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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Feast Day of St Terese of Avila: Oct 15th

This is a repost from last year. The Feast Day of St. Teresa of Avila coincides with an event called "Blog Action Day". Last year the subject of Blog Action Day was "Poverty". This year's is on "Climate Change" . . . and I just don't have it in me to blog about this. It just seems like too much of a modern-day bogeyman: possibly based on real concerns, but exaggerated to grotesqueness and used for its fear impact.

Today is Blog Action Day. Today is also the Feast Day of St. Teresa of Avila - a woman who embraced poverty.

St. Teresa was born in the 1500s to a wealthy family and eventually became a nun. In conjunction with St. John of the Cross, she founded a reformed order of nuns called the Discalced (Shoeless) Carmelites. (Shoelessness is a symbol of humility and poverty.) She believed her call from God was to "Holy Poverty".

When I think about the calling to holy poverty, I think of it as a specific Vocation (that is vocation with a most definite capital "V") - not something that the average Christian is called to, but perhaps I don't have the right understanding about that.

When we embrace the truth that all our possessions are only given to us to enable us to do the Lord's work - God's provision for us - suddenly we are in the midst of a dichotomy: ultimate poverty and ultimate wealth. We are entirely poor because nothing we have truly is ours - it belongs entirely to God...and yet, we have a God who "owns the cattle on a thousand hills." He owns it all and can provide for us all that we need and more.

This attitude toward belongings may not lead us to a vocation of Holy Poverty (big H, big P), in which we eschew owning anything, but it might lead us to holiness in poverty (little h, little p) by allowing us to look at our belongings and money as not "owned" but "held in trust". When we hold our belongings "in trust" we are able and willing to freely give to those in need because we understand that "it" all belongs to God anyway.

Want to read more about Holy Poverty?


In honor of St. Teresa of Avila's Feast Day, here are some links and bits of information for you to learn more about her, her order, and her call to Holy Poverty.



A prayer for St. Teresa of Avila's Feast Day
Father, by your Spirit you raised up Saint Teresa of Jesus to show your Church the way to perfection. May her inspired teaching awaken in us a longing for true holiness. Grant this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

A retelling of her story geared toward young children. And one for older kids and adults. And one more if you'd like a more complete biography.

She is a patron saint - against bodily ills, headaches, sickness, and heart disease, of lace makers and workers, of those who have lost parents, of people in need of grace, of people in religious orders, and of people ridiculed for their piety, of those in opposition to the Church authorities. She also authored two great spiritual works: The Way of Perfection and The Interior Castle.

Meals are always a fun way to celebrate a feast day (it is a FEAST day, after all). I love gixing something from the Saint's home culture. Maybe you'd like to start the day off with St. Teresa's bread (similar to french toast). Or enjoy a Spanish feast for dinner (paella, gazpacho, or a tapas meal, and don't forget flan for dessert).

Updated: Hey - my friend Amy at Splendor in the Ordinary has a nice post on St Teresa of Avila, too! And if you are interested in Blog Action Day 2009: Climate Change, check out the home page for links to lots of bloggers.



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2 comments:

The Cunctator said...

That's really sad.

Global warming is increasing poverty around the globe and is taking its most damaging effects on the least fortunate.

Agriculture is declining in Africa.

Rising sea levels threaten the Bay of Bengal and the Nile Delta.

The life-giving glaciers of the Himalayas are melting away.

Kerry said...

This post is about St Teresa and Holy Poverty. I'd love to discuss your ideas about that!

Otherwise, please save the global warming discussion for a post on that topic or consider discussing it on your blog.

Thank you!