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...the Lord gave me the most explicit commands... St Teresa of Avila Saint Teresa was born in Avila, Spain, March 28, 1515. She died in Alba, October 4, 1582. Her family origins have been traced to Toledo and Olmedo. Her father, Alonso de Cepeda, was a son of a Toledan merchant, Juan Sanchez de Toledo and Ines de Cepeda, originally from Tordesillas. Juan transferred his business to Avila, where he succeeded in having his children marry into families of the nobility. In 1505 Alonso married Catalina del Peso, who bore him two children and died in 1507. Two years later Alonso married the 15-year-old Beatriz de Ahumada of whom Teresa was born. Early Life. In 1528, when Teresa was 15, her mother died, leaving behind 10
children. Teresa was the "most beloved of them all." She was of medium height,
large rather than small, and generally well proportioned. In her youth she had the
reputation of being quite beautiful, and she retained her fine appearance until her last
years (Maria de S. Jose, Libro de recreaciones, 8). Her personality was extroverted, her
manner affectionately buoyant, and she had the ability to adapt herself easily to all
kinds of persons and circumstances. She was skillful in the use of the pen, in needlework,
and in household duties. Her courage and enthusiasm were readily kindled, an early example
of which trait occurred when at the age of 7 she left home with her brother Rodrigo with
the intention of going to Moorish territory to be beheaded for Christ, but they were
frustrated by their uncle, who met the children as they were leaving the city and brought
them home (Ephrem de la Madre de Dios, Tiempo y Vida de Sta. Teresa--hereafter abbrev.
TV--142-143). Vocation. The influence of Dona Maria de Brinceno, who was in charge of the lay students at the convent school, helped Teresa to recover her piety. She began to wonder whether she had a vocation to be a nun. Toward the end of the year 1532 she returned home to regain her health and stayed with her sister, who lived in Castellanos. Reading the letters of St. Jerome led her to the decision to enter a convent, but her father refused to give his consent. Her brother and confidant, Rodrigo, had just set sail for the war on the Rio de la Plata. She decided to run away from home and persuaded another brother to flee with her in order that both might receive the religious habit. On Nov. 2, 1535, she entered the Carmelite Monastery of the Incarnation at Avila, where she had a friend, Juana Suarez; and her father resigned himself to this development. The following year she received the habit and began wholeheartedly to give herself to prayer and penance. Shortly after her profession she became seriously ill and failed to respond to medical treatment. As a last resort her father took her to Becedas, a small village, to seek the help of a woman healer famous throughout Castile, but Teresa's health did not improve. Leaving Becedas in the fall of 1538, she stayed in Hortigosa at the home of her uncle Pedro de Cepeda, who gave her the Tercer Abecedario of Francis of Osuna to read.
Instead of regaining her health, Teresa grew even more ill, and her father brought her
back to Avila in July 1539. On August 15 she fell into a coma so profound that she was
thought to be dead. After 4 days she revived, but she remained paralyzed in her legs for 3
years. After her cure, which she attributed to St. Joseph (V. 6.6-8), she entered a period
of mediocrity in her spiritual life, but she did not at any time give up praying. Her
trouble came of not understanding that the use of the imagination could be dispensed with
and that her soul could give itself directly to contemplation. During this stage, which
lasted 18 years, she had transitory mystical experiences. She was held back by a strong
desire to be appreciated by others, but this finally left her in an experience of
conversion in the presence of an image of "the sorely wounded Christ" (V
9.2). This conversion dislodged the egoism that had hindered her spiritual development.
Thus, at the age of 39, she began to enjoy a vivid experience of God's presence within
her. Reformer. Her great work of reform began with herself. She made a vow always to
follow the more perfect course, and resolved to keep the rule as perfectly as she could (V
32.9). However, the atmosphere prevailing at the Incarnation monastery was less than
favorable to the more perfect type of life to which Teresa aspired. A group assembled in
her cell one September evening in 1560, taking their inspiration from the primitive
tradition of Carmel and the discalced reform of St. Peter of Alcantara, proposed the
foundation of a monastery of an eremitical type. At first her confessor, the provincial of
the Carmelites, and other advisers encouraged her in the plan (TV 478-482); but when the
proposal became known among the townsfolk, there was a great outcry against it. The
provincial changed his mind, her confessor dissociated himself from the project, and her
advisers ranged themselves with the opposition. Six months later, however, when there was
a change of rectors at the Jesuit college, her confessor, Father Alvarez, gave his
approval. Without delay Teresa had her sister Juana and her husband Juan de Ovalle buy a
house in Avila and occupy it as though it were for themselves (V 33.11). This stratagem
was necessary to obviate difficulties with nuns at the Incarnation while the building was
being adapted and made ready to serve as a convent. At Toledo, where she was sent by the
Carmelite provincial at the importunate request of a wealthy and noble lady, she received
a visit from St. Peter of Alcantara, who offered to act as mediator in obtaining from Rome
the permissions needed for the foundation. While there she also received a visit from the
holy Carmelite Maria de Yepes, who had just returned from Rome with permission to
establish a reformed convent and who provided Teresa with a new light on the question of
the type of poverty to be adopted by her own community. At Toledo she also completed in
reluctant obedience to her confessor the first version of her Vida. Foundations. In April 1567 the Carmelite general, Giovanni Battista Rossi
(Rubeo), made a visitation, approved Teresa's work, and commanded her to establish other
convents with some of the nuns from the convent of the Incarnation at Avila. He also gave
her permission to establish two houses for men who wished to adopt the reform. The
extension of Teresa's work began with the foundation of a convent at Medina del Campo,
Aug. 15, 1567. Then followed other foundations: at Malagon in 1568; at Valladolid (Rio de
Olinos) in 1568; at Toledo and at Pastrana in 1569; at Salamanca in 1570; and at Alba de
Tormes in 1571. As she journeyed to Toledo in 1569 she passed through Duruelo, where John
of the Cross and Anthony of Jesus had established the first convent of Discalced Brethren
in November 1568, and in July 1569 she established the second monastery of Discalced
Brethren in Pastrana. Crisis Between the Calced and Discalced. The entry of the Discalced Brethren
into Andalusia was forbidden by Rossi, the general of the order, who opposed Teresa and
Jerome Gratian in this matter. The general chapter at Piacenza in 1575 ordered the
Discalced Brethren to withdraw from Andalusia, and Teresa herself was ordered to retire to
a convent. The general put Jerome Tostado at the head of the Discalced Brethren. While the
conflict raged between the Calced and Discalced Brethren, Teresa wrote the Visitation of
the Discalced Nuns, a part of The Foundations, and her greatest book, The Interior Castle.
The nuncio Nicholas Ormaneto, a defender of the Discalced Brethren, died June 18, 1578,
and his successor, Felipe Sega, was less favorably disposed toward them. John of the Cross
was imprisoned in Toledo. Against Teresa's will the Discalced Brethren held a chapter in
Almodovar on Oct. 9, 1578. The nuncio annulled the chapter and by a decree put the
Discalced Brethren under the authority of the Calced provincials who subjected them to
some harassment. The King intervened, and four were named to advise the nuncio, among them
Pedro Fernandez, OP. Angel de Salazar was made vicar-general of the Discalced Brethren
while negotiations were afoot for the separation of the Discalced from the Calced Brethren
and the erection of a Discalced province. [O. STEGGINK] Spiritual Doctrine. Among the writings of St. Teresa, three can be indicated as
the depositories of her spiritual teaching: her autobiography, the Way of Perfection, and the
Interior Castle. Readers must exercise some caution, however, and resist the temptation to
hastily synthesize the doctrine in these books, because St. Teresa wrote from her personal
experience at different stages of the spiritual life. For example, the doctrine of prayer
found in the autobiography is
not identical with that in the Interior Castle; more than a decade had elapsed between
their composition, and Teresa had meanwhile attained a higher degree of spiritual maturity
with its simultaneous expansion of experience. The autobiography, written primarily
as a manifestation of her spiritual state for her directors, was later enlarged in scope
and in audience. Chapters 11 to 22 inclusive--a later addition--are devoted exclusively to
the discussion of prayer, although additional comments and examples are scattered
throughout the remaining 28 chapters. Teresa depicts different stages of the life of
prayer in metaphorical terms taken from the manner of securing water to irrigate a garden.
The "first water" is laboriously obtained from a well and carried in a bucket to
the garden; this is in reference to beginners who, liberated from the more flagrant mortal
sins, apply themselves to discursive prayer of meditation, although they experience
fatigue and aridity from time to time. After speaking at length of meditation in its
stricter meaning, Teresa made a brief reference to "acquired" contemplation
before beginning her discussion of the "second water." In this second stage, the
gardener secures water through use of a windlass and bucket; here Teresa refers to the
"prayef of quiet, a gift of God thr.øUgh Which the individual begins to have a
passive experlenCe of prayer. The third method of irrigation is the employment of water
from a stream or river; the application made by Teresa is to the "sleep of the
faculties." Although Teresa considered this an important stage in the evolution of
prayer when she wrote her autobiography,
she later relegated it to a simple intensification of the "prayer of quiet" in
the Interior Castle. The fourth method of irrigation is Godgiven: the rain; Teresa employs
this metaphor to describe a state of union in prayer in which the soul is apparently
passive. Back to the Teresian Carmel The information of this page was created by the Province of the Teresian Carmel in Austria, Europe (ocd@ocd.or.at). |