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left, [15] and for which they cannot thank His Majesty enough.
Others He has advanced from well to better. To the young He
gives courage and knowledge, so that they may desire nothing
else, and also to understand that to live away from all things in
this life is to live in greater peace even here below. To those
who are no longer young, and whose health is weak, He gives—and
has given—the strength to undergo the same austerities and
penance with all the others.
14. O my Lord! how Thou dost show Thy power! There is no need to
seek reasons for Thy will; for with Thee, against all natural
reason, all things are possible: so that thou teachest clearly
there is no need of anything but of loving Thee [16] in earnest,
and really giving up everything for Thee, in order that Thou, O
my Lord, might make everything easy. It is well said that Thou
feignest to make Thy law difficult: [17] I do not see it, nor do
I feel that the way that leadeth unto Thee is narrow. I see it as
a royal road, and not a pathway; a road upon which whosoever
really enters, travels most securely. No mountain passes and no
cliffs are near it: these are the occasions of sin. I call that a
pass,—a dangerous pass,—and a narrow road, which has on one
side a deep hollow, into which one stumbles, and on the other a
precipice, over which they who are careless fall, and are dashed
to pieces. He who loves Thee, O my God, travels safely by the
open and royal road, far away from the precipice: he has scarcely
stumbled at all, when Thou stretchest forth Thy hand to save him.
One fall—yea, many falls—if he does but love Thee, and not the
things of the world, are not enough to make him perish; he
travels in the valley of humility. I cannot understand what it
is that makes men afraid of the way of perfection.
15. May our Lord of His mercy make us see what a poor security we
have in the midst of dangers so manifest, when we live like the
rest of the world; and that true security consists in striving to
advance in the way of God! Let us fix our eyes upon Him, and
have no fear that the Sun of justice will ever set, or suffer us
to travel to our ruin by night, unless we first look away from
Him. People are not afraid of living in the midst of lions,
every one of whom seems eager to tear them: I am speaking of
honours, pleasures, and the like joys, as the world calls them:
and herein the devil seems to make us afraid of ghosts. I am
astonished a thousand times, and ten thousand times would I
relieve myself by weeping, and proclaim aloud my own great
blindness and wickedness, if, perchance, it might help in some
measure to open their eyes. May He, who is almighty, of His
goodness open their eyes, and never suffer mine to be
blind again!
1. Doña Luisa de la Cerda.
2. Maria of Jesus was the daughter of a Reporter of Causes in the
Chancery of Granada; but his name and that of his wife are not
known. Maria married, but became a widow soon afterwards.
She then became a novice in the Carmelite monastery in Granada,
and during her noviciate had revelations, like those of
St. Teresa, about a reform of the Order. Her confessor made
light of her revelations, and she then referred them to F. Gaspar
de Salazar, a confessor of St. Teresa, who was then in Granada.
He approved of them, and Maria left the noviciate, and went to
Rome with two holy women of the Order of St. Francis. The three
made the journey on foot, and, moreover, barefooted. Pope Pius
IV. heard her prayer, and, looking at her torn and bleeding feet,
said to her, “Woman of strong courage, let it be as thou wilt.”
She returned to Granada, but both the Carmelites and the city
refused her permission to found her house there, and some went so
far as to threaten to have her publicly whipped. Doña Leonor de
Mascareñas gave her a house in Alcala de Henares, of which she
took possession Sept. 11, 1562; but the house was formally
constituted July 23, 1563, and subjected to the Bishop ten days
after (Reforma, i. c. 59; and Don Vicente, vol. i. p. 255).
The latter says that the Chronicler is in error when he asserts
that this monastery of Maria of Jesus was endowed.
3. The sixth chapter of the rule is: “Nullus fratrum sibi aliquid
proprium, esse dicat, sed sint vobis omnia communia.”
4. See ch. xxxii. § 13.
5. The Constitutions which the Saint read in the Monastery of the
Incarnation must have been the Constitutions grounded on the
Mitigated Rule which was sanctioned by Eugenius IV. (Romani
Pontificis, A.D. 1432).
6. See Relation, i. § 10.
7. F. Pedro Ibañez.
8. Ch. xi. § 3.
9. F. Pedro Ibañez.
10. The house of Doña Luisa, in Toledo.
11. The monastery of the Incarnation, Avila.
12. 2 Cor. xii. 9: “Virtus in infirmitate perficitur.”
13. See Way of Perfection, ch. xxii.; but ch. xiii. ed. Doblado.
14. See Foundations, ch. I, § 1.
15. St. Matt. xix. 29: “Et omnis qui reliquerit domum . . .
propter nomen Meum, centuplum accipiet, et vitam
æternam possidebit.”
16. When the workmen were busy with the building, a nephew of the
Saint, the child of her sister and Don Juan de Ovalle, was struck
by some falling stones and killed. The workmen took the child to
his mother: and the Saint, then in the house of Doña Guiomar de
Ulloa, was sent for. Doña Guiomar took the dead boy into her
arms, gave him to the Saint, saying that it was a grievous blow
to the father and mother, and that she must obtain his life from
God. The Saint took the body, and, laying it in her lap, ordered
those around her to cease their lamentations, of whom her sister
was naturally the loudest, and be silent. Then, covering her
face and her body with her veil, she prayed to God, and God gave
the child his life again. The little boy soon after ran up to
his aunt and thanked her for what she had done. In after years
the child used to say to the Saint that, as she had deprived him
of the bliss of heaven by bringing him back to life, she was
bound to see that he did not suffer loss. Don Gonzalo died three
years after St. Teresa, when he was twenty-eight years of age
(Reforma, i. c. 42, § 2).
17. Psalm xciii. 20: “Qui fingis laborem in præcepto.”
Chapter XXXVI.
The Foundation of the Monastery of St. Joseph.
Persecution and Temptations. Great Interior Trial of the Saint,
and Her Deliverance.
1. Having now left that city, [1] I travelled in great joy,
resolved to suffer most willingly whatever our Lord might be
pleased to lay upon me. On the night of my arrival here, [2]
came also from Rome the commission and the Brief for the erection
of the monastery. [3] I was astonished myself, and so were those
who knew how our Lord hastened my coming, when they saw how
necessary it was, and in what a moment our Lord had brought me
back. [4] I found here the Bishop and the holy friar, [5] Peter
of Alcantara, and that nobleman, [6] the great servant of God, in
whose house the holy man was staying; for he was a man who was in
the habit of receiving the servants of God in his house.
These two prevailed on the Bishop to accept the monastery, which
was no small thing, because it was founded in poverty; but he was
so great a lover of those whom he saw determined to serve our
Lord, that he was immediately drawn to give them His protection.
It was the approbation of the holy old man, [7] and the great
trouble he took to make now this one, now that one, help us, that
did the whole work. If I had not come at the moment, as I have
just said, I do not see how it could have been done; for the holy
man was here but a short time,—I think not quite eight
days,—during which he was also ill; and almost immediately
afterwards our Lord took him to Himself. [8] It seems as if His
Majesty reserved him till this affair was ended, because now for
some time—I think for more than two years—he had been very ill.
2. Everything was done in the utmost secrecy; and if it had not
been so, I do not see how anything could have been done at all;
for the people of the city were against us, as it appeared
afterwards. Our Lord ordained that one of my brothers-in-law [9]
should be ill, and his wife away, and himself in such straits
that my superiors gave me leave to remain with him.
Nothing, therefore, was found out, though some persons had their
suspicions;—still, they did not believe. It was very wonderful,
for his illness lasted only no longer than was necessary for our
affair; and when it was necessary he should recover his health,
that I might be disengaged, and he leave the house empty, our
Lord restored him; and he was astonished at it himself. [10]
3. I had much trouble in persuading this person and that to allow
the foundation; I had to nurse the sick man, and obtain from the
workmen the hasty preparation of the house, so that it might have
the form of a monastery; but much remained still to be done.
My friend was not here, [11] for we thought it best she should be
away, in order the better to hide our purpose. I saw that
everything depended on haste, for many, reasons, one of which was
that I was afraid I might be ordered back to my monastery at any
moment. I was troubled by so many things, that I suspected my
cross had been sent me, though it seemed but a light one in
comparison with that which I understood our Lord meant me
to carry.
4. When everything was settled, our Lord was pleased that some of
us should take the habit on St. Bartholomew’s Day. The most Holy
Sacrament began to dwell in the house at the same time. [12]
With full sanction and authority, then, our monastery of our most
glorious father St. Joseph was founded in the year 1562. [13]
I was there myself to give the habit, with two nuns [14] of the
house to which we belonged, who happened then to be absent from
it. As the house which thus became a monastery was that of my
brother-in-law—I said before [15] that he had bought it, for the
purpose of concealing our plan—I was there myself with the
permission of my superiors; and I did nothing without the advice
of learned men, in order that I might not break, in a single
point, my vow of obedience. As these persons considered what I
was doing to be most advantageous for the whole Order, on many
accounts, they told me—though I was acting secretly, and taking
care my superiors should know nothing—that I might go on.
If they had told me that there was the slightest imperfection in
the whole matter, I would have given up the founding of a
thousand monasteries,—how much more, then, this one! I am
certain of this; for
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