The Story of a Soul (L'Histoire d'une Âme): The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about The Story of a Soul (L'Histoire d'une Âme).

The Story of a Soul (L'Histoire d'une Âme): The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about The Story of a Soul (L'Histoire d'une Âme).

We had hardly reached home when I paid a visit to the Carmel.  You must remember well that interview, dear Mother.  I left myself entirely in your hands, for I had exhausted all my resources.  You told me to write to the Bishop and remind him of his promise.  I obeyed at once, and as soon as my letter was posted I felt I should obtain the coveted permission without any delay.  Alas! each day brought fresh disappointments.  The beautiful feast of Christmas dawned; still Jesus slept.  He left His little ball on the ground without even glancing that way.

This was indeed a sore trial, but Our Lord, Whose Heart is always watching, taught me that He granted miracles to those whose faith is small as a grain of mustard seed, in the hope of strengthening this slender faith; whilst for His intimate friends, for His Mother, He did not work miracles till He had proved their faith.  Did He not permit Lazarus to die even though Mary and Martha had sent word that he was sick?  And at the marriage feast of Cana, when Our Lady asked her Divine Son to aid the master of the house, did He not answer that His hour had not yet come?  But after the trial what a reward!  Water is changed into wine, and Lazarus rises from the dead.  In this way did my Beloved act with His little Therese; after He had tried her for a long time He granted all her desires.

For my New Year’s gift of 1888, Jesus again gave me His Cross.  You told me, dear Mother, that you had had the Bishop’s answer since December 28, the feast of Holy Innocents; that he authorised my immediate entry into the Carmel, but that nevertheless you had decided not to open its doors till after Lent.  I could not restrain my tears at the thought of such a long delay.  This trial affected me in a special manner, for I felt my earthly ties were severed, and yet the Ark in its turn refused to admit the poor little dove.

How did these three months pass?  They were fruitful in sufferings and still more so in other graces.  At first the thought came into my mind that I would not put any extra restraint on myself, I would lead a life somewhat less strictly ordered than was my custom.  But Our Lord made me understand the benefit I might derive from this time He had granted me, and I then resolved to give myself up to a more serious and mortified life.  When I say mortified, I do not mean that I imitated the penances of the Saints; far from resembling those beautiful souls who have practised all sorts of mortifications from their infancy, I made mine consist in simply checking my inclinations, keeping back an impatient answer, doing little services to those around me without setting store thereby, and a hundred other things of the kind.  By practising these trifles I prepared myself to become the Spouse of Jesus, and I can never tell you, Mother, how much the added delay helped me to grow in abandonment, in humility, and in other virtues. ______________________________

[1] Joel 2:19.

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The Story of a Soul (L'Histoire d'une Âme): The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.