-40%
Reliquary / Relic: St. Therese of Lisieux
$ 187.43
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Size: cm1 & 2 class
Wax seal: Carmelite
Memorial:
1 October
30 September (additional in Lisieux, France)
Profile:
Born to a pious middle-class French family of tradesmen; daughter of Blessed Louis Martin and Blessed Marie-Azelie Guérin Martin, and all four of her sisters became nuns. Her mother died when Francoise-Marie was only four, and the family moved to Lisieux, Normandy, France to be closer to family. Cured from an illness at age eight when a statue of the Blessed Virgin smiled at her. Educated by the Benedictine nuns of Notre-Dame-du-Pre. Confirmed there at age eleven. Just before her 14th birthday she received a vision of the Child Jesus; she immediately understood the great sacrifice that had been made for her, and developed an unshakeable faith. Tried to join the Carmelites, but was turned down due to her age. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy at for the Jubilee of Pope Leo XIII whom she met and who knew of her desire to become a nun. Joined the Carmelites at Lisieux on 9 April 1888 at age 15, taking her final vow on 8 September 1890 at age 17. Known by all for her complete devotion to spiritual development and to the austerities of the Carmelite rule. Due to health problems resulting from her ongoing fight with tuberculosis, her superiors ordered her not to fast. Novice mistress at age 20. At age 22 she was ordered by her prioress to begin writing her memories and ideas, which material would turn into the book History of a Soul. Therese defined her path to God and holiness as The Little Way, which consisted of child-like love and trust in God. She had an on-going correspondence with Carmelite missionaries in China, often stating how much she wanted to come work with them. Many miracles attributed to her. Declared a Doctor of the Church in 1997 by Pope John Paul II.
Born: 2 January 1873 at Alcon, Normandy, France as Francoise-Marie Therese Martin
Died: 7pm Thursday 30 September 1897 at Lisieux, France of tuberculosis
Venerated: 14 August 1921 by Pope Benedict XV
Beatified: 29 April 1923 by Pope Pius XI
Canonized: 17 May 1925 by Pope Pius XI
Patronage:
African missions
against bodily ills
against illness
against sickness
AIDS patients
air crews
aircraft pilots
aviators
Belgian air crews
black missions
florists
flower growers
foreign missions (proclaimed on 14 December 1927 by Pope Pius XI)
loss of parents
missionaries
parish missions
restoration of religious freedom in Russia
sick people
Spanish air crews
tuberculosis
—
Australia
France (1944 by Pope Pius XII)
Russia