Early life and education He was born
Juan de Yepes y Álvarez at
Fontiveros,
Old Castile, into a "
New Christian" family of
Converso origins (descendants of
Iberian Jewish converts to Roman Catholicism) in Fontiveros, near
Ávila, a town of around 2,000 people. His father, Gonzalo, was an accountant to richer relatives who were silk merchants. In 1529 Gonzalo married John's mother, Catalina, an orphan of humble origins; he was rejected by his family and forced to work with his wife as a weaver. John's father died in 1545, when John was around three years old. Two years later, John's older brother, Luis, died, probably from malnourishment due to the family's poverty. John's mother Catalina moved with John and his surviving brother Francisco, first to Arévalo in 1548, and then in 1551 to
Medina del Campo, where she was able to find work. There he met
Fray Luis de León, who taught biblical studies (
Exegesis,
Hebrew, and
Aramaic) at the university.
Joining the Reform of Teresa of Ávila in
Beas de Segura, Spain John was
ordained as a priest in 1567. He subsequently considered joining the strict
Carthusian Order, which appealed to him because of its practice of solitary and silent contemplation. His journey from Salamanca to
Medina del Campo, probably in September 1567, became pivotal. In Medina he met the influential Carmelite nun
Teresa of Ávila. She was in Medina to found the second of her new convents. She told him about her reform projects for the Order, which sought to restore the purity of the Carmelite Order by reverting to the observance of its "Primitive Rule" of 1209, which had been relaxed by
Pope Eugene IV in 1432. Under the Rule, much of the day and night was to be divided between the recitation of the
Liturgy of the Hours, study and devotional reading, the celebration of Mass, and periods of solitude. In the case of friars, time was to be spent evangelizing the population around the monastery. There was to be total
abstinence from meat and a lengthy period of
fasting from the
Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross (14 September) until Easter. There were to be long periods of silence, especially between
Compline and
Prime. Simpler, coarser, and shorter habits (clothing) were to be adopted. There was also an
injunction against wearing covered shoes (also previously mitigated in 1432). That particular observance distinguished the "
discalced", i.e., barefoot, followers of Teresa from traditional Carmelites, and they would be formally recognized as the separate Order of
Discalced Carmelites in 1580. Teresa asked John to delay his entry into the Carthusian order and to follow her. Having spent a final year studying in Salamanca, in August 1568 John traveled with Teresa from Medina to
Valladolid, where Teresa intended to found another convent. After a spell at Teresa's side in Valladolid, learning more about the new form of Carmelite life, John left Valladolid in October 1568 accompanied by Fray , intending to found a new monastery for Carmelite friars — the first to follow Teresa's principles. They were given the use of a derelict house at
Duruelo, which had been donated to Teresa. On 28 November 1568, the monastery was established, and on that same day, John changed his name to "John of the Cross." Soon after, in June 1570, the friars moved to the nearby town of
Mancera de Abajo, midway between Ávila and Salamanca. John moved from the first community to set up a new community at
Pastrana in October 1570, and then another community at
Alcalá de Henares, as a house for the academic training of the friars. In 1572 he arrived in Ávila, at Teresa's invitation. She had been appointed
prioress of the Convent of the Incarnation there in 1571. John became the
spiritual director and
confessor of Teresa and the other 130 nuns there, as well as for a wide range of laypeople in the city.
Height of Carmelite tensions The years 1575–77 saw a great increase in tensions among Spanish Carmelite friars over the reforms of Teresa and John. Since 1566 the reforms had been overseen by
Canonical Visitors from the
Dominican Order, with one appointed to Castile and a second to
Andalusia. The Visitors had substantial powers: they could move members of religious communities from one house to another or from one
province to the next. They could assist
religious superiors in the discharge of their office, and could delegate superiors between the Dominican or Carmelite orders. In Castile, the Visitor was Pedro Fernández, who prudently balanced the interests of the Discalced Carmelites with those of the nuns and friars who did not desire reform. In Andalusia to the south, the Visitor was Francisco Vargas, and tensions rose due to his clear preference for the Discalced friars. Vargas asked them to make foundations in various cities, in contradiction to the express orders from the Carmelite
Prior General to curb expansion in Andalusia. As a result, a
General Chapter of the Carmelite Order was convened at
Piacenza in Italy in May 1576, out of concern that events in Spain were getting out of hand. It concluded by ordering the total suppression of the Discalced houses. That measure was not immediately enforced.
King Philip II of Spain was supportive of Teresa's reforms, and so was not immediately willing to grant the necessary permission to enforce the ordinance. The Discalced friars also found support from the papal
nuncio to Spain, ,
Bishop of Padua, who still had ultimate power to visit and reform religious orders. When asked by the Discalced friars to intervene, Nuncio Ormaneto replaced Vargas as Visitor of the Carmelites in Andalusia with
Jerónimo Gracián, a priest from the
University of Alcalá, who was in fact a Discalced Carmelite friar himself. He managed to escape eight months later, on 15 August 1578, through a small window in a room adjoining his cell. (He had managed to pry open the hinges of the cell door earlier that day.) After being nursed back to health, first by Teresa's nuns in
Toledo, and then during six weeks at the Hospital of Santa Cruz, John continued with the reforms. In October 1578 he joined a meeting at
Almodóvar del Campo of reform supporters, better known as the Discalced Carmelites. There, in part as a result of the opposition faced from other Carmelites, they decided to request from the Pope their formal separation from the rest of the Carmelite order. At that meeting John was appointed superior of El Calvario, an isolated monastery of around thirty friars in the mountains about away from
Beas in Andalusia. During that time he befriended the nun
Ana de Jesús, superior of the Discalced nuns at Beas, through his visits to the town every Saturday. While at El Calvario he composed the first version of his commentary on his poem
The Spiritual Canticle, possibly at the request of the nuns in Beas. In 1579 he moved to
Baeza, a town of around 50,000 people, to serve as
rector of a new college, the Colegio de San Basilio, for Discalced friars in Andalusia. It opened on 13 June 1579. He remained in post until 1582, spending much of his time as a spiritual director to the friars and townspeople. 1580 was a significant year in the resolution of disputes between the Carmelites. On 22 June,
Pope Gregory XIII signed a decree, entitled
Pia Consideratione, which authorised the separation of the old (later "calced") and the newly reformed, "Discalced" Carmelites. The Dominican friar
Juan Velázquez de las Cuevas was appointed to oversee the decision. At the first General Chapter of the Discalced Carmelites, in
Alcalá de Henares on 3 March 1581, John of the Cross was elected one of the "Definitors" of the community, and wrote a constitution for them. By the time of the Provincial Chapter at Alcalá in 1581, there were 22 houses, some 300 friars and 200 nuns among the Discalced Carmelites. In November 1581, John was sent by Teresa to help Ana de Jesús to found a convent in
Granada. Arriving in January 1582, she set up a convent, while John stayed in the monastery of Los Mártires, near the Alhambra, becoming its prior in March 1582. While there, he learned of Teresa's death in October of that year. In February 1585, John travelled to
Málaga where he established a convent for Discalced nuns. In May 1585, at the General Chapter of the Discalced Carmelites in
Lisbon, John was elected Vicar Provincial of Andalusia, a post which required him to travel frequently, making annual visitations to the houses of friars and nuns in Andalusia. During this time he founded seven new monasteries in the region, and is estimated to have travelled around 25,000 km. In June 1588, he was elected third Councillor to the Vicar General for the Discalced Carmelites, Father Nicolas Doria. To fulfill this role, he had to return to Segovia in Castile, where he also took on the role of prior of the monastery. After disagreeing in 1590–1 with some of Doria's remodelling of the leadership of the Discalced Carmelite Order, John was removed from his post in Segovia, and sent by Doria in June 1591 to an isolated monastery in Andalusia called La Peñuela. There he fell ill, and travelled to the monastery at
Úbeda for treatment. His condition worsened, however, and he died there of
erysipelas on 14 December 1591. == Veneration ==