St louis and zelie martin patron saint of

TOMORROW, July 12, marks the feast day of Louis and Zélie Martin, the parents of St Thérèse of Lisieux and the first married couple to be made saints together by the Catholic Church.

Pope Francis canonised the couple at a ceremony in Rome in October 2015 during a Vatican synod of bishops which was focusing on pastoral challenges to the family.

Though they are best known as the devout parents of St Thérèse of Lisieux, the 'Little Flower', Saints Louis and Zélie have come to be regarded as exemplars of the vocations of parenting and family life, introducing their children to a life of holiness and God's call in their lives.

Louis, a watchmaker, and Zélie, who made lace, married on July 13 1858 at the Church of the Notre Dame in Alençon, Normandy.

They had nine children, three of whom died in infancy and another at the age of five.

Five daughters survived, and although the family had financial problems, their home was said to be happy and welcoming to all and the Martins would share their table with the destitute and homeless.

Zélie died at the age of 45 in August 1877 from breast cancer, after facing her illness with faith and courage; Louis moved with his daughters to Lisieux.

Later, each of them entered religious life - Pauline, Marie, Thérèse and Céline as Carmelites, and Léonie, who was troubled and fragile, as a Visitation Sister.

By 1889 Louis was living with serious health issues and became completely dependent on his youngest daughter Céline for his care until his death in July 1894.

Saints Louis and Zélie are remembered for their unwavering faith even as they encountered many of the struggles families and parents will be familiar with, including cancer, death, financial worries, depression and worry.

The miracle that led to their canonisation was the curing of a girl called Carmen, who was born prematurely and with multiple life-threatening complications in Valencia, Spain four days before the Martins were beatified in 2008.

Her parents prayed for the help of Louis and Zélie Martin and she recovered completely.

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St louis and zelie martin patron saint of

Feast Day: July 12
Canonized: October 18, 2015
Beatified: October 19, 2008

When Louis Martin and his bride, Zelie, were married in 1858, they promised that they would “serve God first” together. They knew that putting God first in their lives would help them to always live with love.

Louis was a watchmaker. Zelie made beautiful lace to help support their growing family. They taught their children to know, love, and serve God. The Catholic Church was an important part of their family life.

Like all married couples, they sometimes faced disappointments and sadness; four of their nine children died at a young age. They turned to God in difficult times and grew more deeply in love as they shared their sorrows and joys with one another.

In 1877, when Thérèse, the Martin’s youngest daughter, was only four years old, Zelie became very ill and died. The family was brokenhearted, but they remembered that Zelie prayed with them to help them understand that her illness and death was part of God’s plan.

Louis lovingly raised his daughters. He generously gave his permission as each one asked to join the convent. He saw this as a sign that God was pleased that he and Zelie had shared their faith and love with their children.

Zelie and Louis Martin’s lives show us that when we live with love, we grow in holiness. The Martins are such a wonderful example of holiness that Pope Benedict named them “Blessed” in 2008 and Pope Francis officially recognized them both as saints. They are the first married couple to ever be canonized together.

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St. Zélie Guérin Martin

St louis and zelie martin patron saint of

Renowned Lace Maker, Loving Wife, Mother of Saints

St. Zélie Guérin Martin

If you had told the young Zélie Martin that she would someday become a famous lace maker, marry the man of her dreams, and raise five daughters who would become brides of Christ, one of whom would later become a canonized saint and Doctor of the Church, she might have collapsed with joy. And possibly shock. Yet this is the history of the saintly mother of the Martin family, who gave her life for her children even until the very end. She was born in 1831 in France, and was the second of three children. Her parents, while they were strict, raised her and her siblings with a strong faith. They sent Zélie and her sister to the school of The Perpetual Adoration Sisters, where Zélie excelled in her studies and cultivated a deeper religious devotion. Throughout her childhood, Zélie struggled with severe headaches and respiratory problems. She desired to give herself totally to God and enter religious life, but was forced to abandon that dream when she was prevented from entering the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul due to her health issues.

Although she never lost the attraction to religious life, she was inspired with a new maternal mission; to bear many children and nurture them to be saints. If she herself could not be consecrated to God, then she decided she would consecrate all her children to Him. Through Our Lady’s guidance, she decided to become a lace maker, and in perfecting her craft she became one of the best in the business. Her dreams of raising a family became very real when she noticed a man crossing the Bridge of St. Leonard and heard a voice say in the silence of her heart, “This is he whom I have prepared for you.” This was, quite literally, a match made in Heaven. The man was the watchmaker Louis Martin, who, like Zélie, believed his life would be spend serving God in a cloistered monastery. Their connection was immediate, and they were married shortly after their first meeting.

On Motherhood: “Above all, during the months immediately preceding the birth of her child, the mother should keep close to God, of whom the infant she bears within her is the image, the handiwork, the gift and the child. She should be for her offspring, as it were, a temple, a sanctuary, an altar, a tabernacle. In short, her life should be, so to speak, the life of a living sacrament, a sacrament in act, burying herself in the bosom of that God who has so truly instituted it and hallowed it, so that there she may draw that energy, that enlightening, that natural and supernatural beauty which He wills, and wills precisely by her means, to impart to the child she bears and to be born of her.”

In their first ten months of marriage, they agreed to live a life of sexual abstinence. Little did they know that this experience would give them the capacity to understand the beauty and grandeur of the virginal life, since they would be entrusted with five daughters who would live out a virginal consecration. Under the guidance of a spiritual director, they were encouraged to have children of their own. Zélie and Louis had nine children over the course of thirteen years, though only five daughters would survive childhood. Their rich family environment created a firm foundation for their daughters, Pauline, Marie, Céline, Léonie, and Thérèse, who would all later enter religious life. The Martins were loving but firm in how they raised their children; after all, they were determined to make them into saints.

Zélie lived her maternity with every fiber of her being. “When we had our children, our ideas changed somewhat” she once said. “Thenceforward we lived only for them; they made all our happiness and we would never have found it save in them. In fact, nothing any longer cost us anything; the world was no longer a burden to us. As for me, my children were my great compensation, so that I wished to have many in order to bring them up for Heaven.” In 1877, Zélie died of breast cancer, leaving behind her husband and five daughters; her youngest, Thérèse, was only four years old. After her death, Pauline, Marie, Thérèse, and Céline entered Carmel and Léonie became a Visitation Sister. Zélie and Louis were declared Venerable in 1994 by Pope John Paul II, and were later beatified in in 2008 by Pope Benedict XVI. Their canonization is set for October 15th, 2015. St. Thérèse, “The Little Flower” was canonized in 1925, and her sister Léonie’s cause for beatification was officially opened in July of 2015.

Feast Day: July 12

Rachel Ullmann2021-09-02T23:21:05-04:00

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Are Louis and Zelie Martin saints?

On 18 October 2015, Louis and Azélie-Marie Martin were canonized as saints by Pope Francis.

Is Zélie a saint name?

Zélie and Louis were declared Venerable in 1994 by Pope John Paul II, and were later beatified in in 2008 by Pope Benedict XVI. Their canonization is set for October 15th, 2015. St. Thérèse, “The Little Flower” was canonized in 1925, and her sister Léonie's cause for beatification was officially opened in July of 2015.

What did St Louis Martin do?

Louis managed the lace-making business that Zélie continued at home while raising their children. She died from breast cancer in 1877. Louis then moved the family to Lisieux to be near his brother and sister-in-law, who helped with the education of his five surviving girls.

Why were Louis and Zelie Martin canonized?

Louis and Zélie did not do anything extraordinary during their lifetimes, but rather lived their faith in a very simple, humble way, teaching by example, knowing what is was like to mourn the loss of loved ones, nurturing the vocation of their children, and putting their faith into action by reaching out to others in ...