Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
of the Holy Face
Entries in Act of Oblation (1)
Marie of the Trinity offers herself to Merciful Love in the Lisieux Carmel: the First Sunday of Advent, December 1, 1895
On the First Sunday of Advent, November 30, 1895, St. Therese confided to her close friend, the novice Marie of the Trinity, that she had offered herself to Merciful Love on June 9, 1895. Marie of the Trinity at once expressed a desire to do the same, and the two agreed that Marie would offer herself the next day. Thinking it over, Marie told Therese that, because she was so unworthy, she needed a longer time to prepare for such an important act. Saint Therese's face "immediately lit up with joy," and she replied:
Yes, this Act is important, more important than we can imagine, but do you know—the only preparation which the good God asks of us? Well, it is that we recognize humbly our unworthiness! And since He has given you this grace, abandon yourself to Him without fear. Tomorrow morning, after thanksgiving, I will kneel near you in the oratory where the Blessed Sacrament will be exposed. And while you pronounce your act, I will offer you to Jesus as a little victim which I prepared for Him.
Circular of Sister Marie of the Trinity on the Web site of the Archives of the Carmel of Lisieux. Chapter IV.
So Marie of the Trinity offered herself to Merciful Love on December 1, 1895. She was the second disciple of St. Therese to follow Therese in making the offering; Therese's eldest sister, Marie of the Sacred Heart, had offered herself in the summer. About her experience on December 1, Marie of the Trinity wrote:
I was so flooded with graces on that beautiful day, the most beautiful day of my life, that all day long I experienced in a very tangible way the presence of the Eucharistic Jesus in my heart. I confided this to Sr. Therese of the Child Jesus, who was not at all surprised and answered me simply:
"Is not God omnipotent? If we so desire, it would not be difficult for him to make his sacramental presence in our souls remain from one communion to the next. [Therese had, in fact, asked this favor in her offering: "Remain in me as in a tabernacle . . ."] Through this extraordinary feeling that you experienced today, he wishes to give you the pledge that all the requests you have made of him in the Act of Oblation will be granted. You will not always enjoy these feelings, but their effects will be no less real. One receives from God as much as one hopes for."
Therese of Lisieux and Marie of the Trinity, by Pierre Descouvement. Staten Island, New York: Society of St. Paul/Alba House, 1997, pp. 68-69. I recommend this book to everyone who wants to konw Therese as she was in her intimate relationships.
May we, like Marie, let Therese encourage us, in this Advent, to forget our ideas of our own unworthiness and to abandon ourselves to God without fear.