Posted on 09/06/2007 5:34:29 PM PDT by Salvation
On October 19, 2003, Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997) will be beatified in Rome. During the three-and-a-half-year investigation into her cause, no less thorough for having been hastened by the waiver of the customary five-year waiting period, every nook and cranny of her life was studied for evidence that she is the great saint, the Christian Mahatma, that the world already believes her to be. The date chosen for her beatification, Mission Sunday, is the Sunday closest to the twenty-fifth anniversary of the pontificate of John Paul II and to the end of the Year of the Rosary. This may be taken as a sign of how close Mother Teresas cause is to the Popes heart. In any case, the beatification of Mother Teresa makes a fitting colophon to the era of turbulence and grace that will always be associated with his name. Since the pontificate of Gregory the Great (590-604), nearly every generation of Christians has felt itself living in a Church too old to produce heroic saints. If during the days of John Paul II we are inclined to a similar despondency, we have only to consider Mother Teresa to be reminded of how young the Church really is, how capable of fidelity and passionate witness to Christ.
One would expect the canonization process to be steady and sure and, aside from a few marginal detractors, uncontroversial, for no saint has ever been more in the public eye. In her life-long service to Christ in the poorest of the poor, and her simple and consistent teachings on the law of love, she was an open book. She tried always to be transparent to Christ, and in that very transparency her inner life was hidden, making her a difficult subject for biographers. Malcolm Muggeridge observed that when the eighteen-year-old Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu left her family to join the Sisters of Our Lady of Loreto, it was the end of her biography and the beginning of her life. It is only now with the end of her life, and the beginning of her cause, that the biography resumes, and new dimensions of her character are revealed.
During November and December of last year, the ZENIT News Agency published in four installments a study of The Soul of Mother Teresa: Hidden Aspects of Her Interior Life, by the Postulator of Mother Teresas cause, Father Brian Kolodiejchuk, M.C. In this study a new portrait of Mother Teresas interior life emerges, drawn largely from letters she sent to her spiritual directors. She had wanted the letters to be destroyed, not intending to leave behind any record of her spiritual life (I want the work to remain only His), but they were preserved nonetheless; and who among us would willingly dispatch them to the shredder? Fr. Kolodiejchuks study is just the tip of the iceberg-the documentation submitted to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints runs to eight volumesbut what it shows us is Mother Teresa as a classic Christian mystic whose inner life was burned through by the fire of charity, and whose fidelity was tested and purified by an intense trial of faith, a true dark night of the soul.
Fr. Kolodiejchuk sees Mother Teresas life as unfolding in four phases:
The dark night of Mother Teresa presents us with an even greater interpretive challenge than her visions and locutions. It means that the missionary foundress who called herself Gods pencil was not the God-intoxicated saint many of us had assumed her to be. We may prefer to think that she spent her days in a state of ecstatic mystical union with God, because that would get us ordinary worldlings off the hook. How else could this unremarkable woman, no different from the rest of us, bear to throw her lot in with the poorest of the poor, sharing their meager diet and rough clothing, wiping leprous sores and enduring the agonies of the dying, for so many years without respite, unless she were somehow lifted above it all, shielded by spiritual endorphins? Yet we have her own testimony that what made her self-negating work possible was not a subjective experience of ecstasy but an objective relationship to God shorn of the sensible awareness of Gods presence.
In the history of Christian theology and spirituality, there have been many accounts of divine darkness, with a host of different implications. It is an ancient doctrine, emphasized by apophatic theologians and mystics, that God dwells in inaccessible light, a light so searingly absolute that it cancels out all images and ideas we may form of Him, veiling the divine glory in a dark cloud of unknowing. This tradition owes much to the Christian Neoplatonist Dionysius the Pseudo-Areopagite and his liturgically inspired vision of ascent to the divine throne; as such, it says more about divine transcendence than about human desolation.
Among the monastic writers who flourished during the sunlit years of the twelfth century, divine darkness was an essentially cheerful idea. William of St. Thierry positively delighted in our minds incapacity to see that God is present, for he counted on love to make good the deficiencies of our feeble intellect. Love is the eye with which we see God, William said; love itself is understanding. But love is not to be confused with mere feelings. Feelings burn out too easily; they can be manipulated or seduced. The love by which we see God must be an act of the will rather than a passing affection of the heart.
Later generations of Christian mystics dwelt upon the more desolate kinds of darkness to which the spiritual life can lead: the darkness in which all modes of prayer and spiritual practice become arid, and all consolation in the love of God seems lost. Even in the desolate dark night of the soul, indeed especially there, St. John of the Cross taught, God is present, purifying the soul of all passions and hindrances, and preparing her for the inconceivable blessedness of divine union. Along with dark knowing, there is dark loving, no less ardent for being deprived of all sensible and spiritual vision of the beloved. Therefore St. John can say, Oh, night more lovely than the dawn, Oh, night that joined Beloved with lover, Lover transformed in the Beloved!
Yet only in the modern period has the dark night of the soul taken the form of radical doubt, doubting not only ones own state of grace, but Gods promises and even Gods existence. A wise Benedictine, John Chapman of Downside Abbey, made this point in a 1923 letter to a non-monastic friend: [I]n the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries most pious souls seem to have gone through a period in which they felt sure that God had reprobated them. . . . This doesnt seem to happen nowadays. But the corresponding trial of our contemporaries seems to be the feeling of not having any faith; not temptations against any particular article, but a mere feeling that religion is not true.
For this annihilating temptation, Chapman wrote, the only remedy is to despise the whole thing, and pay no attention to itexcept (of course) to assure our Lord that one is ready to suffer from it as long as he wishes. The feeling of not having any faith is painful because it is an authentic purgation, during which faith is really particularly strong all the time, and one is being brought into closer union with the suffering Christ.
This was exactly the way Mother Teresa learned to deal with her trial of faith: by converting her feeling of abandonment by God into an act of abandonment to God. It would be her Gethsemane, she came to believe, and her participation in the thirst Jesus suffered on the Cross. And it gave her access to the deepest poverty of the modern world: the poverty of meaninglessness and loneliness. To endure this trial of faith would be to bear witness to the fidelity for which the world is starving. Keep smiling, Mother Teresa used to tell her community and guests, and somehow, coming from her, it doesnt seem trite. For when she kept smiling during her night of faith, it was not a cover-up but a manifestation of her loving resolve to be an apostle of joy.
One can better understand, having read The Soul of Mother Teresa, why she insisted that adoration of Christ present in the Blessed Sacrament should occupy the center of the Missionaries daily work; and why she felt it imperative to establish purely contemplative communities that would make the Missionaries of Charity an order of adoration as well as apostolic service. Adoring Christ in the Sacrament is also a way of dark knowing and dark loving. To all appearances he is absent, as Aquinas says in the Tantum ergo Sacramentum, so faith must supply what is lacking to our feeble senses. Humanly, there were times when Mother Teresa felt burnt out, but faith supplied what was lacking even to troubled faith; spiritually she was often desolate, but her vow endured and her visible radianceto which everyone attestswas undiminished. This lifelong fidelity should not be confused with a Stoic determination to keep going in the face of defeat. It was something else entirely: objective Christian joy.
Mother Teresa is not the only modern saint to have undergone such a trial of faith; one thinks also of precursors like St. Paul of the Cross (1694-1775), founder of the Passionists, and St. Jane Frances de Chantal (1572-1641), foundress of the Visitandines, but above all of Mother Teresas namesake, St. Thérèse of Lisieux (1873-1897), the French Carmelite famous for her Little Way. The parallels between Mother Teresa (Teresa of the Child Jesus) and St. Thérèse (Teresa of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face) are really quite remarkable. Thérèse also made a vow, informally as a young child, and formally on two occasions as a professed Carmelite nun, to refuse nothing to Jesus. Like Mother Teresa, she had longed to be sent forth in the missions as a herald of Gods love; since her frailty prevented this, she rejoiced in being assigned missionaries for whom she prayed and whom she regarded with great affection as her spiritual brothers. She, too, felt multiple calls; indeed, she felt all calls at once: I feel the vocation of the warrior, the priest, the apostle, the doctor, the martyr, she wrote. I feel within my soul the courage of the Crusader, the Papal Guard, and I would want to die on the field of battle in defense of the Church. Not for feminist reasons did she say, I feel in me the vocation of the priest, but rather because of a youthful desire to be all in all for Christ. The Little Way was her solution: I understood that love comprised all vocations, that love was everything . . . my vocation is love! . . . In the heart of the Church, my Mother, I shall be Love. If love were dependent on mere feelings, however, her vocation would have foundered, for as Thérèse wrote, Do not believe I am swimming in consolations; oh, no, my consolation is to have none on earth.
From Easter 1896 until her death from tuberculosis on September 30, 1897, at age twenty-four, Thérèse endured a trial of faith of the modern kind, which she described as like being enclosed in a dark tunnel. She seemed to hear the darkness mocking her: You are dreaming about the light, about a fatherland embalmed in the sweetest perfumes; you are dreaming about the eternal possession of the Creator of all these marvels; you believe that one day you will walk out of this fog which surrounds you! Advance, advance; rejoice in death which will give you not what you hope for but a night still more profound, the night of nothingness. According to tradition she died trusting and loving God in the very grip of this doubt, and promising to spend her heaven doing good on earth.
Is it fanciful to consider the possibility that Mother Teresa, who died in the same month one hundred years later, who experienced the same ardent call, made the same vow of surrender, suffered the same desolation of faith, and embodied in the face of that dark night the same teaching of fidelity in small things, may have in some way been completing the mission of St. Thérèse? Could it be that this missionary contemplative and this contemplative missionary are companions in a joint work of grace?
However that may be, it was the same objective Christian joy that made Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu become a Saint Teresa for our time, and a saint-maker for our future. When we consider her life and the ongoing life of her community, the Church seems young again, and everything seems possible. If these days are in any sense a dark night for the Church, then Mother Teresa shows the way forward: faith that we are undergoing a purification rather than a free-fall, and fidelity, in small things as well as big, to the vows that bind in order to set free.
Additional information about the Dark NIght of Mother Teresa.
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** Mother Teresa learned to deal with her trial of faith: by converting her feeling of abandonment by God into an act of abandonment to God. **
This is the way saints (to be) and saints already canonized dealt with their dark night.
Shocking that a Prof. from Smith can believe in any form of Christianity.
What kind of college is Smith College. From your post, it sounds as though it does rank too highly with you.
Located in Northampton, MA. All female school. Very liberal, feminist and gay-oriented.
I dated a Smith girl 20 years ago. She was fine, but my experiences on the campus (bathrooms open to both sexes) really opened my eyes.
Do you think it has changed for the better, then? In my judgment, if it was like that 20 years ago, I’d hate to think about what it is like today.
Can't imagine it's any better today. Northampton is still a major gay Mecca.
A group that morning (September 5, 1998) prayed for help for the pro-life movement through the intercession of Mother Teresa. The last abortion for the day was around 4pm, where the pro-lifer who made this request has recently related that Mother Teresa was present with the person at Mass that afternoon. An abortion was taking place at that same time (around 4pm) that would shake up the abortion industry, and generate quite a bit of positive pro-life news and a lot of negative abortion.
This was the botched abortion of Denise Doe. This botched abortion ended up in a major lawsuit.
Also, a law was passed in Louisiana (where the abortion took place) that required health inspections of abortion clinics. The woman who was praying outside the clinic at the time of the botched abortion would be a couple of weeks later invited to meet with Pope John Paul II -- something the woman thought of turning down.
The story of Dennis Doe became the series of newscasts on WAFB-TV Channel 9 in Baton Rouge, LA (where the abortion clinic was).
The abortion clinic (Delta Women's Clinic) would burn down due to a electrical fire.
But how did Blessed Mother Teresa intervene? Anyone familar with the story of Denise Doe knows that it is amazing that the woman survived this botched abortion. In fact in US Senate Testimony, Denise Doe is the most severely injured woman from an abortion that has survived.
As for the why of the botched abortion: it is clear -- the abortionist was incompetent. The abortionist had been kicked out of LSU Medical School for performing abortions while still studying for her OB/GYN speciality -- she could only perform abortions if she was supervised (which was brought out in the lawsuit).
The story of Denise Doe brings out the horror of abortins, and made that known to many young women because of newspaper as well as TV news about what happened to Denise Doe.
For obvious reasons, the devil often tempts saints the most, frequently with doubt. Why would he worry much about people who are doing a fine job wallowing in sin all on there own?
There's a Truth that XXI Century Americans, who tend to equate "love" with "warm fuzzies", will have great difficulty understanding.
"Feelings....Wo-o-o, Feelings!" - The theme song of today.
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