and so he tries to consume our life in useless works ....
Dear little sister, receive Communion often, very often. . . . That is the only remedy if you want to be healed.
(LT 92, to Marie Guerin, May 30, 1889), from The Letters of St. Therese of Lisieux, Volume I. Washington, D.C.: Washington Province of Discalced Carmelite Friars, 1982, pp. 568-569. I repeat: if you know Therese only through her Story of a Soul, great graces await you in her letters).
In 1910 Msgr. de Teil, the vice-postulator for Therese's cause, showed this letter to Pope St. Pius X, the Pope who gave us frequent communion, and said to him "This little sister has made a commentary in advance on Your Holiness' decree on frequent communion." "Est opportunissimum! Est magnum gaudium por me!" ["This is most opportune! This is a great joy to me"], cried the Pope. He ended "We must hurry this cause." Ibid., p. 569. At the Web site of the Archives of the Carmel of Lisieux, read the full text of Therese's letter to Marie Guerin about the Eucharist.
May our love for the Eucharist continue to grow and deepen, and may the transformation it brings us express itself not only in adoration and in frequently joining with the Christian community to celebrate the Eucharist but also in satisfying, with Jesus, all the hungers of the human family.




"Family reliquary" of Blessed Louis and Zelie Martin and St. Therese to be venerated in the Archdiocese of Newark October 17-24, 2015
courtesy of the Archdiocese of Newark
As part of the celebration of the Year of Consecrated Life and of the canonization of Bl. Louis and Zelie Martin on October 18, 2015, the reliquary of the Martin family, which was commissioned by the Magnificat Foundation and is usually venerated at the Monastery of the Discalced Carmelite Nuns in Philadelphia, will be on pilgrimage to the Archdiocese of Newark from October 17, 2015 through and including October 24, 2015. See the details of the presence of the reliquary of the Martin family in the Archdiocese of Newark.



