Sister Lúcia

Sister Lúcia (28 March 1907 – 13 February 2005), born Lúcia de Jesus Rosa dos Santos, was a Portuguese Discalced Carmelite nun, one of the three children, along with her cousins, who claimed to have witnessed Marian apparitions in Fátima in 1917.

Quotes

 * I thought of opening the New Testament, the only book I desire to have here in front of me, in this remote corner of the attic, lit by a single skylight, to which I withdraw whenever I can, in order to escape, as far as possible, from all human eyes. My lap serves as a table, and an old trunk as a chair. But, someone will say, why don’t you write in your cell? Our dear Lord has seen fit to deprive me even of a cell, although there are quite a few empty ones in the house … But I am glad and I thank God for the grace of having been born poor, and for living more poorly still for love of Him. … Very well then. I need no more than this: obedience and abandonment to God who works within me. I am truly no more than a poor and miserable instrument which He desires to use, and in a little while, like a painter who casts his now useless brush into the fire so that it may be reduced to ashes, the Divine Artist will Himself reduce His now useless instrument to the ashes of the tomb, until the great day of the eternal Alleluias. And I ardently desire that day, for the tomb does not annihilate everything, and the happiness of eternal and infinite love begins – now!
 * Fourth Memoir (1941), in The Fatima in Lucia's Own Words (2007), transl. by Dominican Nuns of Perpetual Rosary.