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The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus: The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus
The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus
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table of contents
  1. Introduction to the Present Edition
  2. St. Teresa’s Arguments of the Chapters
  3. Preface by David Lewis
  4. Annals of the Saint’s Life
  5. The Life of the Holy Mother Teresa of Jesus. Prologue
  6. Chapter I. Childhood and Early Impressions…
  7. Chapter II. Early Impressions. Dangerous Books and Companions…
  8. Chapter III. The Blessing of Being with Good People…
  9. Chapter IV. Our Lord Helps Her to Become a Nun…
  10. Chapter V. Illness and Patience of the Saint…
  11. Chapter VI. The Great Debt She Owed to Our Lord for His Mercy to Her…
  12. Chapter VII. Lukewarmness. The Loss of Grace…
  13. Chapter VIII. The Saint Ceases Not to Pray…
  14. Chapter IX. The Means Whereby Our Lord Quickened Her Soul…
  15. Chapter X. The Graces She Received in Prayer…
  16. Chapter XI. Why Men Do Not Attain Quickly to the Perfect Love of God…
  17. Chapter XII. What We Can Ourselves Do…
  18. Chapter XIII. Of Certain Temptations of Satan…
  19. Chapter XIV. The Second State of Prayer…
  20. Chapter XV. Instructions for Those Who Have Attained to the Prayer of Quiet…
  21. Chapter XVI. The Third State of Prayer…
  22. Chapter XVII. The Third State of Prayer…
  23. Chapter XVIII. The Fourth State of Prayer…
  24. Chapter XIX. The Effects of This Fourth State of Prayer…
  25. Chapter XX. The Difference Between Union and Rapture…
  26. Chapter XXI. Conclusion of the Subject…
  27. Chapter XXII. The Security of Contemplatives Lies in Their Not Ascending…
  28. Chapter XXIII. The Saint Resumes the History of Her Life…
  29. Chapter XXIV. Progress Under Obedience…
  30. Chapter XXV. Divine Locutions…
  31. Chapter XXVI. How the Fears of the Saint Vanished…
  32. Chapter XXVII. The Saint Prays to Be Directed by a Different Way…
  33. Chapter XXVIII. Visions of the Sacred Humanity, and of the Glorified Bodies…
  34. Chapter XXIX. Of Visions…
  35. Chapter XXX. St. Peter of Alcantara Comforts the Saint…
  36. Chapter XXXI. Of Certain Outward Temptations and Appearances of Satan…
  37. Chapter XXXII. Our Lord Shows St. Teresa the Place Which She Had by Her Sins Deserved in Hell…
  38. Chapter XXXIII. The Foundation of the Monastery Hindered…
  39. Chapter XXXIV. The Saint Leaves Her Monastery of the Incarnation for a Time…
  40. Chapter XXXV. The Foundation of the House of St. Joseph…
  41. Chapter XXXVI. The Foundation of the Monastery of St. Joseph…
  42. Chapter XXXVII. The Effects of the Divine Graces in the Soul…
  43. Chapter XXXVIII. Certain Heavenly Secrets, Visions, and Revelations…
  44. Chapter XXXIX. Other Graces Bestowed on the Saint…
  45. Chapter XL. Visions, Revelations, and Locutions
  46. Relation I
  47. Relation II
  48. Relation III
  49. Relation IV
  50. Relation V
  51. Relation VI
  52. Relation VII
  53. Relation VIII
  54. Relation IX
  55. Relation X
  56. Relation XI

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When about A.D. 1452 certain communities of Beguines demanded affiliation to the Carmelite Order, they were given the Constitutions of the friars without any alterations. These Constitutions were revised in 1462, but neither there nor in the Acts of the General Chapters, so far as these are preserved, is there the slightest reference to convents of nuns. The colophon of the printed edition (Venice, 1499) shows that they held good for friars and nuns: Expliciunt sacrae constitutiones novae fratrum et sororum beatae Mariae de Monte Carmelo. They contain the customary laws forbidding the friars under pain of excommunication, to leave the precincts of their convents without due licence, but do not enjoin strict enclosure, which would have been incompatible with their manner of life and their various duties. St. Teresa nowhere insinuates that the Constitutions, such as they were, were not kept at the Incarnation; her remarks in chap. vii. are aimed at the Constitutions themselves, which were never made for nuns, and therefore did not provide for the needs of their convents.

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