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The Little Flower Teaches Us
Excerpts of thoughts
of St. Therese of Lisieux
Following are choice selections from the life and
writings
of St. Therese of Lisieux, dearly loved and known by all
as
the Little Flower.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face was proclaimed
a Doctor of the Universal Church on October 19, 1997.
She gives a simple example to all of us; that we can all achieve
a closer union with God through our small everyday offerings to Him- as St.
Therese calls it, her little way.
After My Death I Will Let Fall a Shower of
Roses
St. Therese interrupted a Sister who was speaking to her of the
happiness of Heaven, by these sublime words: It is not that which
attracts me. What is it, then? asked the Sister. O! It
is Love! To love, to be loved, and to return to earth to win love for our
Love!One evening when Mother Agnes of Jesus went to the infirmary, Sister
Therese welcomed her with an extraordinary expression of joy:
Mother! she said, some notes from a distant concert have just
reached my ears, and there has come to me the thought that soon I shall be
listening to the sweet melodies of Paradise. This thought, however, gave me
only a moment's joy, for one hope alone makes my heart beat fastthe love
I shall receive and the love I shall be able to give! I feel that my mission is
soon to beginto make others love God as I love Him ... to teach souls
my little way ...
I Will Spend My Heaven in Doing Good Upon
Earth
This is not impossible, for the Angels keep watch over us
while they enjoy the Beatific Vision. No, there cannot be any rest for me till
the end of the worldtill the Angels shall have said: Time is no
more'. Then I shall take my rest, then I shall be able to rejoice, because
the number of the elect will be complete.
And what is the little way' that you would
teach? asked Mother Agnes of Jesus.
I want to point out to souls the means that I have always
found so completely successful, to tell them there is only one thing to do here
belowto offer Our Lord the flowers of little sacrifices and win
Him by our caresses. That is how I have won Him, and that is why I shall be
made so welcome.
It Is the Way of Spiritual Childhood,
the Way of
Trust and Absolute Self-surrender
"How can a soul as imperfect as mine aspire to possess the
plenitude of love?
O Jesus, my first, my only Friend, You Whom I love
solely, tell me what the mystery is. Why do You not reserve these
measureless aspirations to great souls, to the eagles flying in the upper air?
I see myself as a feeble little bird, with only a light
down to cover me; I am not an eagle, yet I have an eagle's eyes and an eagle's
heart, for in spite of my extreme littleness, I dare to gaze upon the Divine
Sun, the Sun of Love, and my heart feels within it all the eagle's aspirations.
The little bird wants to fly toward that radiant Sun which
charms its eye; it would imitate the eagles, its brothers, as it sees them
mounting up to the Divine Fire of the Blessed Trinity. ...
Alas! All it can do is to lift up its little wings, but to
flythat is not in its small power.
What will it do? Die of grief to see itself thus impotent?
Oh, no! the little bird will not grieve at all. With reckless abandon, it wants
to stay gazing upon its Divine Sun; nothing can affright it, not wind, nor
rain, and if dark clouds come and hide the Star of Love, the little bird does
not move, it knows that beyond the clouds its Sun shines still, that its
radiance is not for a single instant eclipsed.
Sometimes, of course, the little bird's heart is beaten
upon by the storm, it feels as if it believed that nothing exists save the
clouds wrapping it round. ... Then is the moment of perfect joy for the poor
feeble little creature. What happiness for it to stay there just the same; to
gaze steadily at the invisible light which stays hid from its faith!
Jesus, so far I understand Your love for the little bird,
for it has not gone away from You. ... But I know, and You know too, that the
imperfect little creaturethough it stays where it is (that is under the
rays of the Sun)does let itself be distracted a little from its sole
business, takes a little grain on this side or that, runs after a small worm
... again it finds a little pool of water and wets its barely-formed plumage;
it sees a flower that pleases it, and its little mind is occupied about the
flower. ... In a word, not being able to soar like the eagles, the poor little
bird still bothers with the trifles of this earth.
But even now, after all its misdeeds, the little bird
doesn't go and hide in a corner to bewail its wretchedness and die of
contrition, but turns to the Sun, its Beloved, presents its little wet wings to
its kindly rays and cries like the swallow'; and in its sweet song, it
confides its infidelities, tells them in detail, thinking, in the audacity of
its total trust, to win in greater plenitude the love of Him who came not
to call the just but sinners,' ...
If the adored Star remains deaf to the plaintive twitter
of its little creature, if it remains veiled by cloud ... in that event the
little creature stays wet, it accepts to be numb with cold, and rejoices in the
suffering, which of course it has deserved. ...
O Jesus, how happy Your little bird is to be feeble and
little! What would become of it if it were big? It would never have the
boldness to appear in Your presence, to sleep before You. ... Yes, for that too
is a weakness of the little bird. ... When it wants to gaze upon the Divine Sun
and the clouds keep it from seeing a single ray, its little eyes close in spite
of itself, its little head is hid under its little wing, and the poor little
thing sleeps, still fancying that it is gazing upon its dearest Star! When it
awakes, it is not all desolate, its little heart stays at peace; it resumes its
task of love; it invokes the Angels and the Saints who mount up like eagles
toward that consuming Fire, which it so much desires. And the Eagles take pity
on their little brother, protect it, defend it, and put to flight the vultures
that would devour it. These vultures are the demons, and the little bird has no
fear of them; it is not destined to become their prey but the prey of the Eagle
it contemplates in the very center of the Sun of Love.
O Divine Word, You are the adored Eagle, I love You, and
You draw me to You. It is You, descending into this earth of exile, Who have
chosen to suffer and die to draw souls to the heart of the eternal Fire of the
Blessed Trinity.
It is You, ascending again to the inaccessible Light which
is ever after to be Your dwelling-place, Who remain still in the valley of
tears under the appearance of a White Host. ... Eternal Eagle, You will to
nourish me with Your Divine Substance, me, a poor little thing who would return
to nothingness if Your Divine gaze did not give me life from instant to instant
...
O Jesus! Let me, in the excess of my gratitude, tell You
that Your love reaches the point of folly! In face of this folly, how could You
not want my heart to leap upward to You? How can my trust have any limits?
Ah! For You, I know, the saints have committed follies
too; they have done big things, because they were eagles. ... Jesus, I am too
little to do big things, and my folly is to hope that Your Love may accept me
as a victim. ... My folly consists in begging the eagles, my brothers, to
obtain for me the favor of flying upward to the Sun of Love with the Divine
Eagle's own wings.
As long as You will, O my Beloved, Your little bird will
remain without strength of wings; it will stay with its eyes fixed upon You,
its desire is to be fascinated by Your Divine gaze, to become the prey of Your
love. One day, so I hope, adored Eagle, You will come for Your little bird, and
mounting with it to the Fire of Love, You will plunge it for eternity in the
burning Abyss of the Love to which it has offered itself as victim. ...
O Jesus! Why can I not tell all little souls that Your
condescension is beyond utterance ... I feel that if, by an impossibility, You
found a soul feebler and smaller than mine, You would take delight in showering
upon it favors greater still, if it abandoned itself with entire trust to Your
infinite mercy. ...
But why desire to communicate Your secrets of love, O
Jesus! Was it not You alone who taught them to me, and can You not reveal them
to others? Yes, I know it and I conjure You to do it, I beg You to bend down
Your Divine gaze upon a great mass of little souls; I beg You to choose in this
world a legion of little victims worthy of Your love! ...
Jesus has no need of books or of teachers to instruct our
souls. He is the Doctor of doctors and teaches without sound of words. I have
never heard His voice, yet I know that He is within me. Every moment He guides
and inspires me. He shows me, just when I need them, truths that before were
unknown to me. Generally it is not during the hours of meditation that I become
aware of them, but in the midst of my daily occupations.
My Beloved teaches my soul; He speaks to it in silence and
in darkness.
St. Therese in this hour show your power.
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