Quote of the day, 25 February: Céline Martin

During the [clothing] ceremony, I received a special grace of intimate union with my Beloved; I could no longer see anything that was happening around me. The presence of the Bishop, the numerous clergy, the crowd of people who had flocked together, everything had disappeared before my eyes, I was alone with Jesus… when suddenly I was awakened from my inner silence by the chanting of Compline, which continued in vibrant and lively notes.

The choir sang the psalm: Qui habitat in adjutorio Altissimi (Psalm 90/91), and I could hear the meaning of it, and every word came down into my soul as a token of a sacred promise made to me by the One to whom I was uniting my life.

Sister Geneviève of the Holy Face, O.C.D.

Céline Martin
Histoire d’une petite âme, 265

Note: On 25 February 1959, Sister Geneviève of the Holy Face entered into eternity. She was 89 years and 10 months old and had just marked her 63rd year of profession as a Discalced Carmelite.

We always refer to the website of the Archives of the Carmel of Lisieux for the vast majority of our quotes concerning Saint Thérèse, Saint Zélie, and Saint Louis Martin. If you would like to purchase English translations for the collected works of St. Thérèse, please visit the website of our Discalced Carmelite friars at ICS Publications

Translation from the French text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.

Featured image: Chapter four of the Manuale O.C.D. includes the prayer for the blessing of a Carmelite habit. Image credit: Photograph by Carmelite Quotes.

#CarmeliteHabit #CélineMartin #Clothing #monasticLife #SrGenevièveOfTheHolyFace

Quote of the day, 30 January: St. Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi

On the Saturday previous to the First Sunday in Advent, in the year 1582, which was the first day of December, Catherine bade that long-wished-for adieu to the world and entered, rejoicing, the centre of her rest, her paradise on earth—the monastery of St. Maria degli Angeli, of the Sacred Order of the Carmel, in Borgo San Frediano, which was afterwards transferred, as it exists to-day, to the Borgo di Pinti.

Before leaving her father’s house, she knelt at her parents’ feet, asking forgiveness of them for anything displeasing to them she might have done during the whole of her tender life, and earnestly begged that they would impart to her their parental blessing. With tears of true love, she was blessed—not forgiven, though, for she had never been guilty of any fault.

She also took leave of her other relations and some persons who, on account of particular friendship, frequently visited the house, and, finally, of all the servants of the house, speaking to every one words of respect, of humility, of prayer.

In this last separation, the strength of grace and divine love became more manifest in her. Amidst the tears of her parents and the manifestations of sorrow from her relations and the servants, Catherine bore herself with such fortitude of spirit and firmness of countenance that she seemed not to feel it. This could not have been the case with that heart so gentle and loving, if the strength of divine charity had not wholly mastered her.

Thus, having secured victory over all earthly affections, she was received by the nuns at this second and final entrance with those sentiments with which they were inspired by the general opinion they entertained of her and the trial they had made of her singular virtues during the few days of her first stay with them. For some reason, not unusual in such cases, she did not take the religious habit until the following January.

Father Placido Fabrini

The Life of St. Mary Magdalen De Pazzi, chap. 8

Note: St. Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi entered the Carmel of St. Mary of the Angels, and on 30 January 1583, she received the Carmelite habit and the name of Sister Mary Magdalene.

Fabrini, P. & De’ Pazzi, M.M. 1900, The life of St. Mary Magdalen De-Pazzi: Florentine noble, sacred Carmelite virgin, translated from the Italian by Isoleri A., [publisher not identified] Philadelphia.

Featured image: The Ecstasy of St Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi is an oil on canvas painting attributed to the Italian painter Alessandro Rosi (1627–1697). Its creation date is ca. 1650–1660 and it is part of the collection of the Musée des Beaux Arts in Chambéry, France. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

#CarmeliteHabit #farewell #God #StMaryMagdaleneDePazzi #vocation

Novena to St. John of the Cross, Day 9: All things are forgotten

Scripture

Lord, I have given up my pride
and turned away from my arrogance.
I am not concerned with great matters
or with subjects too difficult for me.
Instead, I am content and at peace.
As a child lies quietly in its mother’s arms,
so my heart is quiet within me.
Israel, trust in the Lord
now and forever!
(Psalm 131)

Reading

The soul is incapable of truly acquiring control of the passions and restriction of the inordinate appetites without forgetting and withdrawing from the sources of these emotions. Disturbances never arise in a soul unless through the apprehensions of the memory. When all things are forgotten, nothing disturbs the peace or stirs the appetites. As the saying goes: What the eye doesn’t see, the heart doesn’t want.

The Ascent of Mount Carmel: Book Three, Chapter 5

Prayer

O St. John of the Cross
You were endowed by our Lord with the spirit of self-denial
and a love of the cross.
Obtain for us the grace to follow your example
that we may come to the eternal vision of the glory of God.

O Saint of Christ’s redeeming cross
the road of life is dark and long.
Teach us always to be resigned to God’s holy will
in all the circumstances of our lives
and grant us the special favor
which we now ask of thee.

Mention your request

Above all, obtain for us the grace of final perseverance,
a holy and happy death and everlasting life with you
and all the saints in heaven.
Amen.

Let’s continue in prayer…

We are grateful to Professor Michael Ogunu, O.C.D.S., of the Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites in Nigeria for sharing this novena.

All scripture references in this novena are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Catholic Edition, copyright © 1989, 1993 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America as accessed from the Bible Gateway website.

Don’t become discouraged and give up prayer, says St. John of the Cross. We offer varying novenas to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, as well as novenas to St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, Sts. Louis and Zélie Martin, St. Elizabeth of the Trinity, and St. Joseph.

Let us unite in prayer

#appetites #ascentOfMountCarmel #ascesis #carmel #carmelitas #carmelitasDescalzas #carmelitasDescalzos #carmelite #carmeliteHabit #carmelitePropers #carmelo #discalcedCarmelite #emotions #forgetfulness #memory #mountCarmel #novena #passions #peace #purification #sanJuanDeLaCruz #secularCarmelites #selfControl #selfDenial #selfEmptying #selfForgetful #selfGiving #soul #stJohnOfTheCross #withdrawing

Quote of the day, 26 November: St. Raphael Kalinowski

On July 5, 1877, Kalinowski left the Czartoryski household and headed for the Carmelite house of Linz in Austria for an interview with the Provincial. He was 42 years of age, quite a late vocation by the customs of those days.

The Provincial accepted his request for admittance; he was shown to a little cell in the house and immediately felt he had reached home. The imminent celebration of the Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel would be very special for him that year.

Next day, he had to leave for the Novitiate House of the Austro-Hungarian semi-province of Teresian Carmelites in Graz, also in Austria, where he was required to spend the next few months as a postulant.

On November 26, 1877, Kalinowski was clothed in the brown habit of a Carmelite novice and was given the name Raphael of St. Joseph, the name by which he would henceforth be known.

Kalinowski, we can ascertain from his letters, didn’t become a religious to inaugurate a renewal of Carmel in Poland, but merely to repent of his sins. The Prior of the house was Gabriel Gadi, while the Master of Novices was Teresius Jung. It was the latter—well-educated and experienced, if exacting—who undertook the spiritual guidance and religious formation of the new novice.

The background of candidates to the Order was strictly investigated before they were accepted, so as to discern their suitability for the life. The investigation is primarily about the candidate himself and his past life, but also about his family.

Kalinowski wrote at that time: “God bless the hand which directed me under the roof of the sons of the Holy Spirit.” He was resolved to commit himself to Our Lady’s Order and continue in “allegiance to Jesus Christ” as the Carmelite Rule urges, for the rest of his days.

Timothy Tierney, o.c.d.

Part Two, ch. 1, Answering the Call

Note: Carmelite biographer Szczepan T. Praskiewicz, OCD, tells us that in his Memoirs, Saint Raphael explained how early on during his exile in Siberia, he happened upon a copy of Skarga’s The Lives of the Saints: “That opened up many horizons for me. There, I discovered a note on the Order of the Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel and its rapid diffusion in the West. It occurred to me that precisely this Order should be able to bring the schismatics back to the Church of Rome. Guided in a marvelous way by Providence, I entered this Order ten years later.”

A statue of Saint Joseph in the Maria Schnee convent of the Discalced Carmelite friars in Graz, where St. Raphael Kalinowski entered the novitiate. Image credit: Eigenes Werk / Wikimedia Commons

Praskiewicz, S 2016, Saint Raphael Kalinowski: An Introduction to his Life and Spirituality, Coonan, T, Griffin, M & Sullivan, L (trans.), ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Tierney, T  2016,  Saint Raphael Kalinowski: Apprenticed to Sainthood in Siberia,  Balboa Press  Australia.

Featured image: The Discalced Carmelite crest is seen above the main entrance to the friars’ convent in Linz, Austria. Both St. Raphael Kalinowski and St. Alphonsus Mary Mazurek passed beneath this hallowed gate; the friars in Linz also cared for the Servant of God Père Jacques Bunel after he was liberated from the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in 1945. Image credit: Andrzej Otrębski / Wikimedia Commons (Some rights reserved)

#austria #carmeliteHabit #novitiate #stRaphaelKalinowski #vocation

Marie du jour, 10 May: St. Teresa of Avila

His Majesty well knows that I can count only upon His Mercy, and, as I cannot help having been what I have, there is nothing for me to do but approach God and trust in the merits of His Son, and of the Virgin, His Mother, whose habit both you and I unworthily wear.

Praise Him, my daughters, for you are really the daughters of Our Lady, and when you have as good a Mother as that, there is no reason for you to be scandalized at my unworthiness.

Imitate Our Lady and consider how great she must be and what a good thing it is that we have her for our Patroness; even my sins and my being what I am have not been sufficient to bring any kind of tarnish upon this sacred Order.

Saint Teresa of Avila

Interior Castle, III, chap. 1

Our Lady of Mount Carmel with Saint Teresa and Saint John of the Cross
Juan Rodríguez Juárez (1675–1728)
Oil on canvas
Museo Nacional del Arte, Mexico

Teresa of Avila, St. 1963, The Complete Works of St. Teresa of Jesus, Vol. III, translated from the Spanish by Peers, E, Sheed and Ward, New York.

⬦ Reflection Question ⬦
How can I live more worthily as a child of Our Lady by imitating her virtues each day?
Join the conversation in the comments.

#belonging #BlessedVirginMary #CarmeliteHabit #imitation #mercy #nuns #StTeresaOfAvila #unworthy

Quote of the day, 30 January: St. Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi

God refuses to unite Himself to that soul which refuses to acknowledge its own nothingness, because, being in Himself and of Himself glorious, and not being in need of anyone, if he united Himself to a soul so unjust and blind, He would seem to be in need of this soul rather than to be what He is in Himself, happy.

As in the creation of the universe, nothingness preceded (if that which is not can be said to precede) all that the Creator made in this world, and the union He made of Himself, giving the being and the participation of Himself to all creatures, according to the capacity and the nature of each, whereby every creature becomes united with and dependent on God; so, in order to accomplish this other union with the soul and receive a world of graces, this annihilation must be found in the soul.

As in the creation (by grace) of the microcosm which is the reasonable creature, and in the union of the Word with the humanity, He wanted an anterior annihilation in her who was to be His Mother. Ecce ancilla Domini — “Behold the handmaid of the Lord” (Lk 1:38); that by this act she might become more worthy and capable of a glory and greatness so wonderful that neither she nor any blessed spirit or mere creature can fully comprehend it (the dignity of such a Mother being an infinite grace); so, in order that the Divine Word may unite with the soul, this annihilation must precede, and, by means of it or this being done, God comes to do wonderful things in that soul, and of it can be said: Fecit mihi magna qui potens est; quia respexit humilitatem ancillae (Lk 1:49, 48).

But even this annihilation the soul does not know in itself; but, by annihilating itself, it attains to the greatness of God, Who unites Himself to the soul possessed of such annihilation. This soul then acknowledges God as glorious in Himself, attributing to Him all honor and glory, and not to itself.

Hence God Himself takes such pleasure in this soul that He remains continually united to it. By means of this union, this soul partakes as far as is possible (remaining in its being as to the nature) of the divine perfections.

Saint Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi

Chapter 38 (excerpt)

Note: St. Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi entered the Carmel of St. Mary of the Angels and on 30 January 1583 she received the Carmelite habit and the name of Sister Mary Magdalene.

Fabrini, P. & De’ Pazzi, M.M. 1900, The life of St. Mary Magdalen De-Pazzi: Florentine noble, sacred Carmelite virgin, translated from the Italian by Isoleri A., [publisher not identified] Philadelphia.

Featured image: The Ecstasy of St Mary Magdalene de’ Pazzi is an oil on canvas painting attributed to the Italian painter Alessandro Rosi (1627–1697). Its creation date is ca. 1650–1660 and it is part of the collection of the Musée des Beaux Arts in Chambéry, France. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

#CarmeliteHabit #Clothing #DivineWord #God #grace #MotherOfGod #nothingness #StMaryMagdaleneDePazzi

Luke 1:38 - Bible Gateway

Quote of the day, 10 January: Marie Martin

My dear little daughter, I don’t want the eve of such a beautiful day to pass by without speaking a little word to her from her Jesus. Her Jesus! He has made her a bed of lilies! “My beloved browses among the lilies!” [Song 6:3], says the spouse in the Canticle.

I want to give my little daughter the only picture that is dear to me among all others…. Aunt at Le Mans [Sr. Marie-Dosithée, V.S.M.] gave it to me, and I am attached to it, for it says much to my heart.

But all for the little fiancée of Jesus! What is too beautiful for her?

Oh! yes, “…happy the lily that remained without spot until the hour of reaping” [inscription on the holy card mentioned above]. One day, we shall reap, rejoicing! [Ps 126:5] And this hour will come! And it will be a day without clouds, and the more we shall have suffered the more radiant that day will be. Then! then! Ah! I keep silent…. This day will be so beautiful, it will be so sweet, this day which will have no setting!!

My whole heart to my dear angel, whom I adorned for Jesus on the day of her First Communion and whom I’ll adorn on the day of her espousals.

Sister Marie of the Sacred Heart, O.C.D. (Marie Martin)

Letter LC 107 to St. Thérèse, 9 January 1889

Note: During the Ordinary Process, Pauline Martin explained the date chosen for St. Thérèse’s clothing: “Having begun her postulancy in April, at the age of 15 years and three months, normally she could have received the habit within six months, before the end of October; in fact, she wasn’t clothed until 10 January 1889. Around that time our father was very ill, and we hoped that this delay would enable him to attend her clothing ceremony at a later date.”

Thérèse of Lisieux, S & Clarke, J 1982, General Correspondence: Letters of Saint Therese of Lisieux: Volume 1 1877-1890, Centenary ed., Institute of Carmelite Studies, Washington DC.

Featured image: The lilium longiflorum is also known as the Easter lily. Image credit: Golden Age Photos / Adobe Stock (Stock photo)

#CarmeliteHabit #Clothing #happiness #Jesus #lilies #MarieMartin #PaulineMartin #StThérèseOfLisieux

Song of Solomon 6:3 - Bible Gateway

Quote of the day, 26 November: St. Raphael Kalinowski

Saint Raphael Kalinowski’s last and longest stage of life is the thirty years (1877–1907) he lived in the Carmelite monastery. Consenting to the voice that called him to Carmel, Joseph Kalinowski entered formation, ready to work for God within the Church after decades of service as an engineer, military officer, prisoner of war in Siberia, professor and tutor.

On November 26, 1877, he went to Graz, Austria and was clothed in the habit of the Order, receiving at the same time his religious name: Raphael of Saint Joseph.

How did Kalinowski come to know Carmel? We turn to Father Szczepan T. Praskiewicz, OCD, for the details. He provides fascinating insights into the development of the Saint’s vocation.

Karmelitenkonvent Linz | Image credit: Discalced Carmelites

In his Memoirs Saint Raphael tells us that early on during his exile in Siberia he happened upon a copy of a book written by Piotr Skarga, The Lives of the Saints:

That opened up many horizons for me. There I discovered a note on the Order of the Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel and its rapid diffusion in the West. It occured to me that precisely this Order should be able to bring the schismatics back to the Church of Rome. Guided in a marvelous way by Providence, I entered this Order ten years later.

As with every vocation story, there were many graced encounters that guided his steps along the way.

Saint Raphael Kalinowski had wanted to find a way to become a Carmelite friar, which is why he became a tutor to Gucio, the young son of the noble Czartoryski family residing in Paris. But in God’s providence and unbeknownst to Saint Raphael, one of his pupil’s aunts was a Discalced Carmelite nun in the Carmel of Krakow.

In true Teresian spirit, this aunt, Sr. Mary Xavier of Jesus was seeking young men to renew Carmelite life in Poland. When the Saint accompanied his young pupil on a trip from Paris to visit his aunt at the monastery in Krakow, Kalinowski made a profound impression upon the nun; still, it was the Holy Spirit that spoke to her spirit, impressing upon her the fact that her nephew’s tutor was sent by Divine Providence.

Without saying a word, Sr. Mary Xavier of Jesus began a prayer crusade for the family tutor and his vocation to the Discalced Carmelites; furthermore, she began to correspond with him.

Saint Raphael explained what had happened in a letter to his family back home in Vilnius, Lithuania:

I have a sign of the mercy and goodness of the Lord, which brought me hope and consolation through people consecrated to him. Gucio’s aunt, the Reverend Sister Mary Xavier of Jesus… whom I met only once at the grilles and who hardly knows me, only a few days ago—exactly when I least expected it—sent me the following poem of the seraphic Saint Teresa: Let nothing trouble you, let nothing frighten you…

Nada te turbe in the current Polish translation

Fr. Praskiewicz tells us that St. Teresa’s famous Nada te turbe became Kalinowski’s motto. Soon after he received Sr. Mary Xavier’s letter, he wrote to his parents:

Each day I take strength from Saint Teresa’s words about which I wrote to you, my dear parents, in my last letter.

In the end, these very words were the source of divine inspiration that induced him to join the sons of St. Teresa, the Discalced Carmelite friars. He wrote to his parents on 4 November 1876:

A year ago there came to me, like an echo, a voice from the grilles of Carmel. This voice was clearly addressed to me and I have accepted it; it was a salvific voice from the infinite mercy of God commanding me. I can only exclaim, ‘I will sing the mercies of the Lord forever.’ The only thing that now remains for me to do is to ask your parental blessing.”

Kalinowski attended to the details, the housekeeping of his life as anyone aspiring to enter religious life would do: prepare to leave a job, a home, to travel and pray. On 5 July 1877, he left the Czartoryski family in Paris and traveled to Linz, Austria to meet the Discalced Carmelite provincial superior.

God rewarded Kalinowski for the steadfast pursuit of his vocation at such a mature age—Raphael of St. Joseph was 42 years old when he received the holy habit of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.

A statue of Saint Joseph in the Maria Schnee convent of the Discalced Carmelite friars in Graz, where St. Raphael Kalinowski entered the novitiate. Image credit: Eigenes Werk / Wikimedia Commons

Praskiewicz OCD, S 2016, Saint Raphael Kalinowski: An Introduction to his Life and Spirituality, Translated from the Polish by Coonan, T, Griffin, M & Sullivan, L, ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Featured image: The Discalced Carmelite crest is seen above the main entrance to the friars’ convent in Linz, Austria. Both St. Raphael Kalinowski and St. Alphonsus Mary Mazurek passed beneath this hallowed gate; the friars in Linz also cared for the Servant of God Père Jacques Bunel after he was liberated from the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in 1945. Image credit: Andrzej Otrębski / Wikimedia Commons (Some rights reserved)

#CarmeliteHabit #Clothing #Graz #Linz #NadaTeTurbe #novitiate #StRaphaelKalinowski #SzczepanTPraskiewicz #vocation

Raphael Kalinowski, O.C.D. (1835-1907) - biography

Quote of the day, 14 November: St. Teresa of Avila

Now we are all at peace, calced and discalced; no one can hinder us from serving our Lord. Hence, my Brothers and Sisters, since His Majesty has heard your prayers so well, let us make haste to serve Him.

Let those in the present who are eyewitnesses consider the favors He has granted us and the trials and disturbances from which He has delivered us. And those who are to come, when they find everything running smoothly, let them, for the love of our Lord, not neglect anything relating to perfection. May that which is said of some orders that praise their beginnings not be said of them.

Now we are beginning, and let them strive to advance always from good to better. Let them beware, for the devil through very small things drills holes through which very large things enter. May it not happen that those who are to come say: “These things are not important; don’t go to extremes.” Oh, my daughters, everything that helps us advance is important.

For love of our Lord, I beg you to remember how soon everything comes to an end, to remember the favor our Lord has granted us in bringing us to this order and the great punishment that will befall anyone who might introduce some mitigation.

Rather, fix your eyes always on the ancestry from which we come, those holy prophets. How many saints we have in heaven who have worn this habit! Let us adopt the holy presumption that with the Lord’s help we will be like them.

The battle will be brief, my Sisters, and the end is eternal. Let us set aside these things that in themselves are nothing, using only those that lead us to this end without end, so as to love Him and serve Him more, for He will live forever and ever, amen, amen. Thanks be to God.

Saint Teresa of Avila

The Foundations, ch. 29, nos. 32–33

Carmelite Army
Belita William (American, 21st c.)
Oil on canvas, 48 x 60 in.
St. Therese Church, Alhambra California

© Belita William, all rights reserved

We are grateful to the artist, Belita William, for her kind permission to share this new work with our readers. You can view more of Belita’s artworks at belitawilliamart.com.

Teresa of Avila, St. 1985, The Collected Works of St. Teresa of Avila, translated from the Spanish by Kavanaugh, K; Rodriguez, O, ICS Publications, Washington DC.

#AllCarmeliteSaints #beginning #CarmeliteHabit #devil #perfection #prophets #StTeresaOfAvila #unity

I met our Mother Teresa of Jesus on the occasion of having, since my childhood, wished very much to find an order of nuns living with such harshness and religion as one finds in these monasteries.

And, knowing my desires, a Father of the Company of Jesus whom I had trusted for many years went at my request to find out about some monasteries to see if they proceeded with the order I was looking for.

He found Mother Teresa of Jesus in Toledo, and this Father wrote to me: “Here I have found a holy woman who, with apostolic authority, founds a monastery with the religion that you desire. She is a native of Avila and her name is Doña Teresa de Ahumada, and her Rule and Constitutions are thus,” explaining their essentials.

And I was so satisfied that I wrote to this Father, whose name was Father Pedro Rodriguez, to tell the holy Mother of my desires and the reason why I had not tried to fulfill them until then, because until I knew what the saint thought, and where and how, I did not write her.

He showed her my letter, and she immediately received me, saying that of the three or four houses that she had founded at the time, I should go to the one I wanted, although she would be more pleased if I came to receive the habit in the one in Avila, since it was the first one she had founded and she was the prioress there.

Then, even though she was still there in Toledo, she had to come to Avila, where I received the habit from Mother Teresa of Jesus.

I learned that she was from there and that her father was Barnaba Alonso Sanchez de Cepeda, and her mother was Doña Beatriz de Ahumada. I knew some of her relatives, who were very honorable and important, and in Avila, I met some of them. I have known them for more than twenty-six years and I have dealt with some of them individually.

Mother Teresa of Jesus and I were such good friends that by sight and in writing, in her own handwriting, I knew almost everything about her, which are declared in her books, to which I refer in general.

Venerable Anne of Jesus (Lobera)

Testimony given at Salamanca
Ordinary Process, first question
5 July 1597

Translation from the Spanish text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.

Featured image: Detail of a portrait of Anne of Jesus after Hieronymus Wierix. Image credit: Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (Public domain)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/09/26/lobera-testim1/

#AnneOfJesusLoberaYTorres #Avila #CarmeliteHabit #causeOfBeatification #Clothing #StTeresaOfAvila #testimony #Toledo