
Sts. Marie Azelie Guerin Martin and Louis Martin
12/20/23 • 7 min
Song of Songs 2:8-12
Hark! My lover - here he comes springing across the mountains, leaping across the hills. My lover is like a gazelle or a young stag...My lover speaks; he says to me, “Arise my beloved, my beautiful one, and come! For see, the winter is past, the rains are over and gone. The flowers appear on the earth...”
Louis Martin wanted to be a monk but was turned away because he had not learned Latin. Marie-Azelie Guerin wanted to be a nun but was denied entrance due to respiratory trouble and recurring headaches. God had other plans for the young handsome watchmaker and the pretty lacemaker. Zelie was passing Louis on a bridge one night and heard a holy inner voice telling her that this was the man God wanted her to marry. Zelie’s aunt was able to introduce them in 1858. Both prayerful people, they fell deeply in love, and were married three months later. They lived in Alencon, France.
Zelie became so successful in lacemaking that Louis gave up his trade as a watchmaker and became a partner with his beloved wife in her business. It was unusual in their time for the husband to give up his trade to take on the business of his wife, but they made it work. Together they had nine children, but their love was not without great suffering. Only five daughters lived beyond infancy. The Martins lost two little boys before they saw their first birthday, and two girls died in 1870, one who was five and one who was just seven weeks old.
While the Martin family did not have money worries, they chose to live a simple lifestyle. They helped the poor and prayed together as a family every day. Zelie’s letters reveal what great joy both she and Louis found in their daughters. Still, they also show what sorrow they felt when losing a child. She wrote to her sister-in-law, “When I closed the eyes of my dear little children and buried them, I felt sorrow through and through... People said to me, ‘It would have been better never to have had them.’ I couldn’t stand such language. My children were not lost forever; life is short and full of miseries, and we shall find our little ones again up above.” Zelie and Louis trusted God’s plan always.
The youngest Martin child is probably the best known. She is St. Therese of the Child Jesus, also known as The Little Flower or St. Therese of Lisieux. The latter name applies because when Therese was only four years old, her mother died of breast cancer. Louis then sold the lacemaking business and the home in Alencon and moved the family to Lisieux. He did this so that one of Zelie’s sisters could help care for his girls. He loved Alencon and had many friends there, but he always put the needs of his children first. From Lisieux, one by one, his five daughters chose to enter religious life.
In his final years, Louis developed dementia and was placed in a caring asylum. He saw, in his lucid moments, the humiliation of his disease as a blessing, bringing him closer to the Lord. He never stopped praying and placing his life in God’s loving hands.
In 2015, Pope Francis canonized Zelie and Louis together, saying, “The holy spouses Louis Martin and Marie-Azelie Guerin practiced Christian service in the family, creating day by day an environment of faith and love which nurtured the vocations of their daughters, among whom was Saint Therese of the Child Jesus.”
Sts. Louis Martin and Marie-Azelie Guerin Martin are today’s Ornaments of Grace.
OBSERVING THE BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENTS
How can you, by example, help to teach children about the love of Jesus for them?
Learn More
Heart to Heart, a Catholic Media Ministry: htoh.us
420 W County Line Rd, Suite 200
Barrington, IL 60010
Support our ministry with a financial gift: htoh.us/donate
Song of Songs 2:8-12
Hark! My lover - here he comes springing across the mountains, leaping across the hills. My lover is like a gazelle or a young stag...My lover speaks; he says to me, “Arise my beloved, my beautiful one, and come! For see, the winter is past, the rains are over and gone. The flowers appear on the earth...”
Louis Martin wanted to be a monk but was turned away because he had not learned Latin. Marie-Azelie Guerin wanted to be a nun but was denied entrance due to respiratory trouble and recurring headaches. God had other plans for the young handsome watchmaker and the pretty lacemaker. Zelie was passing Louis on a bridge one night and heard a holy inner voice telling her that this was the man God wanted her to marry. Zelie’s aunt was able to introduce them in 1858. Both prayerful people, they fell deeply in love, and were married three months later. They lived in Alencon, France.
Zelie became so successful in lacemaking that Louis gave up his trade as a watchmaker and became a partner with his beloved wife in her business. It was unusual in their time for the husband to give up his trade to take on the business of his wife, but they made it work. Together they had nine children, but their love was not without great suffering. Only five daughters lived beyond infancy. The Martins lost two little boys before they saw their first birthday, and two girls died in 1870, one who was five and one who was just seven weeks old.
While the Martin family did not have money worries, they chose to live a simple lifestyle. They helped the poor and prayed together as a family every day. Zelie’s letters reveal what great joy both she and Louis found in their daughters. Still, they also show what sorrow they felt when losing a child. She wrote to her sister-in-law, “When I closed the eyes of my dear little children and buried them, I felt sorrow through and through... People said to me, ‘It would have been better never to have had them.’ I couldn’t stand such language. My children were not lost forever; life is short and full of miseries, and we shall find our little ones again up above.” Zelie and Louis trusted God’s plan always.
The youngest Martin child is probably the best known. She is St. Therese of the Child Jesus, also known as The Little Flower or St. Therese of Lisieux. The latter name applies because when Therese was only four years old, her mother died of breast cancer. Louis then sold the lacemaking business and the home in Alencon and moved the family to Lisieux. He did this so that one of Zelie’s sisters could help care for his girls. He loved Alencon and had many friends there, but he always put the needs of his children first. From Lisieux, one by one, his five daughters chose to enter religious life.
In his final years, Louis developed dementia and was placed in a caring asylum. He saw, in his lucid moments, the humiliation of his disease as a blessing, bringing him closer to the Lord. He never stopped praying and placing his life in God’s loving hands.
In 2015, Pope Francis canonized Zelie and Louis together, saying, “The holy spouses Louis Martin and Marie-Azelie Guerin practiced Christian service in the family, creating day by day an environment of faith and love which nurtured the vocations of their daughters, among whom was Saint Therese of the Child Jesus.”
Sts. Louis Martin and Marie-Azelie Guerin Martin are today’s Ornaments of Grace.
OBSERVING THE BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENTS
How can you, by example, help to teach children about the love of Jesus for them?
Learn More
Heart to Heart, a Catholic Media Ministry: htoh.us
420 W County Line Rd, Suite 200
Barrington, IL 60010
Support our ministry with a financial gift: htoh.us/donate
Previous Episode

Blessed Maria Sagheddu - Ornaments of Grace | Isaiah 7:10-14
Isaiah 7:10-14
Again the Lord spoke to Ahaz: Ask for a sign from the Lord, your God; let it be deep as the nether world, or high as the sky! But Ahaz answered: “I will not ask! I will not tempt the Lord.” Then he said: Listen, O house of David! Is it not enough for you to weary men; must you also weary my God? Therefore, the Lord himself will give you this sign: the virgin shall be with child, and bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel.
Born to shepherds in the Sardinian Region, an island to the west of Italy, Maria Sagheddu recognized the sign given by a loving God as Immanuel, God with us!
Maria’s father and one brother died in 1919 when she was only five; two more brothers died in childhood. Such grief surely brought little Maria to an early understanding of how quickly life on earth can pass. Though excelling in school, she had to leave after an elementary education to help her mother care for the other children and the home.
Maria’s sister, Giovanni Antonia, just a year younger, was her closest sibling in every way. In 1932, Giovanni died at age 17. After that, Maria’s devotion to the Lord grew. She began to teach religion to children and teens. She also reached out to help elderly people in the area in any way she could. These good works seemed to spur Maria to spend more time in prayer and study.
Soon, she felt called to religious life. With the help of her Jesuit confessor, she entered the Trappist Convent near Rome and received the name Maria Gabriella. Making her vows on the Feast of Christ the King in 1937, she entered wholeheartedly into the Trappist way of life and learned much about the need for ecumenism, a closer relationship among all Christian churches. She suffered from bouts of anxiety, but abandoned herself completely into the hands of God and found relief. The Sisters found her trusting, humble, cheerful, and always ready to do the most tiring jobs happily.
Maria Gabriella gave thanks to God for allowing her to be at one with Him through her vowed life. Still, she longed for all Christians to grow in understanding of one another and to develop a relationship with one another in Jesus. In January, 1938, during a time of special prayer for Christian unity, Maria offered herself as a spiritual sacrifice so that all might be one. This sacrifice, in God’s plan, was not only to be spiritual but physical as well. By May of the same year, doctors told her she had incurable tuberculosis. After suffering with the disease for over a year, Maria peacefully gave herself to the Lord and died on April 23, 1939. It was Good Shepherd Sunday, and the Gospel proclaimed “... and there will be one fold and one shepherd.”
During her very short life of 25 years, her love for unity had been welcomed by the Anglican Church and other believers as well. After her death, vocations flocked to her religious community. St. Pope John Paul II referred to Maria Gabriella in his encyclical That They May Be One as an example to follow: someone who realized it is our duty at all times, everywhere, to pray and work for unity. The Pope beatified her on January 25, 1983.
OBSERVING THE BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENTS
How can you work for greater unity among all Christian faiths?
Learn More
Heart to Heart, a Catholic Media Ministry: htoh.us
420 W County Line Rd, Suite 200
Barrington, IL 60010
Support our ministry with a financial gift: htoh.us/donate
Next Episode

Louis Braille - Ornaments of Grace | 1 Samuel 1:24-28
1 Samuel 1:24-28
Once Samuel was weaned, Hannah presented him at the temple in Shiloh...Hannah approached Eli and said: “Pardon, my lord! As you live, I am the woman who stood near you here, praying to the Lord. I prayed for this child, and the Lord granted my request. Now I, in turn, give him to the Lord; as long as he lives, he shall be dedicated to the Lord.”
Samuel, dedicated to the Lord by his parents as shown in today’s reading, changed the course of Israel’s history by anointing Saul as the first king. Louis Braille, dedicated to the Lord by his parents at Baptism, changed the course of many lives by developing a system of touch reading for the blind.
Born in a small French town, Louis Braille was not unlike children everywhere who try to imitate their parents. He saw his father working as a leatherer. So, the three-year-old picked up an awl to do the same. Unfortunately for little Louis, the awl unexpectedly bounced back from the leather and hit him in the eye. The hole in his eye became infected and extremely painful. In the early 1800’s, there was no effective treatment, and the infection spread to the other eye as well. By the time he was just five, little Louis was completely blind.
But God had gifted Louis with a bright mind, a beautiful sense of music, and a caring father. His father taught him to move safely but independently using a cane. He was devout and learned to play the organ. He used this gift in many churches in France. He also won a scholarship to one of the only schools in the world at that time for blind youth. It was in Paris. There he learned a system of reading using raised letters. His father made Louis a set of thick leather letters that he could trace to write home. The young twelve-year-old realized using such a system to produce books was more than cumbersome. Few books for the blind were available. He had become familiar with a system of dots and dashes used by soldiers to communicate silently in the dark, but it was complicated.
After three years, Louis Braille developed a simpler system for the blind, not unlike the system of dots and dashes but far less complicated. Ironically, Louis used an awl to impress the letters, mathematical symbols, and musical notations into paper. It could be accessible to all. He did this because of his caring nature, believing the blind should be able to communicate on an equal footing with those who could see. What an amazing vision for a 15-year-old boy!
By twenty-four, Braille was a full professor at the Institute for the Blind in Paris and remained in that position until his death from tuberculosis at age forty-three. His system was not accepted widely in his day. After his death, however, it took hold and is used to this day, even with the advent of electronic devices. Look on public bathroom signs or elevator panels or public signs of any kind. When you see this code which has been a blessing to countless people, you can remember a man whose loss of sight led him to find a way to help others. Yes, Louis Braille was dedicated to the Lord at his Baptism, and he practiced his faith all his life. It was that faith and using the gifts God gave him that changed for the better the lives of so many.
Louis Braille is today’s Ornament of Grace.
OBSERVING THE BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENTS
How did Louis use the many gifts God gave him to uplift and encourage others instead of wallowing in self-pity?
Learn More
Heart to Heart, a Catholic Media Ministry: htoh.us
420 W County Line Rd, Suite 200
Barrington, IL 60010
Support our ministry with a financial gift: htoh.us/donate
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