THE MISSION OF ST THÉRÈSE
By Hans Urs von Balthasar1
◊◊◊
There can be no doubt that Thérèse of Lisieux was directly entrusted by
God with a mission to the Church. Thérèse’s mission, at the very first glance,
displays the marks of a clearly defined, and quite exceptional character. This is
much less due to the personal drama of the little saint than to the sacred form
into which the trickling grains of petty anecdotes are compressed, into a hard,
unbreakable block, by a firm invisible hand. It is contrary to all expectation that
the simple, modest story of this little girl should eventually culminate, as it
irrefutably does, in the enunciation of theological truths.
Originally, she herself never dreamt that she might be chosen to bear
some fundamental message to the Church. She only became aware of it
gradually; in fact, it did not occur to her until her task was almost completed,
after she had already lived out her teaching and was writing the last chapters of
her book. Suddenly, as she saw it all laid out before her, she recognized its
strangeness, that in her obedience she had unwillingly conceived something
beyond her own personality. And now that she saw it, she also understood it,
and seized it with a kind of violence…
At that moment she realized she was to be set on a pedestal, and that every
bit of her life, even its smallest details, would be used as a pattern for many of
the “little ones”. She regards the publication of her manuscript as “an important
work”; she knows “that all the world will love me”, and that her writings “will
do a great deal of good”. During her last months, as if making her last will and
testament, she repeats constantly: “One must tell souls.” Exactly the same
expressions recur in reference to the mission she is soon to begin in heaven: “I
feel that my mission will soon begin to teach souls to love God as I love Him, to
give them my little way…” Similarly, she recognizes the function within the
Church of her mission. She not only foresees the proclamation of her own
sanctity but she also, as it were, foresaw the canonization of her doctrine.
So, her life only contains exemplary value for the Church insofar as the
Holy Spirit has possessed her and used her in order to demonstrate something
for the sake of the Church, opening up new vistas onto the Gospels. That, and
that alone, should be the motive for the Church’s interest in Thérèse. That, and
that alone, should engage the attention of those who feel themselves put off my
many features of her cult, or even of her character, or who experience
indefinable objections to them. In fact, there are few other cases in which it is
so prudent to distinguish between the mission of a saint and its essentials.
In the case of Thérèse of Lisieux the dramatic tension between her
mission and her person needs specially to be borne in mind, and to be
appreciated primarily in theological terms; the essence of sanctity has to be
grasped as truly evangelical, as belonging to the Church, as a mission and not
simply as an individual ascetical, mystical manifestation. Moreover, it is not
just because of contemporary “needs” but because of the depth of revealed truth
that portraits of the saints must in future be remodeled, so that the saints can
again live amongst us, and in us, as the best protectors and inspirers of the
community of the saints, which is the Church.