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The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus: Chapter IX. The Means Whereby Our Lord Quickened Her Soul…

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus
Chapter IX. The Means Whereby Our Lord Quickened Her Soul…
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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

Chapter IX. The Means Whereby Our Lord Quickened Her Soul…

The Means Whereby Our Lord Quickened Her Soul, Gave Her Light in Her Darkness, and Made Her Strong in Goodness.

1. My soul was now grown weary; and the miserable habits it had contracted would not suffer it to rest, though it was desirous of doing so. It came to pass one day, when I went into the oratory, that I saw a picture which they had put by there, and which had been procured for a certain feast observed in the house. It was a representation of Christ most grievously wounded; and so devotional, that the very sight of it, when I saw it, moved me--so well did it show forth that which He suffered for us. So keenly did I feel the evil return I had made for those wounds, that I thought my heart was breaking. I threw myself on the ground beside it, my tears flowing plenteously, and implored Him to strengthen me once for all, so that I might never offend Him any more.

2. I had a very great devotion to the glorious Magdalene, and very frequently used to think of her conversion--especially when I went to Communion. As I knew for certain that our Lord was then within me, I used to place myself at His feet, thinking that my tears would not be despised. I did not know what I was saying; only He did great things for me, in that He was pleased I should shed those tears, seeing that I so soon forgot that impression. I used to recommend myself to that glorious Saint, that she might obtain my pardon.

3. But this last time, before that picture of which I am speaking, I seem to have made greater progress; for I was now very distrustful of myself, placing all my confidence in God. It seems to me that I said to Him then that I would not rise up till He granted my petition. I do certainly believe that this was of great service to me, because I have grown better ever since.144

4. This was my method of prayer: as I could not make reflections with my understanding, I contrived to picture Christ as within me;145 and I used to find myself the better for thinking of those mysteries of His life during which He was most lonely. It seemed to me that the being alone and afflicted, like a person in trouble, must needs permit me to come near unto Him.

5. I did many simple things of this kind; and in particular I used to find myself most at home in the prayer in the Garden, whither I went in His company. I thought of the bloody sweat, and of the affliction He endured there; I wished, if it had been possible, to wipe away that painful sweat from His face; but I remember that I never dared to form such a resolution--my sins stood before me so grievously. I used to remain with Him there as long as my thoughts allowed me, and I had many thoughts to torment me. For many years, nearly every night before I fell asleep, when I recommended myself to God, that I might sleep in peace, I used always to think a little of this mystery of the prayer in the Garden--yea, even before I was a nun, because I had been told that many indulgences were to be gained thereby. For my part, I believe that my soul gained very much in this way, because I began to practise prayer without knowing what it was; and now that it had become my constant habit, I was saved from omitting it, as I was from omitting to bless myself with the sign of the cross before I slept.

6. And now to go back to what I was saying of the torture which my thoughts inflicted upon me. This method of praying, in which the understanding makes no reflections, hath this property: the soul must gain much, or lose. I mean, that those who advance without meditation, make great progress, because it is done by love. But to attain to this involves great labour, except to those persons whom it is our Lord’s good pleasure to lead quickly to the prayer of quiet. I know of some. For those who walk in this way, a book is profitable, that by the help thereof they may the more quickly recollect themselves. It was a help to me also to look on fields, water, and flowers.146 In them I saw traces of the Creator--I mean, that the sight of these things was as a book unto me; it roused me, made me recollected, and reminded me of my ingratitude and of my sins. My understanding was so dull, that I could never represent in the imagination either heavenly or high things in any form whatever until our Lord placed them before me in another way.147

7. I was so little able to put things before me by the help of my understanding, that, unless I saw a thing with my eyes, my imagination was of no use whatever. I could not do as others do, who can put matters before themselves so as to become thereby recollected. I was able to think of Christ only as man. But so it was; and I never could form any image of Him to myself, though I read much of His beauty, and looked at pictures of Him. I was like one who is blind, or in the dark, who, though speaking to a person present, and feeling his presence, because he knows for certain that he is present--I mean, that he understands him to be present, and believes it--yet does not see him. It was thus with me when I used to think of our Lord. This is why I was so fond of images. Wretched are they who, through their own fault, have lost this blessing; it is clear enough that they do not love our Lord--for if they loved Him, they would rejoice at the sight of His picture, just as men find pleasure when they see the portrait of one they love.

8. At this time, the Confessions of St. Augustine were given me. Our Lord seems to have so ordained it, for I did not seek them myself, neither had I ever seen them before. I had a very great devotion to St. Augustine, because the monastery in which I lived when I was yet in the world was of his Order;148 and also because he had been a sinner--for I used to find great comfort in those Saints whom, after they had sinned, our Lord converted to Himself. I thought they would help me, and that, as our Lord had forgiven them, so also He would forgive me. One thing, however, there was that troubled me--I have spoken of it before149--our Lord had called them but once, and they never relapsed; while my relapses were now so many. This it was that vexed me. But calling to mind the love that He bore me, I took courage again. Of His mercy I never doubted once, but I did very often of myself.

9. O my God, I amazed at the hardness of my heart amidst so many succours from Thee. I am filled with dread when I see how little I could do with myself, and how I was clogged, so that I could not resolve to give myself entirely to God. When I began to read the Confessions, I thought I saw myself there described, and began to recommend myself greatly to this glorious Saint. When I came to his conversion, and read how he heard that voice in the garden, it seemed to me nothing less than that our Lord had uttered it for me: I felt so in my heart. I remained for some time lost in tears, in great inward affliction and distress. O my God, what a soul has to suffer because it has lost the liberty it had of being mistress over itself! and what torments it has to endure! I wonder now how I could live in torments so great: God be praised Who gave me life, so that I might escape from so fatal a death! I believe that my soul obtained great strength from His Divine Majesty, and that He must have heard my cry, and had compassion upon so many tears.

10. A desire to spend more time with Him began to grow within me, and also to withdraw from the occasions of sin: for as soon as I had done so, I turned lovingly to His Majesty at once. I understood clearly, as I thought, that I loved Him; but I did not understand, as I ought to have understood it, wherein the true love of God consists. I do not think I had yet perfectly disposed myself to seek His service when His Majesty turned towards me with His consolations. What others strive after with great labour, our Lord seems to have looked out for a way to make me willing to accept--that is, in these later years to give me joy and comfort. But as for asking our Lord to give me either these things or sweetness in devotion, I never dared to do it; the only thing I prayed Him to give me was the grace never to offend Him, together with the forgiveness of my great sins. When I saw that my sins were so great, I never ventured deliberately to ask for consolation or for sweetness. He had compassion enough upon me, I think--and, in truth, He dealt with me according to His great mercy--when He allowed me to stand before Him, and when He drew me into His presence; for I saw that, if He had not drawn me, I should not have come at all.

11. Once only in my life do I remember asking for consolation, being at the time in great aridities. When I considered what I had done, I was so confounded, that the very distress I suffered from seeing how little humility I had, brought me that which I had been so bold as to ask for. I knew well that it was lawful to pray for it; but it seemed to me that it is lawful only for those who are in good dispositions, who have sought with all their might to attain to true devotion--that is, not to offend God, and to be disposed and resolved for all goodness. I looked upon those tears of mine as womanish and weak, seeing that I did not obtain my desires by them; nevertheless, I believe that they did me some service; for, specially after those two occasions of great compunction and sorrow of heart,150 accompanied by tears, of which I am speaking, I began in an especial way to give myself more to prayer, and to occupy myself less with those things which did me harm--though I did not give them up altogether. But God Himself, as I have just said, came to my aid, and helped me to turn away from them. As His Majesty was only waiting for some preparation on my part, the spiritual graces grew in me as I shall now explain. It is not the custom of our Lord to give these graces to any but to those who keep their consciences in greater pureness.151

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