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JMJ
Feast of our Holy Mother Teresa of Jesus (Teresa of Avila)
Reformer of the Carmelite Order and Foundress of the Discalced Carmelites of the unmitigated Primitive Rule
Zelo zelatus sum pro Domino Deo
exercituum (With
zeal have I been zealous for the Lord God of hosts…) – 3 Kings 19.10. These are
the words of inscription that cut across the sword of flame held by the hand of
the great Prophet of Mt. Carmel – the Prophet Elias – which one reads as he looks
closer at the coat of arms of the Carmelite Order of Teresian Reform. And this
phrase forms the first part of the very words the great Prophet of Carmel
replied to Our Lord Who asked His Prophet the reason for hiding in the mount of
Horeb – in Sacred Scriptures, the mount
of God.
In
reforming Carmel, St. Teresa of Jesus, no doubt inspired by the spirit of the
Father and Founder of the Carmelite Order, looked up to the primitive
eremitical life led by the successors of the Prophets Elias and Eliseus on the
Mount of Carmel – a life permeated by those words of their Father and Founder:
zeal for the honor and glory of God. And a burning zeal it must be for the Order is the contemplative Order par
excellence.
Common
opinion has it that a “contemplative” Order such as Teresian Carmel is one that
is devoted to prayer and silence. Some deny Teresian Carmel as the
contemplative Order par excellence because
silence in the monasteries of the Carthusian Order is almost absolute. It must
be distinguished that the exercise of
prayer is one thing and the grace
and gift of prayer is another, and that prayer – both as exercise and grace
– together with silence [and penitential exercises] are only means toward our
goal: that of infused contemplation,
that is, God’s gift of Himself or God, our Highest Good, communicating and
giving Himself to us in so far as we are capable of receiving Him in this life
and according to the degree of our generosity in giving ourselves wholly to
Him.
This
burning desire – this zeal – that a
Teresian Carmelite carries in his heart is not human passion but the intense charity of God and which
intensity heightens as the soul draws closer and closer to the summit of the
mount of Christian Perfection. It is that divine fire which set the bush in
flames but without destroying it and in the midst of which God
communicated Himself to Moses on the mount of Horeb (cf., Ex. 3) – the same
mount as above where the great Prophet of Carmel spoke about his zeal for Our Lord. The fire of divine
love so intense yet so delicately gentle towards those it draws and chooses to
be drawn to the Heart of God to be Its fit receptacle of repose; but also the
fire of God’s avenging justice, which did not shy to consume the heart of the
Prophet Elias, towards those who turn souls
away from the true God* and who obstinately spurn God’s "merciful love" and goodness – the height of this God's "merciful love" was manifested
on Calvary.
---
* The fiery Prophet of God had the more than four hundred
false prophets of a false god seized and killed (cf., 3 Kings 18.40).
---
The
Teresian Carmelite Spirit then is prophetic. In Scriptural language, a prophet
is a “man of God” called to bring God to His people and his people to God – to speak
in the place of and to give witness to the true God: the God of justice and of mercy. And for this reason, this
prophetic vocation is eminently Marian – hence the Most Blessed Virgin Mary,
the Apocalyptic Woman that cometh forth as the morning rising, fair as
the moon, bright as the sun, terrible as an army set in array (Canticle of
Canticles, 6.9), with Her diadem on Her head of twelve stars, crowns the edifice of the Order surmounted as it is with the Cross of Her Crucified Son: for it was Our Immaculate Mother who brought forth
the God-Man, Our Lord Jesus Christ, and still brings forth and forms Her son in
the souls of God’s children until they are perfectly conformed to the image of
Her Son consumed with the vehement intensity of divine charity, of that perfect
love towards God and towards souls – the
image of Her Son on the Cross, Him
Crucified (2 Corinthians 2.2).
According
to the Word of God, a prophet is one who is raised up to take the place of God
as regards the people (cf., Deut. 18.16). But what is man, like Moses, to be
counted upon by God to take His place and to represent His interest? Sacred
Scriptures tells us that the Lord… called
Moses unto the top [of the mount]…. And the
Lord spoke to Moses face to face, as a man is wont to speak to his friend
(Ex. 19.20; 33.11); that is, he who is called the “man of God” is the friend of God. But a true friend is
proved in times of trouble when his heroic love is counted upon: Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay down his life for his friends (Jn. 15.13). And since, looking on Him Whom they pierced (Jn. 19.37; also, Zacharias 12.10), it is a "dreadful" thing to have God for one's friend because of the cost of being counted upon by Him, Our Lord gives his friend the company of His Mother who, though bodily stood at the foot of the Cross, burned nevertheless in Her grieving heart with the zealous love of a mother most ready and determined to take the place of Her only beloved child!
This sentiment of the Immaculate Heart is what Our Blessed Mother at the foot of the Cross bequeaths especially to Her children who asks to be clothed in Her holy Habit – Her Scapular. When our dearest “Little Therese” (as she would like to be called) recalled an incident in her childhood, where she was offered by her sister Leonie a basket filled with doll dresses and other pieces for making others and then was asked to “choose,” she took her reply “I choose all!” as the summary of her whole life (cf., Story of a Soul, Chapter 1). She writes: “later on when perfection was set before me, I understood that to become ‘a saint’ one had to suffer much, seek out always the most perfect thing to do, and forget self. I understood, too, there were many degrees of perfection and each soul was free to respond to the advances of Our Lord, to do little or much for Him, in a word, to ‘choose’ among the sacrifices He was asking. Then, as in the days of my childhood, I cried out: My God, ‘I choose all!’ I don’t want to be a ‘saint by halves,’ I’m not afraid to suffer for You, I fear only one thing: to keep my ‘own will’; so take it, for ‘I choose all’ that You will!” St. Therese proved how faithful a daughter she was of St. Teresa who in turn proved also a faithful daughter of Her Mother of Carmel. The “Little Flower” of Carmel took to heart the admonition of La Madre (Teresa de Jesus) which rings as a Teresian Carmelite religious enters his cell wherein on the wall is hung a big cross without the corpus or the body of the Crucified: "be ready to take the place of your Beloved on the Cross!"
Now "all our perfection consists in being conformed, united, and consecrated to Jesus Christ" (St. Louis-Marie de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary) and Him Curicified (1 Corinthians 2.2): I know... the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable to His death (Philippians 3.10). If we look at the emblem of Teresian Carmel, we see Mount Carmel surmounted by the Cross of Our Lord - being the Order instituted by Our Lord and Our Blessed Mother as the school par excellence of Christian perfection the summit of which is crowned by charity: that excelling love of God and souls as manifested by the Crucified. And when one is granted the privilege to enter, much less to just take a peek, into the cell of a Discalced Carmelite Friar or Nun, he will see a big Cross hanging on the wall without the 'corpus' or the body of the Crucified. But why a 'corpus'-less Cross in Teresian Carmel? In the fourth Station of the Cross according to the method of St. Francis of Assisi, the Saint reflects on Our Sorrowful Mother meeting His Beloved: "How earnestly did She desire to die in place of Jesus..." A Teresian Carmelite must own such sentiment of the Immaculate Heart of Our Blessed Mother and thus is he exhorted: "Be ready to take the place of your Beloved !" for the most perfect of all devotion is, without any doubt, that which the most perfectly conforms, unites, and consecrates us to Jesus Christ Crucified. Jesus, our greatest friend, has given Himself to us without reserve, body and soul, virtues, graces, and merits. "He has bought the whole of me by whole of Himself," says St. Bernard of Clairvaux. Is it not, then, a simple matter of justice and of gratitude that we should give Him all that we can give Him? He has been the first to be liberal towards us; let us, at least, be the second... "With the liberal He will be liberal."
This sentiment of the Immaculate Heart is what Our Blessed Mother at the foot of the Cross bequeaths especially to Her children who asks to be clothed in Her holy Habit – Her Scapular. When our dearest “Little Therese” (as she would like to be called) recalled an incident in her childhood, where she was offered by her sister Leonie a basket filled with doll dresses and other pieces for making others and then was asked to “choose,” she took her reply “I choose all!” as the summary of her whole life (cf., Story of a Soul, Chapter 1). She writes: “later on when perfection was set before me, I understood that to become ‘a saint’ one had to suffer much, seek out always the most perfect thing to do, and forget self. I understood, too, there were many degrees of perfection and each soul was free to respond to the advances of Our Lord, to do little or much for Him, in a word, to ‘choose’ among the sacrifices He was asking. Then, as in the days of my childhood, I cried out: My God, ‘I choose all!’ I don’t want to be a ‘saint by halves,’ I’m not afraid to suffer for You, I fear only one thing: to keep my ‘own will’; so take it, for ‘I choose all’ that You will!” St. Therese proved how faithful a daughter she was of St. Teresa who in turn proved also a faithful daughter of Her Mother of Carmel. The “Little Flower” of Carmel took to heart the admonition of La Madre (Teresa de Jesus) which rings as a Teresian Carmelite religious enters his cell wherein on the wall is hung a big cross without the corpus or the body of the Crucified: "be ready to take the place of your Beloved on the Cross!"
Now "all our perfection consists in being conformed, united, and consecrated to Jesus Christ" (St. Louis-Marie de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary) and Him Curicified (1 Corinthians 2.2): I know... the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable to His death (Philippians 3.10). If we look at the emblem of Teresian Carmel, we see Mount Carmel surmounted by the Cross of Our Lord - being the Order instituted by Our Lord and Our Blessed Mother as the school par excellence of Christian perfection the summit of which is crowned by charity: that excelling love of God and souls as manifested by the Crucified. And when one is granted the privilege to enter, much less to just take a peek, into the cell of a Discalced Carmelite Friar or Nun, he will see a big Cross hanging on the wall without the 'corpus' or the body of the Crucified. But why a 'corpus'-less Cross in Teresian Carmel? In the fourth Station of the Cross according to the method of St. Francis of Assisi, the Saint reflects on Our Sorrowful Mother meeting His Beloved: "How earnestly did She desire to die in place of Jesus..." A Teresian Carmelite must own such sentiment of the Immaculate Heart of Our Blessed Mother and thus is he exhorted: "Be ready to take the place of your Beloved !" for the most perfect of all devotion is, without any doubt, that which the most perfectly conforms, unites, and consecrates us to Jesus Christ Crucified. Jesus, our greatest friend, has given Himself to us without reserve, body and soul, virtues, graces, and merits. "He has bought the whole of me by whole of Himself," says St. Bernard of Clairvaux. Is it not, then, a simple matter of justice and of gratitude that we should give Him all that we can give Him? He has been the first to be liberal towards us; let us, at least, be the second... "With the liberal He will be liberal."
"When
evening comes, you will be examined in love.
Love consists not in feeling great things but in having great detachment and in suffering for the Beloved.
Love consists not in feeling great things but in having great detachment and in suffering for the Beloved.
Learn to love as God desires to be loved
and abandon you own ways of acting.
What does it profit you to give God one thing
if He asks you another?
Consider what it is that God wants, and then do it.
You will as a result satisfy your heart better
than with something toward which you yourself are inclined."
– St. John of the Cross, co-reformer of St. Teresa of
Jesus
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