The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of CarmelSt. Teresa was...
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Author: Teresa, of Avila
Format: eBook
Language: English
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The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel

$17.73 $8.86

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel

$17.73 $8.86
Author: Teresa, of Avila
Format: eBook
Language: English

The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of the Order of Our Lady of Carmel

St. Teresa was born in Avila on Wednesday, March 28, 1515. Her father was Don Alfonso Sanchez de Cepeda, and her mother Doa Beatriz Davila y Ahumada. The name she received in her baptism was common to both families, for her great-grandmother on the father's side was Teresa Sanchez, and her grandmother on her mother's side was Teresa de las Cuevas. While she remained in the world, and even after she had become a nun in the monastery of the Incarnation, which was under the mitigated rule, she was known as Doa Teresa Sanchez Cepeda Davila y Ahumada; for in those days children took the name either of the father or of the mother, as it pleased them. The two families were noble, but that of Ahumada was no longer in possession of its former wealth and power.[1] Doa Beatriz was the second wife of Don Alfonso, and was related in the fourth degree to the first wife, as appears from the dispensation granted to make the marriage valid on the 16th of October, 1509. Of this marriage Teresa was the thirdchild. Doa Beatriz died young, and the eldest daughter, Maria de Cepeda, took charge of her younger sisters--they were two--and was as a second mother to them till her marriage, which took place in 1531, when the Saint was in her sixteenth year. But as she was too young to be left in charge of her father's house, and as her education was not finished, she was sent to the Augustinian monastery, the nuns of which received young girls, and brought them up in the fear of God.[2] The Saint's own account is that she was too giddy and careless to be trusted at home, and that it was necessary to put her under the care of those who would watch over her and correct her ways. She remained a year and a half with the Augustinian nuns, and all the while God was calling her to Himself. She was not willing to listen to His voice; she would ask the nuns to pray for her that she might have light to see her way; "but for all this," she writes, "I wished not to be a nun."[3] By degrees her will yielded, and she had some inclination to become a religious at the end of the eighteen months of her stay, but that was all. She became ill; her father removed her, and the struggle within herself continued,--on the one hand, the voice of God calling her; on the other, herself labouring to escape from hervocation. At last, after a struggle which lasted three months, she made up her mind, and against her inclination, to give up the world. She asked her father's leave, and was refused. She besieged him through her friends, but to no purpose. "The utmost I could get from him," she says, "was that I might do as I pleased after his death."[4] How long this contest with her father lasted is not known, but it is probable that it lasted many months, for the Saint was always most careful of the feelings of others, and would certainly have endured much rather than displease a father whom she loved so much, and who also loved her more than his otherchildren.[5] ......Buy Now (To Read More)

Product details

Ebook Number: 8120
Author: Teresa, of Avila
Release Date: May 1, 2005
Format: eBook
Language: English

Contributors



Translator: Lewis, David, 1814-1895

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