| Family St. Louis Martin (1823-1894) and Zelie Guerin  (Martin) (1831-1877) were beatified on Mission Sunday October 19, 2008 by Pope  Benedict XVI. Louis was born into a military family and spent his early years  at various French military posts. At the age of twenty-two he sought to enter  religious life at an Augustinian monastery. He had difficulty learning the  required Latin and eventually left the monastery. He eventually settled down in  Alencon France and became a successful watchmaker.
 St. Zelie Guerin (Martin) (1831-1877), also born into a military family, and as a young  lady also sought to enter religious life, but soon abandoned her hopes and  learned the lace-making techniques. She started her own successful lace-making  business.
 
 Louis and Zelie met in Alencon and were married on July 13th, 1858. During the  next fifteen years, they had nine children; seven girls and two boys. Within a  three year period, the two baby boys, and two daughters aged five years and  six-and-a-half weeks all died. Their last child was born on January 2nd, 1873  and named her Marie-Francoise-Therese Martin. A century later, people would  know her as St. Therese of Lisieux and call her the ‘Little Flower’.
 On October 19, 2008, World Mission Sunday,  Louis Martin and Marie Zelie Guerin, the parents of St. Therese of the Child  Jesus, were declared blessed in Lisieux, France, by Cardinal Jose Saraiva  Martins, retired prefect of the Congregation for the Cause of Saints. It was  only the second time in history that a married couple has been beatified. (The  first couple being Luigi and Maria Quattrocchi of Italy, in 2001.) Here are  excerpts from their biography, read during the ceremony by Father Antonio of  the Mother of God, O.C.D., Vice Postulator:
 
 Louis Martin was born in Bordeaux on August 22, 1823. At the end of his studies  in Alençon, he didn’t turn toward a military career like his father, but chose  the profession of watchmaker. A man of faith and of prayer, for a time Louis  wished to enter the priesthood. In 1845, he went to the Swiss Alps to enter a  Carthusian monastery, where his first task was to learn Latin. He tried to  learn it but in the end gave up. Having finished his watchmaking studies in  Rennes and Strasbourg, he returned to Alençon, where he dedicated himself to  his work as a watchmaker-jeweler with diligence and honesty.
 
 Zelie Guerin was born at Gandelain, near Saint-Denis-sur-Sarthon, on December  23, 1831. When her father retired in 1844, the family moved to Alençon. Zelie  studied under the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration. She received training that  made her a very skillful lacemaker. She made the famous Point d’Alençon, and  she was in charge of sales for her own lacemaking business. Like her sister  Marie-Louise, Zelie wanted to consecrate herself to the  Lord. After a discussion with the Superior of the Daughters of Charity at the  Alençon hospital, she understood that it was not the will of God. A  providential meeting united these two young people thirsty for the Absolute.  One day, as Zelie crossed the Saint-Leonard Bridge, she passed a young man with  a noble face, a reserved air, and a demeanor filled with an impressive dignity.  At that very moment, an interior voice whispers in secret, "This is he  whom I have prepared for you." The identity of the passer-by was soon  revealed. She came to know Louis Martin.
 
 The two young people quickly came to appreciate and love each other. Their  spiritual harmony established itself so quickly that a religious engagement  sealed their mutual commitment without delay. They did not see their marriage  as a normal arrangement between two middle-class families of Alençon, but as a  total opening to the will of God.
 
 From the beginning, the betrothed couple place their love under the protection  of God, who, in their union, would always be "the first served."  Their marriage was celebrated at midnight on July 13th, 1858 in the parish of  Notre-Dame d’Alençon.
 
 Louis and his spouse decide at the beginning of their marriage to maintain  perfect chastity. Shortly thereafter, they welcome into their home a  five-year-old boy whose widowed father was crushed by the burden of raising  eleven children. However, Divine Wisdom, which leads all with "strength  and gentleness," has other views for this couple, and at the end of ten  months, on the advice of a priest friend, they change their minds. They now  desire to have many children in order to raise them and offer them to the Lord.
 
 The union of Louis and Zelie is blessed by the birth of nine children. The work  of both spouses obtains for them a certain wealth, but their family life is not  without trials. In this time of high infant mortality, they lose four children  at an early age, at a time when they want to have a son to become a priest. But  neither the bereavement nor the trials weaken their confidence in the goodness  of God’s plans, and they abandon themselves with love to His Will. (The  surviving children, five girls, will all become nuns, four of them in the  carmelite monastery.)
 
 The education of the children is at the same time joyful, tender, and  demanding. Very early, Zelie teaches them the morning offering of their hearts  to the good God, the simple acceptance of daily difficulties "to please  Jesus." An indelible mark that is the basis of the little way taught by  the most celebrated of their children: Therese. One cannot conceive of the  growth in holiness of Therese and the religious vocations of her sisters  independent of the spiritual life of Mr. and Mrs. Martin, at the heart of their  vocation to family life.
 
 Towards the end of 1876, an old growth in Mrs. Martin’s breast returns.  Discovered too late, the cancer is inoperable. At half past midnight on August  28, 1877, she dies in Alençon. Louis is left with five children: Marie,  Pauline, Leonie, Celine, and Therese, who is four and a half years old.
 Louis consults with his elder daughters,  and decides to move to Lisieux to live close to the family of his  brother-in-law, Isidore Guerin, and thus to ensure a better future for his  children. Life at the Buissonnets, the new house in Lisieux, is more austere  and withdrawn than at Alençon. But the most admirable work of this father, an  exemplary educator, is the offering to God of all his daughters and then of  himself. In his unshakable submission to the will of God, like Abraham, he  places no obstacle to these vocations and considers the offering of his  children to the Lord as a very special grace granted to his family.
 
 Shortly after the entry of Therese into the Carmel of Lisieux, during a visit  to the parlor of the monastery, Louis tells his daughters that at the Church of  Notre-Dame of Alençon (May 1888), as he was reconsidering his life, he had  said: "My God, I am too happy. It’s not possible to go to Heaven like  that. I want to suffer something for you." "And," said he,  "I offered myself." Louis doesn’t dare pronounce the word "victim,"  but his daughters understand this. This confidence really strikes Therese, who,  several years later, offered herself as a victim to the Merciful Love of God  (June 9, 1895).
 
 The last years of the life of Mr. Martin, "the patriarch", as he is  affectionately called by those close to him, are marked by several health  problems. He knows the humiliation of illness: a cerebral arteriosclerosis with  a long hospitalization at the Bon Sauveur in Caen in 1889, where he filled  those around him with admiration and respect. Returning to Lisieux in May 1892,  from then on paralyzed and almost unable to speak, he dies peacefully on  Sunday, July 29, 1894.
 
 On March 26, 1994, the Servant of God, John Paul II, declares the individual  heroic virtues of the Martin couple. In 2008, the Medical Commission of the  Congregation for the Causes of Saints declared inexplicable by science and  general knowledge the healing of the young Pietro Schiliro, of Monza, Italy.  Born on May 25, 2002, Pietro suffered from a serious condition following the  inhalation of meconium, which led to serious pulmonary complications. The  unexpected healing came about on June 29, 2002, after a novena of prayers to  the Venerable Servants of God Louis and Zelie Martin. On July 3, Pope Benedict  XVI approved the miracle of Pietro’s healing, accomplished by God through the  intercession of the Venerable Servants of God, Louis and Zelie,  "incomparable" parents of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, and he  set October 19, 2008, as the date of their beatification, and July 12 as their  feast day on the liturgical calendar.
 
 In his homily, Cardinal Saraiva Martin, the Prefect of the Congregation for the  Causes of Saints, said that in a time of crisis for the family, the family has  in the Martin couple a true model. He also offered them as a model for people  who face illness and death, as Zelie died of cancer, leaving Louis to live on  through the trial of cerebral arteriosclerosis. He said that they teach us to  face death, abandoning ourselves to God. Here are excerpts from his homily:
 
 Therese wrote in a letter to Father Belliere, and that many people now know by  heart: "God gave me a father and a mother who were more worthy of heaven  than of earth". This beatification of Louis Martin and Zelie Guerin, whom  Therese defined as "parents without equal, worthy of heaven, holy ground  permeated with the perfume of purity" is very important in the Church.
 
 My heart is full of gratitude to God for this exemplary witness of conjugal  love, which is bound to stimulate Christian couples in practicing virtue just  as it stimulated the desire for holiness in Therese. While reading the  Apostolic Letter of the Holy Father, I thought of my father and mother, and now  I invite you to think of your parents that together we may thank God for having  created and made us Christians through the conjugal love of our parents. The  gift of life is a marvelous thing, but even more wonderful for us is that our  parents led us to the Church which alone is capable of making us Christians.  For no one becomes a Christian by oneself.
 
 Among the vocations to which individuals are called by Providence, marriage is  one of the highest and most noble. Louis and Zelie understood that they could  become holy not in spite of marriage, but through, in, and by marriage, and  that their becoming a couple was the beginning of an ascent together. Today the  Church celebrates not only the holiness of these children of Normandy, a gift  to us all, but admires, as well, in the Blessed couple that which renders more  splendid and beautiful the wedding robe of the Church. The conjugal love of  Louis and Zelie is a pure reflection of Christ’s love for his Church, but it is  also a pure reflection of the "resplendent love without stain or wrinkle,  but holy and immaculate" (Ep 5, 27) as the Church loves its Spouse,  Christ.
 A Prayer to St. Louis and St. Zélie Martin  the Parents of St Thérèse
 St. Louis and St. Zélie Martin, today we turn to you in prayer.
 
 By fulfilling the duties of your state in lifeand practicing the evangical virtues
 as spouses and as parents,
 you have modelled for us
 an exemplary Christian life.
 
 May the exampleof your unwavering trust in God
 and your constant willingness to surrender
 all the joys, the trials,
 the sorrows and the sufferings
 that filled your life
 encourage us to persevere
 in our daily challenges
 and to remain in joy and Christian hope.
 Amen.
   
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