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  1. Apr 11, 2024 · Saint Teresa of Avila, Spanish nun, one of the great mystics, reformers, and religious women of the Roman Catholic Church. Author of numerous spiritual classics, she was elevated to doctor of the church by Pope Paul VI in 1970. Learn more about her life, mysticism, religious reforms, and legacy.

  2. Teresa of Ávila, OCD (Teresa Sánchez de Cepeda Dávila y Ahumada; 28 March 1515 – 4 or 15 October 1582), also called Saint Teresa of Jesus, was a Carmelite nun and prominent Spanish mystic and religious reformer.

  3. Jun 2, 2023 · 4 min read. ‘To have courage for whatever comes in life — everything lies in that.’. As a small girl, St. Teresa of Ávila (1515-82) wanted to become a martyr slaughtered at the hands of the Moors. As a young adult, she was taken up with vanities and worldly concerns.

  4. Saints & Angels. Facts. Feastday: October 15. Patron: of Headache sufferers, Spanish Catholic Writers. Birth: March 28, 1515. Death: October 4, 1582. Beatified: April 24th 1614, Rome by Pope Paul V. Canonized: March 12th 1622, Rome by Pope Gregory XV. Author and Publisher - Catholic Online. Printable Catholic Saints PDFs. Shop St. Teresa of Avila.

  5. Aug 15, 2019 · To St. Teresa it was given to speak to the world, in her diaphanous, colloquial language and her simple, unaffected style, of the work of the Holy Spirit in the enamoured soul, of the interior strife and the continual purgation through which such a soul must pass in its ascent of Mount Carmel and of the wonders which await it on the mountain's ...

  6. Saint Teresa of Ávila, orig. Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada, (born March 28, 1515, Ávila, Spain—died Oct. 4, 1582, Alba de Tormes; canonized 1622; feast day October 15), Spanish Carmelite nun, mystic, and saint. After entering a convent around the age of 20, she fell seriously ill.

  7. Teresa wrote of herself without self-love or pride. Towards her persecutors she was respectful, representing them as honest servants of God. Teresa's other literary works came later, during the fifteen years when she was actively engaged in founding new convents of reformed Carmelite nuns.

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