Our apologies that our blog has long been outdated due to a technical problem, which disabled the in-charge to open and update it. We have then decided to make a new one with the same name.
To begin with, let us focus on the Celebration of the 500th Birth Anniversary of our holy Mother Foundress and Reformer, St. Teresa of Avila, whose feast is on 15 October 2015.
As a way of preparing, we will publish each day of the novena (6-14 October) about her and from her writings...
Who is Teresa of Avila?
St Teresa wa born to Don Alonso de Cepeda and Doña Beatriz de Ahumada on March 29, 1515 in Avila, Spain. She is the third of the nine children.
As a young girl she struggles to balance a love for God with a need for friends and fun. Later as a teenager, she was more interested in boys than in religion. She became over eager to read romantic stories of chivalry, began to cultivate her feminine charm and to plan for a possible marriage. When she was 13, her mother died at the age of 33 years. Her father entrusted her to the care of the Augustinian nuns at Our Lady of Grace convent in Avila. At first she hated to live as a boarder at the convent but later she developed the love for silence and prayer there through reading good books.
At the age of 20 she decided to offer her life to God. She entered the Carmelite Monastery of the Incarnation in Avila and took the name of Teresa of Jesus. In the monastery there was a large number of nuns which was not conducive to prayer. Teresa longed for a quite atmosphere, solitude and silence, and deeper interior prayer. She prayed for guidance and God inspired her to found a new Carmelite Monastery with only a few nuns (a bout a dozen) in the community that focused on a re return to a life of simplicity, solitude, silence, fraternal charity and interior prayer.
St. Teresa of Avila is the Foundress of the Discalced Carmelite Order (or Teresian Carmel), both priests and nuns. She founded the first Carmelite Monastery for nuns under the patronage of St . Joseph on August 24, 1562 in Avila. There she told the nuns to offer their prayers and sacrifices for the sanctification of priests and especially "for those who are defenders of the Church and for preachers and for learned men who protect her (the Church) from attack...."(WP 1:2). She died on October 4, 1582 at the age of 67, was declared a Saint (canonized) by Pope Gregory XI on March 12, 1622. Pope Paul VI declared her the First Woman Doctor of the Church for her writings and teachings on September 27, 1970.
Next: Why do we celebrate St. Teresa's 500th Birth Centenary?
To begin with, let us focus on the Celebration of the 500th Birth Anniversary of our holy Mother Foundress and Reformer, St. Teresa of Avila, whose feast is on 15 October 2015.
As a way of preparing, we will publish each day of the novena (6-14 October) about her and from her writings...
St Teresa wa born to Don Alonso de Cepeda and Doña Beatriz de Ahumada on March 29, 1515 in Avila, Spain. She is the third of the nine children.
As a young girl she struggles to balance a love for God with a need for friends and fun. Later as a teenager, she was more interested in boys than in religion. She became over eager to read romantic stories of chivalry, began to cultivate her feminine charm and to plan for a possible marriage. When she was 13, her mother died at the age of 33 years. Her father entrusted her to the care of the Augustinian nuns at Our Lady of Grace convent in Avila. At first she hated to live as a boarder at the convent but later she developed the love for silence and prayer there through reading good books.
At the age of 20 she decided to offer her life to God. She entered the Carmelite Monastery of the Incarnation in Avila and took the name of Teresa of Jesus. In the monastery there was a large number of nuns which was not conducive to prayer. Teresa longed for a quite atmosphere, solitude and silence, and deeper interior prayer. She prayed for guidance and God inspired her to found a new Carmelite Monastery with only a few nuns (a bout a dozen) in the community that focused on a re return to a life of simplicity, solitude, silence, fraternal charity and interior prayer.
St. Teresa of Avila is the Foundress of the Discalced Carmelite Order (or Teresian Carmel), both priests and nuns. She founded the first Carmelite Monastery for nuns under the patronage of St . Joseph on August 24, 1562 in Avila. There she told the nuns to offer their prayers and sacrifices for the sanctification of priests and especially "for those who are defenders of the Church and for preachers and for learned men who protect her (the Church) from attack...."(WP 1:2). She died on October 4, 1582 at the age of 67, was declared a Saint (canonized) by Pope Gregory XI on March 12, 1622. Pope Paul VI declared her the First Woman Doctor of the Church for her writings and teachings on September 27, 1970.
Next: Why do we celebrate St. Teresa's 500th Birth Centenary?

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