Saint Thérèse of Lisieux - Doctor of the
Church

In
his Apostolic Letter, dated 19th October
1997, Pope John Paul II proclaimed Saint
Thérèse
of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face a
Doctor of the Universal Church.
The
full text of Divini Amoris Scientia is
printed below.
It
is also available in printer-friendly (.pdf)
format
by clicking
here.
The Science of Divine Love
1. THE SCIENCE OF DIVINE LOVE, which the
Father of mercies pours out through
Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit, is a
gift granted to the little and the
humble so that they may know and
proclaim the secrets of the kingdom,
hidden from the learned and the wise;
for this reason Jesus rejoiced in the
Holy Spirit, praising the Father who
graciously willed it so (cf. Lk
10:21-22; Mt 11:25-26).
Mother
Church also rejoices in noting that
throughout history the Lord has
continued to reveal himself to the
little and the humble, enabling his
chosen ones, through the Spirit who
"searches everything, even the depths of
God" (1 Cor 2:10), to speak of
the gifts "bestowed on us by God... in
words not taught by human wisdom but
taught by the Spirit, interpreting
spiritual truths in spiritual language"
(1 Cor 2:12,13). In this way the
Holy Spirit guides the Church into the
whole truth, endowing her with various
gifts, adorning her with his fruits,
rejuvenating her with the power of the
Gospel and enabling her to discern the
signs of the times in order to respond
ever more fully to the will of God (cf.
Lumen gentium, nn. 4, 12;
Gaudium et spes, n. 4).
Shining
brightly among the little ones to whom
the secrets of the kingdom were revealed
in a most special way is Thérèse of the
Child Jesus and the Holy Face, a
professed nun of the Order of Discalced
Carmelites, the 100th anniversary of
whose entry into the heavenly homeland
occurs this year.
During
her life Thérèse discovered "new lights,
hidden and mysterious meanings" (Ms
A, 83v) and received from the divine
Teacher that "science of love" which she
then expressed with particular
originality in her writings (cf. Ms
B, 1r). This science is the luminous
expression of her knowledge of the
mystery of the kingdom and of her
personal experience of grace. It can be
considered a special charism of Gospel
wisdom which Thérèse, like other saints
and teachers of faith, attained in
prayer (cf. Ms C, 36r·).
2. The
reception given to the example of her
life and Gospel teaching in our century
was quick, universal and constant. As if
in imitation of her precocious spiritual
maturity, her holiness was recognized by
the Church in the space of a few years.
In fact, on 10 June 1914 Pius X signed
the decree introducing her cause of
beatification; on 14 August 1921
Benedict XV declared the heroic virtues
of the Servant of God, giving an address
for the occasion on the way of spiritual
childhood; and Pius XI proclaimed her
blessed on 29 April 1923. Shortly
afterwards, on 17 May 1925, the same
Pope canonized her before an immense
crowd in St Peter's Basilica,
highlighting the splendour of her
virtues and the originality of her
doctrine. Two years later, on 14
December 1927, in response to the
petition of many missionary Bishops, he
proclaimed her patron of the missions
along with St Francis Xavier.
Beginning with these acts of
recognition, the spiritual radiance of
Thérèse of the Child Jesus increased in
the Church and spread throughout the
world. Many institutes of consecrated
life and ecclesial movements, especially
in the young Churches, chose her as
their patron and teacher, taking their
inspiration from her spiritual doctrine.
Her message, often summarized in the
so-called "little way", which is nothing
other that the Gospel way of holiness
for all, was studied by theologians and
experts in spirituality. Cathedrals,
basilicas, shrines and churches
throughout the world were built and
dedicated to the Lord under the
patronage of the Saint of Lisieux. The
Catholic Church venerates her in the
various Eastern and Western rites. Many
of the faithful have been able to
experience the power of her
intercession. Many of those called to
the priestly ministry or the consecrated
life, especially in the missions and the
cloister, attribute the divine grace of
their vocation to her intercession and
example.
3. The
Pastors of the Church, beginning with my
predecessors, the Supreme Pontiffs of
this century, who held up her holiness
as an example for all, also stressed
that Thérèse is a teacher of the
spiritual life with a doctrine both
spiritual and profound, which she drew
from the Gospel sources under the
guidance of the divine Teacher and then
imparted to her brothers and sisters in
the Church with the greatest
effectiveness (cf. Ms B, 2v-3).
This
spiritual doctrine has been passed on to
us primarily by her autobiography which,
taken from three manuscripts she wrote
in the last years of her life and
published a year after her death with
the title Histoire d'une âme (Lisieux
1898), has aroused an extraordinary
interest down to our day. This
autobiography, translated along with her
other writings into about 50 languages,
has made Thérèse known in every part of
the world, even outside the Catholic
Church. A century after her death,
Thérèse of the Child Jesus continues to
be recognized as one of the great
masters of the spiritual life in our
time.
4. It
is not surprising then that the
Apostolic See received many petitions to
confer on her the title of Doctor of the
Universal Church.
In
recent years, especially with the happy
occasion of the first centenary of her
death close at hand, these requests
became more and more numerous, including
on the part of Episcopal Conferences; in
addition, study conferences were held
and numerous publications have pointed
out how Thérèse of the Child Jesus
possesses an extraordinary wisdom and
with her doctrine helps so many men and
women of every state in life to know and
love Jesus Christ and his Gospel.
In the
light of these facts, I decided
carefully to study whether the Saint of
Lisieux had the prerequisites for being
awarded the title of Doctor of the
Universal Church.
5. In
this context I am pleased to recall
briefly some events in the life of
Thérèse of the Child Jesus. Born in
Alençon, France, on 2 January 1873, she
is baptized two days later in the Church
of Notre Dame, receiving the name
Marie-Françoise-Thérèse. Her parents are
Louis Martin and Zélie Guérin, whose
heroic virtues I recently recognized.
After her mother's death on 28 August
1877, Thérèse moves with her whole
family to the town of Lisieux where,
surrounded by the affection of her
father and sisters, she receives a
formation both demanding and full of
tenderness.
Towards
the end of 1879 she receives the
sacrament of Penance for the first time.
On the day of Pentecost in 1883 she has
the extraordinary grace of being healed
from a serious illness through the
intercession of Our Lady of Victories.
Educated by the Benedictines of Lisieux,
she receives First Communion on 8 May
1884, after an intense preparation
crowned with an exceptional experience
of the grace of intimate union with
Jesus. A few weeks later, on 14 June of
that same year, she receives the
sacrament of Confirmation with a vivid
awareness of what the gift of the Holy
Spirit involves in her personal sharing
in the grace of Pentecost. On Christmas
Day of 1886 she has a profound spiritual
experience that she describes as a
"complete conversion". As a result, she
overcomes the emotional weakness caused
by the loss of her mother and begins "to
run as a giant" on the way of perfection
(cf. Ms A, 44v45v).
Thérèse
wishes to embrace the contemplative
life, like her sisters Pauline and Marie
in the Carmel of Lisieux, but is
prevented from doing so by her young
age. During a pilgrimage to Italy, after
visiting the Holy House of Loreto and
places in the Eternal City, at an
audience granted by the Pope to the
faithful of the Diocese of Lisieux on 20
November 1887, she asks Leo XIII with
filial boldness to be able to enter
Carmel at the age of 15 years.
On 9
April 1888 she enters the Carmel of
Lisieux, where she receives the habit of
the Blessed Virgin's order on 10 January
of the following year and makes her
religious profession on 8 September
1890, the feast of the Birth of the
Virgin Mary. At Carmel she undertakes
the way of perfection marked out by the
Mother Foundress, Teresa of Jesus, with
genuine fervour and fidelity in
fulfilling the various community tasks
entrusted to her. Illumined by the Word
of God, particularly tried by the
illness of her beloved father, Louis
Martin, who dies on 29 July 1894,
Thérèse embarks on the way of holiness,
insisting on the centrality of love. She
discovers and imparts to the novices
entrusted to her care the little way of
spiritual childhood, by which she enters
more and more deeply into the mystery of
the Church and, drawn by the love of
Christ, feels growing within her the
apostolic and missionary vocation which
spurs her to bring everyone with her to
meet the divine Spouse.
On 9
June 1895, the feast of the Most Holy
Trinity, she offers herself as a
sacrificial victim to the merciful Love
of God. On 3 April of the following
year, on the night between Holy Thursday
and Good Friday, she notices the first
symptoms of the illness which will lead
to her death. Thérèse welcomes it as a
mysterious visitation of the divine
Spouse. At the same time she undergoes a
trial of faith which will last until her
death. As her health deteriorates, she
is moved to the infirmary on 8 July
1897. Her sisters and other religious
collect her sayings, while her
sufferings and trials, borne with
patience, intensify to the moment of her
death on the afternoon of 30 September
1897. "I am not dying; I am entering
life", she had written to one of her
spiritual brothers, Fr Bellière (Lettres
244). Her last words, "My God, I
love you", are the seal of her life.
6.
Thérèse of the Child Jesus left us
writings that deservedly qualify her as
a teacher of the spiritual life. Her
principal work remains the account of
her life in three autobiographical
manuscripts (Manuscrits
autobiographiques A, B, C), first
published with the soon to be famous
title of Histoire d'une Âme.
In
Manuscript A, written at the request of
her sister Agnes of Jesus, then Prioress
of the monastery, and given to her on 21
January 1896, Thérèse describes the
stages of her religious experience: the
early years of childhood, especially the
time of her First Communion and
Confirmation, adolescence, up to her
entrance into Carmel and her first
profession.
Manuscript B, written during her retreat
that same year at the request of her
sister Marie of the Sacred Heart,
contains some of the most beautiful,
best known and oft-quoted passages from
the Saint of Lisieux. They reveal the
Saint's full maturity as she speaks of
her vocation in the Church, the Bride of
Christ and Mother of souls.
Manuscript C, composed in June and the
first days of July 1897, a few months
before her death and dedicated to the
Prioress, Marie de Gonzague, who had
requested it, completes the
recollections in Manuscript A on life in
Carmel. These pages reveal the author's
supernatural wisdom. Thérèse recounts
some sublime experiences during this
final period of her life. She devotes
moving pages to her trial of faith: a
grace of purification that immerses her
in a long and painful dark night,
illuminated by her trust in the
merciful, fatherly love of God. Once
again, and without repeating herself,
Thérèse makes the light of the Gospel
shine brightly. Here we find the most
beautiful pages she devoted to trusting
abandonment into God's hands, to unity
between love of God and love of
neighbour, to her missionary vocation in
the Church.
In
these three different manuscripts, which
converge in a thematic unity and in a
progressive description of her life and
spiritual way, Thérèse has left us an
original autobiography which is the
story of her soul. It shows how in her
life God has offered the world a precise
message, indicating an evangelical way,
the "little way", which everyone can
take, because everyone is called to
holiness.
In the
266 Lettres we possess, addressed to
family members, women religious and
missionary "brothers", Thérèse shares
her wisdom, developing a teaching that
is actually a profound exercise in the
spiritual direction of souls.
Her
writings also include 54 Poésies,
some of which have great theological and
spiritual depth inspired by Sacred
Scripture. Worthy of special mention are
Vivre d'Amour!... (Poésies
17) and Pourquoi je t'aime, ô Marie!
(Poésies 54), an original
synthesis of the Virgin Mary's journey
according to the Gospel. To this
literary production should be added
eight Récréations pieuses: poetic
and theatrical compositions, conceived
and performed by the Saint for her
community on certain feast days, in
accordance with the tradition of Carmel.
Among those writings should be mentioned
a series of 21 Prières. Nor can
we forget the collection of all she said
during the last months of her life.
These sayings, of which there are
several editions, known as the
Novissima verba, have also been
given the title Derniers Entretiens.
7. From
careful study of the writings of St
Thérèse of the Child Jesus and from the
resonance they have had in the Church,
salient aspects can be noted of her
"eminent doctrine", which is the
fundamental element for conferring the
title of Doctor of the Church.
First
of all, we find a special charism of
wisdom. This young Carmelite, without
any particular theological training, but
illumined by the light of the Gospel,
feels she is being taught by the divine
Teacher who, as she says, is "the Doctor
of Doctors" (Ms A, 83v), and from
him she receives "divine teachings" (Ms
B, 1r). She feels that the words of
Scripture are fulfilled in her: "Whoever
is a little one, let him come to me....
For to him that is little, mercy shall
be shown" (Ms B, 1v; cf. Prv 9:4;
Wis 6:6) and she knows she is being
instructed in the science of love,
hidden from the wise and prudent, which
the divine Teacher deigned to reveal to
her, as to babes (Ms A, 49r; cf.
Lk 10:21-22).
Pius
XI, who considered Thérèse of Lisieux
the "Star of his pontificate", did not
hesitate to assert in his homily on the
day of her canonization, 17 May 1925:
"The Spirit of truth opened and made
known to her what he usually hides from
the wise and prudent and reveals to
little ones; thus she enjoyed such
knowledge of the things above - as Our
immediate Predecessor attests - that she
shows everyone else the sure way of
salvation" (AAS 17 [1925], p.
213).
Her
teaching not only conforms to Scripture
and the Catholic faith, but excels ("eminet")
for the depth and wise synthesis it
achieved. Her doctrine is at once a
confession of the Church's faith, an
experience of the Christian mystery and
a way to holiness. Thérèse offers a
mature synthesis of Christian
spirituality: she combines theology and
the spiritual life; she expresses
herself with strength and authority,
with a great ability to persuade and
communicate, as is shown by the
reception and dissemination of her
message among the People of God.
Thérèse's teaching expresses with
coherence and harmonious unity the
dogmas of the Christian faith as a
doctrine of truth and an experience of
life. In this regard it should not be
forgotten that the understanding of the
deposit of faith transmitted by the
Apostles, as the Second Vatican Council
teaches, makes progress in the Church
with the help of the Holy Spirit: "There
is growth in insight into the realities
and words that are passed on... through
the contemplation and study of believers
who ponder these things in their hearts
(cf. Lk 2:19 and 51). It comes from the
intimate sense of spiritual realities
which they experience. And it comes from
the preaching of those who have
received, along with their right of
succession in the episcopate, the sure
charism of truth" (Dei Verbum, n.
8).
In the
writings of Thérèse of Lisieux we do not
find perhaps, as in other Doctors, a
scholarly presentation of the things of
God, but we can discern an enlightened
witness of faith which, while accepting
with trusting love God's merciful
condescension and salvation in Christ,
reveals the mystery and holiness of the
Church.
Thus we
can rightly recognize in the Saint of
Lisieux the charism of a Doctor of the
Church, because of the gift of the Holy
Spirit she received for living and
expressing her experience of faith, and
because of her particular understanding
of the mystery of Christ. In her are
found the gifts of the new law, that is,
the grace of the Holy Spirit, who
manifests himself in living faith
working through charity (cf. St Thomas
Aquinas, Summa Theol., I-II, q.
106, art. 1; q. 108, art. 1).
We can
apply to Thérèse of Lisieux what my
Predecessor Paul VI said of another
young Saint and Doctor of the Church,
Catherine of Siena: "What strikes us
most about the Saint is her infused
wisdom, that is to say, her lucid,
profound and inebriating absorption of
the divine truths and mysteries of
faith.... That assimilation was
certainly favoured by the most singular
natural gifts, but it was also evidently
something prodigious, due to a charism
of wisdom from the Holy Spirit" (AAS
62 [1970], p. 675).
8. With
her distinctive doctrine and
unmistakable style, Thérèse appears as
an authentic teacher of faith and the
Christian life. In her writings, as
in the sayings of the Holy Fathers, is
found that life-giving presence of
Catholic tradition whose riches, as the
Second Vatican Council again says, "are
poured out in the practice and life of
the Church, in her belief and prayer" (Dei
Verbum, n. 8).
If
considered in its literary genre,
corresponding to her education and
culture, and if evaluated according to
the particular circumstances of her era,
the doctrine of Thérèse of Lisieux
appears in providential harmony with the
Church's most authentic tradition, both
for its confession of the Catholic faith
and for its promotion of the most
genuine spiritual life, presented to all
the faithful in a living, accessible
language.
She has
made the Gospel shine appealingly in our
time; she had the mission of making the
Church, the Mystical Body of Christ,
known and loved; she helped to heal
souls of the rigours and fears of
Jansenism, which tended to stress God's
justice rather than his divine mercy. In
God's mercy she contemplated and adored
all the divine perfections, because
"even his justice (and perhaps even more
so than the other perfections) seems to
me clothed in love" (Ms A, 83v·).
Thus she became a living icon of that
God who, according to the Church's
prayer, "shows his almighty power in his
mercy and forgiveness" (cf. Roman
Missal, Opening prayer, 26th Sunday
in Ordinary Time).
Even
though Thérèse does not have a true and
proper doctrinal corpus, nevertheless a
particular radiance of doctrine
shines forth from her writings which, as
if by a charism of the Holy Spirit,
grasp the very heart of the message of
Revelation in a fresh and original
vision, presenting a teaching of eminent
quality.
The
core of her message is actually the
mystery itself of God-Love, of the
Triune God, infinitely perfect in
himself. If genuine Christian spiritual
experience should conform to the
revealed truths in which God
communicates himself and the mystery of
his will (cf. Dei Verbum, n. 2),
it must be said that Thérèse experienced
divine revelation, going so far as to
contemplate the fundamental truths of
our faith united in the mystery of
Trinitarian life. At the summit, as the
source and goal, is the merciful love of
the three Divine Persons, as she
expresses it, especially in her Act
of Oblation to Merciful Love. At the
root, on the subject's part, is the
experience of being the Father's
adoptive children in Jesus; this is the
most authentic meaning of spiritual
childhood, that is, the experience of
divine filiation, under the movement of
the Holy Spirit. At the root again, and
standing before us, is our neighbour,
others, for whose salvation we must
collaborate with and in Jesus, with the
same merciful love as his.
Through
spiritual childhood one experiences that
everything comes from God, returns to
him and abides in him, for the salvation
of all, in a mystery of merciful love.
Such is the doctrinal message taught and
lived by this Saint.
As it
was for the Church's Saints in every
age, so also for her, in her spiritual
experience Christ is the centre and
fullness of Revelation. Thérèse knew
Jesus, loved him and made him loved with
the passion of a bride. She penetrated
the mysteries of his infancy, the words
of his Gospel, the passion of the
suffering Servant engraved on his holy
Face, in the splendour of his glorious
life, in his Eucharistic presence. She
sang of all the expressions of Christ's
divine charity, as they are presented in
the Gospel (cf. PN 24, Jésus,
mon Bien-Aimé, rappelle-toi!).
Thérèse
received particular light on the reality
of Christ's Mystical Body, on the
variety of its charisms, gifts of the
Holy Spirit, on the eminent power of
love, which in a way is the very heart
of the Church, where she found her
vocation as a contemplative and
missionary (cf. Ms B, 2r·-3v·).
Lastly,
among the most original chapters of her
spiritual doctrine we must recall
Thérèse's wise delving into the mystery
and journey of the Virgin Mary,
achieving results very close to the
doctrine of the Second Vatican Council
in chapter eight of the Constitution
Lumen gentium and to what I myself
taught in the Encyclical Letter
Redemptoris Mater of 25 March 1987.
9. The
primary source of her spiritual
experience and her teaching is the Word
of God in the Old and New Testaments.
She herself admits it, particularly
stressing her passionate love for the
Gospel (cf. Ms A, 83v). Her
writings contain over 1,000 biblical
quotations: more than 400 from the Old
Testament and over 600 from the New.
Despite
her inadequate training and lack of
resources for studying and interpreting
the sacred books, Thérèse immersed
herself in meditation on the Word of God
with exceptional faith and spontaneity.
Under the influence of the Holy Spirit
she attained a profound knowledged of
Revelation for herself and for others.
By her loving concentration on Scripture
- she even wanted to learn Hebrew and
Greek to understand better the spirit
and letter of the sacred books - she
showed the importance of the biblical
sources in the spiritual life, she
emphasized the originality and freshness
of the Gospel, she cultivated with
moderation the spiritual exegesis of the
Word of God in both the Old and New
Testaments. Thus she discovered hidden
treasures, appropriating words and
episodes, sometimes with supernatural
boldness, as when, in reading the texts
of St Paul (cf. 1 Cor 12-13), she
realized her vocation to love (cf. Ms
B, 3r-3v). Enlightened by the
revealed Word, Thérèse wrote brilliant
pages on the unity between love of God
and love of neighbour (cf. Ms C,
11v-19r); and she identified with Jesus'
prayer at the Last Supper as the
expression of her intercession for the
salvation of all (cf. Ms C,
34r-35r).
Her
doctrine, as was said, conforms to the
Church's teaching. From childhood she
was taught by her family to participate
in prayer and liturgical worship. In
preparation for her first Confession,
first Communion and the sacrament of
Confirmation, she gave evidence of an
extraordinary love for the truths of the
faith, and she learned the Catechism
almost word for word (cf. Ms A,
37r-37v). At the end of her life she
wrote the Apostles' Creed in her own
blood, as an expression of her
unreserved attachment to the profession
of faith.
In
addition to the words of Scripture and
the Church's doctrine, Thérèse was
nourished as a youth by the teaching of
the Imitation of Christ, which,
as she herself acknowledges, she knew
almost by heart (cf. Ms A, 47r).
Decisive for fulfilling her Carmelite
vocation were the spiritual texts of the
Mother Foundress, Teresa of Jesus,
especially those explaining the
contemplative and ecclesial meaning of
the charism of the Teresian Carmel (cf.
Ms C, 33v). But in a very special
way, Thérèse was nourished on the
mystical doctrine of St John of the
Cross, who was her true spiritual master
(cf. Ms A, 83r). It should cause
no surprise, then, if she who had been
an outstanding pupil in the school of
these two Saints, later declared Doctors
of the Church, should later become a
master of the spiritual life.
10. The
spiritual doctrine of Thérèse of
Lisieux has helped extend the kingdom of
God. By her example of holiness, of
perfect fidelity to Mother Church, of
full communion with the See of Peter, as
well as by the special graces obtained
by her for many missionary brothers and
sisters, she has rendered a particular
service to the renewed proclamation and
experience of Christ's Gospel and to the
extension of the Catholic faith in every
nation on earth.
There
is no need to dwell at length on the
universality of Thérèse's doctrine and
on the broad reception of her message
during the century since her death: it
has been well documented in the studies
made in view of conferring on her the
title of Doctor of the Church.
A
particularly important fact in this
regard is that the Church's Magisterium
has not only recognized Thérèse's
holiness, but has also highlighted the
wisdom of her doctrine. Pius X had
already said that she was "the greatest
saint of modern times". On joyfully
receiving the first Italian edition of
the Story of a Soul, he extolled
the fruits that had resulted from
Thérèse's spirituality. Benedict XV, on
the occasion of proclaiming the Servant
of God's heroic virtues, explained the
way of spiritual childhood and praised
the knowledge of divine realities which
God granted to Thérèse in order to teach
others the ways of salvation (cf. AAS
13 [1921], pp. 449-452). On the
occasion of both her beatification and
canonization, Pius XI wished to expound
and recommend the Saint's doctrine,
underscoring her special divine
enlightenment (Discorsi di Pio XI,
vol. I, Turin 1959, p. 91) and
describing her as a teacher of life (cf.
AAS 17 [1925], pp. 211-214). When
the Basilica of Lisieux was consecrated
in 1954, Pius XII said, among other
things, that Thérèse penetrated to the
very heart of the Gospel with her
doctrine (cf. AAS 46 [1954], pp.
404-408). Cardinal Angelo Roncalli, the
future Pope John XXIII, visited Lisieux
several times, especially when he was
Nuncio in Paris. On various occasions
during his pontificate he showed his
devotion to the Saint and explained the
relationship between the doctrine of the
Saint of Avila and her daughter, Thérèse
of Lisieux (Discorsi, Messaggi,
Colloqui, vol. II [1959-1960], pp.
771-772). Many times during the
celebration of the Second Vatican
Council, the Fathers recalled her
example and doctrine. On the centenary
of her birth, Paul VI addressed a Letter
on 2 January 1973 to the Bishop of
Bayeux and Lisieux, in which he extolled
Thérèse's example in the search for God,
offered her as a teacher of prayer and
theological virtue of hope, and a model
of communion with the Church, calling
the attention of teachers, educators,
pastors and theologians themselves to
the study of her doctrine (cf. AAS
65 [1973], pp. 12-15). I myself on
various occasions have had the joy of
recalling the person and doctrine of the
Saint, especially during my
unforgettable visit to Lisieux on 2 June
1980, when I wished to remind everyone:
"One can say with conviction about
Thérèse of Lisieux that the Spirit of
God allowed her heart to reveal directly
to the people of our time the
fundamental mystery, the reality of
the Gospel.... Her 'little way' is the
way of 'holy childhood'. There is
something unique in this way, the genius
of St Thérèse of Lisieux. At the same
time there is the confirmation and
renewal of the most basic and
most universal truth. What truth
of the Gospel message is really more
basic and more universal than this: God
is our Father and we are his children?"
(Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II,
vol. III/1 [1980], p. 1659).
These
simple references to an uninterrupted
series of testimonies from the Popes of
this century on the holiness and
doctrine of St Thérèse of the Child
Jesus and to the universal dissemination
of her message clearly express to what
extent the Church, in her pastors and
her faithful, has accepted the spiritual
doctrine of this young Saint.
A sign
of the ecclesial reception of the
Saint's teaching is the appeal to her
doctrine in many documents of the
Church's ordinary Magisterium,
especially when speaking of the
contemplative and missionary vocation,
of trust in the just and merciful God,
of Christian joy and of the call to
holiness. Evidence of this fact is the
presence of her doctrine in the recent
Catechism of the Catholic Church
(nn. 127, 826, 956, 1011, 2011, 2558).
She who so loved to learn the truths of
the faith in the catechism deserved to
be included among the authoritative
witnesses of Catholic doctrine.
Thérèse possesses an exceptional
universality.
Her
person, the Gospel message of the
"little way" of trust and spiritual
childhood have received and continue to
receive a remarkable welcome, which has
transcended every border.
The
influence of her message extends first
of all to men and women whose holiness
and heroic virtues the Church herself
has recognized, to the Church's pastors,
to experts in theology and spirituality,
to priests and seminarians, to men and
women religious, to ecclesial movements
and new communities, to men and women of
every condition and every continent. To
everyone Thérèse gives her personal
confirmation that the Christian mystery,
whose witness and apostle she became by
making herself in prayer "the apostle of
the apostles", as she boldly calls
herself (Ms A, 56r·), must be
taken literally, with the greatest
possible realism, because it has a value
for every time and place. The power of
her message lies in its concrete
explanation of how all Jesus' promises
are fulfilled in the believer who knows
how confidently to welcome in his own
life the saving presence of the
Redeemer.
11. All
these reasons are clear evidence of how
timely is the Saint of Lisieux's
doctrine and of the particular impact
her message has had on the men and
women of our century. Moreover, some
circumstances contribute to making her
designation as a Teacher for the Church
of our time even more significant.
First
of all, Thérèse is a woman, who
in approaching the Gospel knew how to
grasp its hidden wealth with that
practicality and deep resonance of life
and wisdom which belong to the feminine
genius. Because of her universality she
stands out among the multitude of holy
women who are resplendent for their
Gospel wisdom.
Thérèse
is also a contemplative. In the
hiddenness of her Carmel she lived the
great adventure of Christian experience
to the point of knowing the breadth,
length, height and depth of Christ's
love (cf. Eph 3:18-19). God did not want
his secrets to remain hidden, but
enabled Thérèse to proclaim the secrets
of the King (cf. Ms C, 2v·). By
her life Thérèse offers a witness and
theological illustration of the beauty
of the contemplative life as the total
dedication to Christ, Spouse of the
Church, and as an affirmation of God's
primacy over all things. Hers is a
hidden life which possesses a mysterious
fruitfulness for spreading the Gospel
and fills the Church and the world with
the sweet odour of Christ (cf. LT
169, 2v).
Lastly,
Thérèse of Lisieux is a young person.
She reached the maturity of holiness
in the prime of youth (cf. Ms C,
4r). As such, she appears as a Teacher
of evangelical life, particularly
effective in illumining the paths of
young people, who must be the leaders
and witnesses of the Gospel to the new
generations.
Thérèse
of the Child Jesus is not only the
youngest Doctor of the Church, but is
also the closest to us in time, as if to
emphasize the continuity with which the
Spirit of the Lord sends his messengers
to the Church, men and women as teachers
and witnesses to the faith. In fact,
whatever changes can be noted in the
course of history and despite the
repercussions they usually have on the
life and thought of individuals in every
age, we must never lose sight of the
continuity which links the Doctors of
the Church to each other: in every
historical context they remain witnesses
to the unchanging Gospel and, with the
light and strength that come from the
Holy Spirit, they become its messengers,
returning to proclaim it in its purity
to their contemporaries. Thérèse is a
Teacher for our time, which thirsts for
living and essential words, for heroic
and credible acts of witness. For this
reason she is also loved and accepted by
brothers and sisters of other Christian
communities and even by non-Christians.
12.
This year, when the centenary of the
glorious death of Thérèse of the Child
Jesus and the Holy Face is being
celebrated, as we prepare to celebrate
the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000,
after receiving a great number of
authoritative petitions, especially from
many Episcopal Conferences throughout
the world, and after accepting the
official petition, or Supplex
Libellus, addressed to me on 8 March
1997 by the Bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux,
as well as from the Superior General of
the Discalced Carmelites of the Blessed
Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel and from the
Postulator General of the same order, I
decided to entrust the Congregation for
the Causes of Saints, which has
competence in this matter, with the
special study of the cause for
conferring the title of Doctor on this
Saint, "after hearing the opinion of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith regarding the eminent doctrine" (Apost.
Const. Pastor Bonus, n. 73).
After
the necessary documentation had been
collected, the two above-mentioned
Congregations addressed the question in
the meetings of their respective
consultors: the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith on 5 May 1997,
with regard to the "eminent doctrine",
and the Congregation for the Causes of
Saints on 29 May of the same year, to
examine the special "Positio". On the
following 17 June, the Cardinals and
Bishops who are members of these
Congregations, following a procedure
approved by me for this occasion, met in
a plenary interdicasterial session and
discussed the cause, giving a
unanimously favourable opinion on
granting the title of Doctor of the
Universal Church to St Thérèse of the
Child Jesus and the Holy Face. I was
personally informed of this opinion by
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Prefect of
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, and by the Pro-Prefect of the
Congregation for the Causes of Saints,
Archbishop Alberto Bovone, titular
Archbishop of Caesarea in Numidia.
In view
of this, on 24 August last, during the
Angelus prayer in the presence of
hundreds of Bishops and before a vast
throng of young people from around the
world, gathered in Paris for the 12th
World Youth Day, I wanted personally to
announce my intention to proclaim
Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy
Face a Doctor of the Universal Church
during the celebration of World Mission
Sunday in Rome.
Today,
19 October 1997, in St Peter's Square,
filled with faithful from every part of
the world, and in the presence of a
great many Cardinals, Archbishops and
Bishops, during the solemn Eucharistic
celebration I proclaimed Thérèse of the
Child Jesus and the Holy Face a Doctor
of the Universal Church in these words:
Fulfilling the wishes of many
Brothers in the Episcopate and of a
great number of the faithful throughout
the world, after consulting the
Congregation for the Causes of Saints
and hearing the opinion of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith regarding her eminent doctrine,
with certain knowledge and after lengthy
reflection, with the fullness of Our
apostolic authority We declare Saint
Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy
Face, virgin, to be a Doctor of the
Universal Church. In the name of the
Father, and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit.
This
having been duly enacted, We decree that
this Apostolic Letter is to be
religiously preserved and to have full
effect both now and in the future;
furthermore, it is thus to be judged and
defined as right, and whatever to the
contrary may be attempted by anyone, on
whatever authority, knowingly or
unknowingly, is null and void.
Given in Rome, at St Peter's, under the
Fisherman's ring, the 19th day of the
month of October in the year of the Lord
1997, the 20th of the Pontificate.