Friday, May 6, 2022

the patron saint of Headache sufferers

When Teresa of Avila (born Teresa Ali Fatim Corella Sanchez de Capeda y Ahumada) was 16, her father decided she was out of control and sent her to a convent. At first she hated it but eventually she began to enjoy it -- partly because of her growing love for God, and partly because the convent was a lot less strict than her father.  

She chose religious life because she though that it was the only safe place for someone as prone to sin as she was. Teresa was too charming. Everyone liked her and she liked to be liked. She found it too easy to slip into a worldly life and ignore God. She got more involved in flattery, vanity and gossip than spiritual guidance. These weren't great sins perhaps but they kept her from God.

Then Teresa fell ill with malaria. When she had a seizure, people were so sure she was dead that after she woke up four days later she learned they had dug a grave for her. Afterwards she was paralyzed for three years and was never completely well. Her sickness became an excuse to stop her prayer completely.

When she was 41, a priest convinced her to go back to her prayer, but she still found it difficult. As she started to pray again, God gave her spiritual delights: the prayer of quiet where God's presence overwhelmed her senses, raptures where God overcame her with glorious foolishness, prayer of union where she felt the sun of God melt her soul away. Teresa were convinced that her delights came from God because the experiences gave her peace, inspiration, and encouragement.

Two years later Teresa began to consider the restoration of Carmelite life to its original observance of austerity, which had relaxed in the 14th and 15th centuries. Her reform required utter withdrawal so that the nuns could meditate on divine law and, through a prayerful life of penance, exercise what she termed “our vocation of reparation” for the sins of humankind. Eight years later (1562), with Pope Pius IV’s authorization, she opened the first convent (St. Joseph’s) of the Carmelite Reform. A storm of hostility came from municipal and religious personages, especially because the convent existed without endowment, but she staunchly insisted on poverty and subsistence only through public alms.

The Carmelite prior general from Rome, went to Ávila in 1567 and approved the reform, directing Teresa to found more convents and to establish monasteries. In the same year, while at Medina del Campo, Spain, she met a young Carmelite priest, Juan de Yepes (later St. John of the Cross, the poet and mystic), who she realized could initiate the Carmelite Reform for men. A year later Juan opened the first monastery of the Primitive Rule at Duruelo, Spain.

Teresa’s ascetic doctrine has been accepted as the classical exposition of the contemplative life, and her spiritual writings are among the most widely read. Her Life of the Mother Teresa of Jesus (1611) is autobiographical; the Book of the Foundations (1610) describes the establishment of her convents. Her recognized written masterpieces on the progress of the Christian soul toward God through prayer and contemplation are The Way of Perfection (1583), The Interior Castle (1588), Spiritual Relations, Exclamations of the Soul to God (1588), and Conceptions on the Love of God. Of her poems, 31 are extant; of her letters, 458 are extant.

Teresa died on October 4 at the age of 67. In 1970 she was declared a Doctor of the Church for her writing and teaching on prayer, the first woman to be so honored. St. Teresa is the patron saint of Headache sufferers. Her symbol is a heart, an arrow, and a book. She was beatified in 1614 by Pope Paul V. Canonized in1622 by Pope Gregory XV.




References

https://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=208
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Saint-Teresa-of-Avila

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