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  • Saint Thérèse of Lisieux: Her Family, Her God, Her Message
  • David J. Centner O.C.D.
Saint Thérèse of Lisieux: Her Family, Her God, Her Message. By Bernard Bro. Translated by Anne Englund Nash. (San Francisco: Ignatius Press. 2003. Pp. 253. $15.95 paperback.)

St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus is an important saint. Bernard Bro, O.P., is one of her most important interpreters. In Saint Thérèse of Lisieux: Her Family, Her God, Her Message, he takes up and expands on many of the themes of his popular 1974 book The Little Way. Bro incorporates insights of scholars with whom he had collaborated as editor at Editions du Cerf in the preparation of the centenary edition of the works of the saint and of studies of her doctrine. These include Conrad de Meester, O.C.D., and Guy Gaucher, O.C.D., later auxiliary bishop of Lisieux, and Emmanuel Renault, O.C.D. Most significantly, he draws on his intimate knowledge of the saint's writing and his contact with the living tradition of the Carmel of Lisieux to present the meaning of Thérèse's life and doctrine. And with the help of literary quotations, he does so for a world in which men and women are increasingly isolated and alienated. Bro writes both as a man of letters and as pastor who understands the basic issues of human life. [End Page 987]

Bro notes that many who write about Thérèse approach her by placing her in opposition to someone else or by analyzing her in the light of psychology, semantics, or structuralism. In contrast to such a "reductive" hermeneutic, he proposes a hermeneutic that "builds up" by striving for an "authentic connaturality and sympathy with the reality being studied" (p. 248). Consequently, his interest is in revealing the dynamic of the life of St. Thérèse from within, from what actually motivated her and gave meaning to her life. We are not surprised to learn that he discusses love, confidence or surrender, mercy, zeal for souls, hope, suffering, and silence, for they are key concepts in her life and writings. Bro eruditely explores the meaning of these questions for the world. Then, by presenting them as St. Thérèse experienced them, he reveals the profound fidelity of her life and doctrine to the saving work of Christ. As a consequence, he is well able to establish her theological originality and (as a kind of running bass note) to suggest that she deserves her title of doctor of the Church.

Bro ably shows that Thérèse's experiences of loss and of her own helplessness led her to understand that God loves us first and loves us without condition. As a consequence, her task in life was to return that love by living in truth and choosing whatever God in his mercy might send, even if it meant choosing without obvious success. Thérèse emerges as a teacher of hope.

Bro's insights make this an important work. But it is a flawed work. Its organization is sometimes confusing. Chapter titles correspond poorly with contents. Bro provides no biographical sketch or chronology; instead he presumes a detailed familiarity with the saint's life and with primary sources. He omits some important source references. His indulgent use of literary citations sometimes obscures his exposition. Minor historical inaccuracies intrude. The intrinsic flaws are compounded by a translation that is sometimes too faithful to the French for ease of reading in English. Nevertheless, in spite of these difficulties, this book deserves a place in the library of every student and preacher of St. Thérèse.

David J. Centner O.C.D.
Washington Theological Union
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