One needn’t live a long life to leave a deep imprint. Teresa of Los Andes is proof of that.
As a young girl growing up in Santiago, Chile, in the early
1900s, she read an autobiography of a French-born saint—Thérèse,
popularly known as the Little Flower. The experience deepened her desire
to serve God and clarified the path she would follow. At age 19 she
became a Carmelite nun, taking the name of Teresa.
The convent
offered the simple lifestyle Teresa desired and the joy of living in a
community of women completely devoted to God. She focused her days on
prayer and sacrifice. “I am God’s,” she wrote in her diary. “He created
me and is my beginning and my end.”
Toward the end of her short
life, Teresa began an apostolate of letter-writing, sharing her thoughts
on the spiritual life with many people. At age 20 she contracted typhus
and quickly took her final vows. She died a short time later, during
Holy Week.
Teresa remains popular with the estimated 100,000
pilgrims who visit her shrine in Los Andes each year. She is Chile’s
first saint.
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