PowerPoint PresentationEMMANUEL RENAULT, O.C.D.
JEAN ABIVEN, O.C.D.
Saint Teresa’s Life
• 1515 (March 28): The birth of Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada. • 1535
(November 2): Teresa enters the Incarnation Convent.
• 1554: Teresa’s Conversion (Saint Augustine, Christ’s
wounds…)
• 1562 (August 24): Foundation of Saint Joseph’s Carmel.
(December): Teresa begins The Way of Perfection. • 1568 (November
28): The foundation of first male Discalced Carmelite monastery
with John of the Cross.
• 1572 (November 16): Teresa experiences the Grace of Spiritual
Marriage.
• 1582 (October 4/15): Teresa dies “Daughter of the Church” in Alba
de Tormes.
• 1614 (April 4): Teresa’s Beatification by Paul V.
• 1622 (March 12): Teresa’s Canonization by Gregory XV.
• 1970 (September 27): Teresa is named Doctor of the Church by Paul
VI.
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Introduction
Teresa of Avila developed a way of prayer usable by either
beginners or those more advanced in the way of perfection.
It took her a lot of time to identify the original
characteristics
of her manner of prayer – situated between
ordinary meditation and supernatural prayer or contemplation.
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where we speak often, one on one,
with God who we know loves us.
St. Theresa of Avila (V 8, 5)
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…If we make the effort, practice this recollection for some days
…the gain will be clearly seen; we will understand, when beginning
to pray, that the bees are approaching and entering beehive to make
honey. (W 28 7)
At the beginning since the recollection is not so deep—for there
are greater and lesser degrees of recollection…
And this recollection(supernatural) will be effected without our
effort because the Lord has desired that…the faculties are drawn
inward…
When the soul does no more than give a sign that it wishes to be
recollected, the senses obey it and become recollected.
Even though they go out again afterward, their having already
surrendered is a great thing; for they go out as captives and
subjects and do not cause the harm they did previously.
And when the will calls them back again, they come more quickly,
until after many of these entries the Lord wills that they rest
entirely in perfect contemplation.
Lord, teach us to pray….
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of practicing interior prayer, but no one taught
them. And, without an interior life, the baptized run
out of breath, their actions become noisy gongs and
even their religious practice, when it exists, dries
up.”
Discursive Meditation
Teresa received no special training in prayer during her novitiate
in the Tradition of the Order. Moreover there wasn’t any obligation
to have a personal prayer time. Teresa had to teach herself.
As a novice, she practiced discursive prayer or meditation using
books of which there was no shortage of works on the subject. She
would meditate on the Passion of Our Lord and on her sins. She
considered what gave her insight into the briefness of everything
in this world.
At the time of her final vows, after reading many books and
practicing many hours, she still did not know how to proceed in
prayer or how to be recollected. (V 4, 7) She said that she had
read a lot of things and didn’t understand anything of what I read.
(V 12 6) Her writings indicate that this method of prayer
(meditation) did not suit her.
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Osuna Method After having read many works on prayer Teresa finally
found one that suited her-
The Third Spiritual Alphabet by Francisco de Osuna , a Franciscan,
who suggested
finding union with God in prayer through the path of interior
recollection.
He suggested becoming silent within, making oneself ‘deaf, blind
and dumb’,
emptying the intellect of all human thought of the created - to
think of nothing-
no pensar nada- in order to be attentive to God and His
Divinity.
Osuna said it was also important to make a big place in the
‘heart,’ for love.
This method completely agreed with Teresa’s temperament, leaning
towards
kindness and emotional activity and very little towards reasoning.
Teresa
completely gave herself to this method; in 6 months she experienced
the
prayer of union.
Osuna Method Teresa’ Objections to Osuna’s Method
First Objection : no pensar Nada Teresa realized that trying to
find God by emptying the senses and the intellect only
caused the soul to be idle…The intellect ceases to work because God
suspends
it…trying to keep the soul’s faculties busy and thinking you can
make them be quiet is
foolish. (V 12 5)
Second Objection: Christ’s Divinity In order to attain
contemplation, Osuna suggested eliminating from one’s thoughts
the
human nature of Christ in order to concentrate on His divinity.
Teresa insisted on
attaching oneself strongly to Christ’s humanity that provides man a
friendship
(W 26 2), a focal point for the faculties (V 22 9)… but mainly
because if we are going to
please Him and receive His great favors, we must do so through the
most sacred
humanity of Christ in whom He takes His delight (V 22 6).
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What is this Way of Prayer inspired by Osuna and
distinct from Discursive or Methodical meditation?
3 Essential points:
1/ Recollect oneself
of the Living Presence of Jesus Christ
3/ Nature of the Activity: the Look; the heart to heart
with Him
4/ And…A few tips to recollect oneself will be added
I tried as hard as I could to keep Jesus Christ,
our God and our Lord, present within me,
and that was my way of prayer. (V 4 7)
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The Prayer of Recollection
1- Recollect Oneself: Preliminary Steps: examination of conscience,
the act of contrition and the sign of
the cross. (W 26 1) Self-knowledge: to come before God it is
necessary to recognize one’s misery, unworthiness and experience a
real humility and admiration before Our Lord… however sublime the
contemplation, let your prayer always begin and end with
self-knowledge. (W 39 5)
Effort of Recollection…getting accustomed to caring nothing at all
about seeing or
hearing. (V11 9) This prayer is called ‘recollection,’ because the
soul collects its faculties together and enters within itself to be
with its God. (W 28 4)…It strives so as not to look at things here
below. (W 28 6)
The Movement of the Soul to enter into itself can be sought anytime
and anywhere
since God is everywhere (W 28 2) It helped me also to look at
fields, or water, or flowers (V 9 5)
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In the beginning….
- habit of silence (W 4 9): exterior solitude and withdrawal to
enable interior
silence and solitude.
- recollection is an effort of attention on God- absorbs the soul’s
strength to the
point of evacuating everything that isn’t Him. Everyone can achieve
this
recollection with the help of ordinary grace.
…it is possible for us to acquire by our own means […]
in obtaining this initial devotion we can help ourselves in some
way.
This recollection is not something supernatural,
it is something we can desire to achieve ourselves with the help of
God….(W 29 4)
- supernatural prayer: we cannot procure through our own efforts (W
31 2)
depending on depth of recollection has various names.
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2- Become aware of the Presence of Christ :
- To Realize that Our Lord is there (in front of me, beside me,
within me) is
the most important step.
- Consideration: grasping the quality of the Lord compared to our
situation
as creature and sinner, is essential for the soul.
…a person who is not aware to whom he is speaking, what he is
asking,
who it is who is asking and of whom, I don’t call that prayer (C 1
7).
- To practice interior prayer it is not enough to ‘meditate on’
---
intellect grows weary, there must be a Personal Relationship
with the Lord, a direct face to face contact.
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2- Become aware of the Presence of Christ : cont’d.
How does one bring about this living contact?
Teresa tells us by a representation of Christ in His
Humanity.
What sort of image does Teresa mean since she suggests this
method
for souls who, like herself, were incapable of using their
imagination
this way…
Teresa could not achieve an image of Christ that was visual and
continuous,
in other words, like a painting or an image of Him …I was
unable
to keep Him as engraved in my soul as I desired (F 5 2)
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The Prayer of Recollection What does she mean?
It was impossible for her to compose an image of Christ within
herself…like an image seen with bodily eyes...she could only
imagine in this way what she had seen with her senses.
The representation she proposed would not be an imaginative one but
based on faith… a living faith perceived not seen …I was like one
who is blind or in darkness;…he knows with certainty that He is
there; such was the case with me when I thought of our Lord (V 9
6).
Teresa held an intermediary position between a vision of faith of
the ‘pure divine essence’ of Osuna and the imaginative
representation of methodical meditation.
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The Prayer of Recollection Teresa, leaning on the certainty by
faith of the living proximity of Christ,
appreciated the truth of the Incarnation which brings a warmth,
consistency and dynamism to
the relationship of Our Lord with man that the highest abstract
elevations to the Divinity will never bring.
This is why she insists on the physical reality of the Presence…
however softly we speak, He is near enough to hear us (W 28
2).
Representation by faith (non-visual) plays a major role in interior
prayer…
Do you think it is of little importance to know what heaven is and
where you must seek your most sacred Father?
Well, I tell you that for wandering minds it is very important not
only to believe these truths
but to strive to understand them by experience. Doing this is one
of the ways of greatly
slowing down the mind and recollecting the soul (W 28 1).
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The Prayer of Recollection The Representation of Christ…Teresa
suggests that He be considered
sometimes next to you (V 13 22), sometimes in front of you (V 12
2)
and, sometimes within you (W 28 4)
Yet, she insists that He is preferably represented in the most
intimate part of
the soul as such a thought is much more alluring and fruitful than
thinking
of Him as outside of oneself (V 40 6)…enter the paradise within
itself to be
with its God (W29 4) or in the little heaven of our soul. ( W28
5)
Teresa’s preference for the representation of Christ in the soul is
doctrinal.
(Jn 15:4 Remain in me). She is insisting on a truth which
constitutes a
fundamental principle of Teresian spirituality: Christ resides in
the soul,
at its center, as if in a mansion. This idea, present throughout
Teresian
writings, is developed in the Interior Castle.
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The Prayer of Recollection
3/ What is the Nature of the Activity of the Soul Recollected in
the Presence
of the Christ-Man going to be?
Represent the Lord Himself as close to you and behold how lovingly
and humbly
He is teaching you […] I’m not asking you now that you think about
Him…
I’m not asking you to do anything more than look at Him (W 26
3).
A. This mutual look…or loving attention expresses a personal,
living relationship
of reciprocal presence. It is about a simple activity. This bold
act of faith
includes the hope, in the form of desire of union with God, mainly
animated
by love. Teresa’s significant formula…
I tried as hard as I could to keep Jesus Christ, our God and our
Lord,
present within me, and that was my way of prayer (V 4 7).
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The Prayer of Recollection B. Conversation with Christ can take one
of two variable forms:
First Form: Heart to Heart
For not only will you desire to look at Him but you will also
delight in speaking with Him,
not with ready–made prayers but with those that come from the
sorrow of your own heart,
for He esteems them highly (W 26 6)
Remain there in His presence with the intellect quiet.
And if a person is able he should occupy himself in looking at
Christ who is looking at Him, and he should speak and
petition,
and humble himself, and delight in the Lord’s presence, and
remember that he is unworthy of being there. (V 13 22)
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The Prayer of Recollection This One on One spontaneous exchange is
characterized by
Truth, Liberty and Love: Truth- that it hide nothing, knowing it is
loved by the Lord in spite of everything.
Liberty- It is about the simplicity of two friends.
Love- the Heart of Teresian Prayer
… it is important not to think much but to love much (IC 4 1
7).
…bodily strength is not necessary but only love and a habit (V 7
12)
…they are servants of love (V 11 1)
…If all imaginations are not capable of meditation, all souls are
capable of loving (F 5 2)
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The Prayer of Recollection Second Form : Conversation with an
Evangelical theme:
- Teresa knew that the will often needs the help of the intellect
so as
to be enkindled (IC 6 7, 7)
- We choose a Bible scene that we enter into … interpreting the
words of Christ as
if spoken to us. St. Theresa’s preference was the Passion… It is
from here that has
come and continues to come every good (V 13 13). (Theater)
- In this Restrained Sense, she invites us into meditation but be
careful not to
prolong this meditative conversation…one should not weary oneself
(V 13 22)…once
the soul is wakened to love (See V 22 14) come back to the free and
spontaneous
conversation or to the simple look.
- We alternate periods of silence with exchange…..He doesn’t want
us to be
breaking our heads trying to speak a great deal to Him (W 29
6).
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The Prayer of Recollection
- St. Teresa’s manner of prayer allows much liberty provided the
soul is
active or awakened to love.
- It is possible in one prayer session to go from the simple look
to a
heart to heart and inversely, using at will the type of prayer
that
allows us to stay vigilante and loving.
- To preserve this interior liberty necessary for love, St. Teresa
said that
...it is very helpful not to drag the soul along, as they say, but
to
lead it gently for the sake of its greater advantage (V 11
16).
(No forcing yourself)
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The Prayer of Recollection 4/ Methods to Recollect Oneself: To
establish or reestablish contact with the Lord St. Teresa suggests
little ploys, skill (W26 10).
A Book …a good book written in the vernacular to recollect one’s
thoughts…
little by little accustom the soul with coaxing and skill not to
grow discouraged (W26 10).
For eighteen years, after Communion, I never dared to begin prayer
without a book. For my soul was as fearful of being without it
during prayer as it would have been
should I have had to do battle with a lot of people. With this
recourse, which was like a partner or a shield by which to
sustain the blows of my many thoughts,
I went about consoled (V4 9).
Reading offers a center of interest, something for my thoughts to
focus on ...and even for some replaces mental prayer that they
cannot achieve (V 4 8).
In any case, for those who journey along this path, a book helps to
promptly recollect oneself (V 9 5). I have always been fond of the
words of the Gospels and found more
recollection in them than in very cleverly written books (W21
3).
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The Prayer of Recollection 4/ Methods to Recollect Oneself
cont’d.
Image or Painting of the Lord
…not so as to carry it about on your heart and never look at it but
so as to speak often with Him (W 26 9).
Vocal Prayer
…Now, then, let us speak again to those souls I mentioned that
cannot recollect or tie their minds down in mental prayer
or engage in reflection (W 24 1).
The intellect is recollected much more quickly with this kind of
prayer even though it may be vocal;
it is prayer that brings with it many blessings (W 28 4).
I tell you that it is very possible that while you are reciting the
Our Father or some other vocal prayer,
the Lord may raise you to perfect contemplation (W 25 1).
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her having a real conversation with the Lord.
Even though we do not hear Him,
He speaks well to the heart
when we beseech Him from the heart (W 24 5).
Concerning beginners and all those who begin,
yet they never reach the end…thinking they are doing nothing,
she remarks that it is then perhaps that
their will is being strengthened and fortified,
although they may not be aware of this (V 11 15).
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A Last Objection
Though He comes disguised, the disguise … does not prevent Him from
being recognized in many ways,
in conformity with the desire we have to see Him. And you can
desire to see Him so much that He will reveal Himself to you
entirely (W 34 12)
if we prepare ourselves to receive Him, He never fails to give in
many ways
which we do not understand (W 35 1)
The Lord’s answer may perhaps not be through words, but by His
action in the most intimate part of the soul.
By the feelings that He gives… Sometimes a silence full of
love…
Sometimes a feeling that He is there, that He is listening. More
often nothing other than a
reinforced will to serve Him whatever the cost.
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