
The Dust Of Saint Therese 
She died just short of twenty five years
old. She spent her last nine years enclosed
in a Carmelite convent. She did quite a lot
of traveling with her family in her younger
days, yet she was never in a mission country.
And yet a Pope decided to proclaim her Patroness
of the worldwide Missions, alongside Saint
Francis Xavier, a Jesuit priest of mythological
proportions, who was a tireless itinerant
preacher in India and Japan.
Why did Pope Pius XI, precisely eighty years
ago, on December 14th 1927, decide to proclaim
Saint Therese of the Child Jesus Patron Saint
of the Missions? A rather odd decision, no?,
considering that she never went to the missions?!
Obviously there is a message hidden here.
Perhaps the Church wants to tell us that
what makes a missionary are not the legs
but the heart! A missionary after all is
a person whose heart burns with love for
Christ and zeal for souls. He is utterly
concerned in rescuing souls from the clutches
of the evil one by whatever means he can
use…prayer, preaching, penance…
When she was fourteen, Therese was praying
in the Cathedral of Lisieux and… "looking
at a picture of Our Lord on the Cross, I
was struck by the blood flowing from one
of the divine hands. I felt a great pang
of sorrow when thinking this blood was falling
to the ground without anyone's hastening
to gather it up. I was resolved to remain
in spirit at the foot of the Cross and to
receive the divine dew. I understood I was
then to pour it out upon souls… I wanted
to give my Beloved to drink and I felt myself
consumed with a thirst for souls."
Saving souls became quickly her leitmotiv.
Toward the end of her life she will add that
she wants to "save souls even after
my death".
This was beautifully illustrated in one amusing
incident. Mission life among the Eskimos
in Labrador Canada in the beginning of last
century was not easy. The external conditions
were tough - travel on sleds and canoes.
Isolation was a real sore issue - the missionaries
had to spend months of complete solitude
in a barren region of snow and ice.
Language was a problem for the missionaries
coming from France. And to make things even
worse, the interest in Christianity of these
Inuit natives was zero. The efforts of these
Oblate missionaries were only met with jeers
and sarcasm from the native audience.
Pessimism reigned supreme among the priests
and after numerous years of futile labors,
the superiors decided to suppress this mission.
Then Therese intervened from heaven! When
the mail arrived from Europe, the missionaries
found a packet from Lisieux. In it there
was a short Life of Sister Therese of the
Child Jesus who had died sixteen years earlier
and … some little sacks of dust from her
casket because her mortal remains had just
been exhumed. Father Arsene Turquetil, one
of the missionaries, who was also from Normandy,
like Therese, decided to try his 'luck' with
this dust!
"Tomorrow morning," Father Arsene
told Brother Girard, "we will give it
a shot. When the Eskimos are gathered in
the room to listen the gramophone, I will
give them catechesis on the law. While I
speak to them, you will invoke Therese and
then you will open these sacks and discreetly
spread the dust upon the heads of my listeners!"
This is what Brother Girard did and sure
enough the results were quick to come! Just
one day after this naïve way of evangelizing,
the witch doctor of Chesterfield, the biggest
enemy of the Mission, came forward and requested
baptism, adding, I will "come here every
day. I will do all that you tell me, because
I don't want to go to the hell."
This was just the beginning. Many Eskimos
asked for baptism, a Church was built, then
a hospital, both named after Therese, the
Church suddenly flourished. Father Arsene
even became Bishop of the area!
Many believe that this sudden dissemination
of faith among the Eskimos was one of the
main reasons that prompted Pope Pius XI to
insist against the prudent fears of the Congregations
of Rites and the Propagation of the Faith
to confer the title of Patroness of the Missions
to Saint Therese! Saints have a way to get
what they want. Or as Saint Therese would
put it, "Love attracts love!"
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
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provided that the content is unaltered
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its original state, if this copyright
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