(1515–1582),
Doctor of the Church and co-founder of the Discalced Carmelites A combination of political and social conditions that prevailed in Europe in the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries, including the
Hundred Years' War,
Black Plague,
Protestant Reformation, and
Humanist Revival, adversely affected the Order. Many Carmelites, including whole communities, succumbed to contemporary attitudes and conditions that were diametrically opposed to their original vocation. To accommodate this situation their rule of life was "mitigated" several times. Consequently, the Carmelites less and less resembled the first hermits of
Mount Carmel.
St. Teresa of Jesus (of Avila) considered contemplative prayer to be the surest means to restore the authentic mission of the Carmelite Order. She wrote that God communicated to her the command to establish a new reformed monastery. A group of nuns assembled in her cell one September evening in 1560, taking their inspiration from the primitive tradition of Carmel and the discalced reform of
St. Peter of Alcantara, a controversial movement within Spanish Franciscanism, proposed to found a monastery of an
eremitical kind. With few resources and often bitter opposition, Teresa succeeded in 1562 in establishing a small monastery with the austerity of desert solitude within the heart of the city of
Ávila,
Spain, combining eremitical and community life. On 24 August 1562, the new
Convent of St. Joseph was founded. Teresa's rule, which retained a distinctively Marian character, contained exacting prescriptions for a life of continual prayer, safeguarded by strict enclosure and sustained by the asceticism of solitude, manual labor, perpetual abstinence, fasting, and fraternal charity. In addition to this, Teresa envisioned an order fully dedicated to poverty. The Discalced Carmelites were established as a separate province of the Carmelite Order by the decree
Pia consideratione of
Pope Gregory XIII on 22 June 1580. By this decree the Discalced Carmelites were still subject to the Prior General of the Carmelite Order in Rome, but were otherwise distinct from the Carmelites in that they could elect their own superiors and author their own constitutions for their common life. The following Discalced Carmelite Chapter at
Alcala de Henares,
Spain in March 1581 established the constitutions of the Discalced Carmelites and elected the first provincial of the Discalced Carmelites,
Jerome Gratian. This office was later translated into that of Superior General of the Discalced Carmelites. == Carmelite charism ==