August
9: Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (AKA: Edith
Stein)
A brilliant philosopher who stopped believing in God when she was 14, Edith
Stein was so captivated by reading the autobiography of Teresa of Avila (October
15) that she began a spiritual journey that led to her Baptism in 1922. Twelve
years later she imitated Teresa by becoming a Carmelite, taking the name Teresa
Benedicta of the Cross.
Born into a prominent Jewish family in Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland), Edith
abandoned Judaism in her teens. As a student at the University of Göttingen, she
became fascinated by phenomenology, an approach to philosophy. Excelling as a
protégé of Edmund Husserl, one of the leading phenomenologists, Edith earned a
doctorate in philosophy in 1916. She continued as a university teacher until
1922 when she moved to a Dominican school in Speyer; her appointment as lecturer
at the Educational Institute of Munich ended under pressure from the
Nazis.
After living in the Cologne Carmel (1934-38), she moved to the Carmelite
monastery in Echt, Netherlands. The Nazis occupied that country in 1940. In
retaliation for being denounced by the Dutch bishops, the Nazis arrested all
Dutch Jews who had become Christians. Teresa Benedicta and her sister Rosa, also
a Catholic, died in a gas chamber in Auschwitz on August 9, 1942.
Blessed John Paul II beatified Teresa Benedicta in 1987 and canonized her
12 years later.
COMMENT:
The writings of Edith Stein fill 17 volumes, many of which have been
translated into English. A woman of integrity, she followed the truth wherever
it led her. After becoming a Catholic, Edith continued to honor her mother’s
Jewish faith. Sister Josephine Koeppel, O.C.D. , translator of several of
Edith’s books, sums up this saint with the phrase, “Learn to live at
God’s hands.”
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