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Jun 15, 2016 4759 Kate Flannery
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A Good Sense of Humor According to Saint Teresa of Avila

In my adult years, I have often turned to Saint Teresa of Avila as a spiritual mother. I love her courage, her passion, her wit, and her boldness. Throughout her life, she was always on the go. She was a reformer who brought the Carmelite Order back to its original roots. She got things done, founding more than fifteen monasteries. Yet, she was a great mystic—a woman who received beautiful graces, revelations and experiences of God in profound ways that are hard to tangibly explain. She went into ecstasies as a result of her deep relationship with the Lord and wrote a  book called “The Interior Castle,” about the journey of faith leading to union with God. I love the synthesis of the practical and the mystical in her personality. This synthesis becomes more compelling in our lives today, for it reveals that we are capable of a deep interior life and relationship with God in the midst of the busyness of life.

There is a story about Saint Teresa that has caused me to laugh in genuine appreciation of her character. According to tradition, Teresa fell off her donkey while journeying to visit one of her convents—causing her to land in the mud and dirty her Carmelite habit. With her quick, fiery Spanish temper, Teresa looked up to heaven and said to God, “If this is how You treat Your friends, no wonder You don’t have many.”

I love this story because it beautifully depicts Saint Teresa’s humanity and honest relationship with God. It is a raw, unfiltered moment of frankness that I believe is an example of both true prayer and transparency in our relationship with God.

If prayer is ongoing dialogue with God through words, thoughts or actions, what is Teresa’s statement if not prayer? She talks to God with confidence and trust. She is bold about her feelings, knowing that God can handle her honesty. Notably, where does Teresa turn first in her day-to-day life? To God. He is her crutch, her foundation, even in times of frustration and annoyance, He is at the forefront of her mind.

Acquire the habit of speaking to God as if you were alone with Him, familiarly and with confidence and love, as to the dearest and most loving of friends. -Saint Alphonsus Ligouri

When I first heard this anecdote, I could completely relate to Saint Teresa. Like her, I fall down on the road toward holiness. Furthermore, I often catch myself blaming God for different moments of hardship and frustration. What we sometimes miss as we lie there in the mud is the hand that is in front of us—the extended hand of Christ that I often imagine in the story of the woman caught in adultery, the one who Jesus saved from being stoned. God is not the one who pushes us down, but He is the one who picks us up. How quick are we to reach for the outstretched hand? Do we even reach out for it? Or are we too proud, choosing to try to get up by ourselves? What did Saint Teresa do? In one of her reflections, she writes, “I praise the mercy of God, for it was He alone who gave me His hand” (Life, Ch 7, “The Collected Works of Saint Teresa of Avila, Volume One,” ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 1987).

Do we immediately turn to God in our day-to-day lives? This is a question we can all reflect upon. Taking our reflection a step further, do we respond to the situations in which we find ourselves with joy or a sense of humor?

I believe Pope Francis and Saint Teresa would have been great friends. In his homily at the canonization Mass of Junipero Serra, Pope Francis reminded us of Saint Paul’s command to “rejoice always.” If we forget this call, we fall into the temptation of becoming “sourpusses”—to use Pope Francis’ term. We are called to be people of joy in the midst of suffering, not in the absence of it. It is this type of transparency in our relationship with God, this type of outlook on the life of faith, this sense of humor that helps us move forward in answering the universal call to be missionary disciples who witness to the Gospel through our encounter with those around us.

Like Saint Teresa, may we always have a sense of humor. May we be bold and honest in our dialogue with God. May we be apostles of joy. And may we join in saying the phrase very often attributed to Saint Teresa of Avila, “God protect us from sour-faced saints!”

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Kate Flannery

Kate Flannery is the social media coordinator for the Catholic Apostolate Center (www.CatholicApostolateCenter.org). Reprinted with permission

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