| 
Homily
of John Paul II
Fides News:
THE POPE ADDRESSES VISITORS
WHO CAME FOR BEATIFICATION “THERE IS NO DOUBT THAT MOTHER
TERESA WAS ONE OF THE GREATEST MISSIONARIES OF THE 20TH CENTURY
THE POPE BEATIFIES MOTHER
TERESA: “WITH THE WITNESS OF HER LIFE , SHE REMINDS EVERYONE
THAT THE CHURCH’S EVANGELISING MISSION PASSES BY WAY OF
CHARITY
PHOTOS AND VIDEO OF MOTHER
TERESA’S BEATIFICATION DISTRIBUTED IN REAL TIME AMONG THE
POOR THANKS TO HIGH-TECH DON BOSCO YOUTH
“A WOMAN IN LOVE
WITH JESUS” : POSTULATOR OF MOTHER TERESA’S BEATIFICATION
CAUSE FR KOLODIEJCHUK, SPEAKS TO FIDES
KARNATAKA AND VATICAN:
CELEBRATIONS FOR MOTHER TERESA, 25 YEARS OF POPE JOHN PAUL II,
CLOSING OF ROSARY YEAR
EXHIBITION ON MOTHER
TERESA: A FEW POOR BELONGINGS, PHOTOGRAPHS, LETTERS, WRITINGS
REVEAL HER SOUL
GOVERNMENT INSTITUTES
NATIONAL AWARD IN MEMORY OF MOTHER TERESA TO PROMOTE HER MESSAGE
OF LOVE AND SERVICE
RELICS OF MOTHER TERESA
WILL BE CARRIED TO ROME FOR BEATIFICATION
WOMAN CURED OF CANCER
BY MOTHER TERESA’S INTERCESSION WILL ATTEND BEATIFICATION
IN ROME
BEATIFICATION OF MOTHER
TERESA: OPPORTUNITY TO RE-LAUNCH INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE THROUGHOUT
INDIA
PEACE AND RECONCILIATION
IN THE NAME OF MOTHER TERESA, ANTIDOTE FOR INTERRELIGIOUS VIOLENCE
IN GUJARAT STATE: BISHOPS SPEAK TO FIDES SERVICE
PROGRAMME OF EVENTS TO
MARK 25TH YEAR OF JOHN PAUL ELECTION TO THE PAPACY RELEASED: CELEBRATIONS
TO CULMINATE WITH BEATIFICATION OF MOTHER TERESA ON MISSION SUNDAY
SALESIANS PRODUCE VIDEO
ON MOTHER TERESA IN THREE LANGUAGES WITH PARTS OF HER SPEECHES
PRESENTATION OF MONDO
E MISSIONE SPECIAL ISSUE ON MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA
MISSION IN CHINA: MOTHER
TERESA HAD A DREAM AND IT WILL COME TRUE
“MOTHER TERESA THE
MOST PRECIOUS GEM”: SCHOOL CONTEST IN RAJASTHAN STATE, CHILDREN
OF ALL AGES CHRISTIAN AND NON, BUSY PRODUCING ESSAYS, PAINTINGS,
SCULPTURES ON MOTHER TERESA
CATHOLIC BISHOPS SUGGEST
TO FEDERAL GOVERNMENT THAT DAY OF THE BEATIFICATION OF MOTHER
TERESA SHOULD BE A STATE HOLIDAY
MORE THAN 10,000 DELEGATES
FROM ALL ASIA FROM 9-16 AUGUST IN BANGALORE FOR ASIAN YOUTH DAY
– SR. NIRMALA WILL TELL YOUTH ABOUT MOTHER TERESA
CALCUTTA FILM FESTIVAL
TO HONOUR MOTHER TERESA
LIFE STORY OF MOTHER TERESA
NOW AVAILABLE IN KANNADA LANGUAGE SPOKEN BY 33 MILLION INDIANS
INTERVIEW WITH CATHOLIC
ARCHBISHOP OF CALCUTTA: STOP ANTI-CONVERSION BILL. EVERY PERSON
MUST ENJOY FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE
LOCAL CALCUTTA COMMITTEE
FOR OCTOBER BEATIFICATION OF MOTHER TERESA
SISTER NIRMALA RE-ELECTED
SUPERIOR OF MOTHER TERESA' S MISSIONARIES OF CHARITY
MOTHER TERESA'S MISSIONARIES
OF CHARITY CHOOSE TO REMAIN AT CHILDREN'S HOME IN BAGHDAD: "THEY
NEED US
MOTHER TERESA OFFICIAL
WEB SITE: PASSES CAN BE BOOKED FOR BEATIFICATION ON MISSION SUNDAY
19 OCTOBER
|
 |
| 19
OCTOBER 2003, Saint Peter's Square |
Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997)
By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian. By faith,
I am a Catholic nun. As to my calling, I belong to the world.
As to my heart, I belong entirely to the Heart of Jesus. ”Small
of stature, rocklike in faith, Mother Teresa of Calcutta was entrusted
with the mission of proclaiming God’s thirsting love for
humanity, especially for the poorest of the poor. “God still
loves the world and He sends you and me to be His love and His
compassion to the poor.” She was a soul filled with the
light of Christ, on fire with love for Him and burning with one
desire: “to quench His thirst for love and for souls.”
This luminous messenger of God’s love was born on 26 August
1910 in Skopje, a city situated at the crossroads of Balkan history.
The youngest of the children born to Nikola and Drane Bojaxhiu,
she was baptised Gonxha Agnes, received her First Communion at
the age of five and a half and was confirmed in November 1916.
From the day of her First Holy Communion, a love for souls was
within her. Her father’s sudden death when Gonxha was about
eight years old left in the family in financial straits. Drane
raised her children firmly and lovingly, greatly influencing her
daughter’s character and vocation. Gonxha’s religious
formation was further assisted by the vibrant Jesuit parish of
the Sacred Heart in which she was much involved.
At the age of eighteen, moved by a desire to become a missionary,
Gonxha left her home in September 1928 to join the Institute of
the Blessed Virgin Mary, known as the Sisters of Loreto, in Ireland.
There she received the name Sister Mary Teresa after St. Thérèse
of Lisieux. In December, she departed for India, arriving in Calcutta
on 6 January 1929. After making her First Profession of Vows in
May 1931, Sister Teresa was assigned to the Loreto Entally community
in Calcutta and taught at St. Mary’s School for girls. On
24 May 1937, Sister Teresa made her Final Profession of Vows,
becoming, as she said, the “spouse of Jesus” for “all
eternity.” From that time on she was called Mother Teresa.
She continued teaching at St. Mary’s and in 1944 became
the school’s principal. A person of profound prayer and
deep love for her religious sisters and her students, Mother Teresa’s
twenty years in Loreto were filled with profound happiness. Noted
for her charity, unselfishness and courage, her capacity for hard
work and a natural talent for organization, she lived out her
consecration to Jesus, in the midst of her companions, with fidelity
and joy.
On 10 September 1946 during the train ride from Calcutta to Darjeeling
for her annual retreat, Mother Teresa received her “inspiration,”
her “call within a call.” On that day, in a way she
would never explain, Jesus’ thirst for love and for souls
took hold of her heart and the desire to satiate His thirst became
the driving force of her life. Over the course of the next weeks
and months, by means of interior locutions and visions, Jesus
revealed to her the desire of His heart for “victims of
love” who would “radiate His love on souls.”
“Come be My light,” He begged her. “I cannot
go alone.” He revealed His pain at the neglect of the poor,
His sorrow at their ignorance of Him and His longing for their
love. He asked Mother Teresa to establish a religious community,
Missionaries of Charity, dedicated to the service of the poorest
of the poor. Nearly two years of testing and discernment passed
before Mother Teresa received permission to begin. On August 17,
1948, she dressed for the first time in a white, blue-bordered
sari and passed through the gates of her beloved Loreto convent
to enter the world of the poor.
After a short course with the Medical Mission Sisters in Patna,
Mother Teresa returned to Calcutta and found temporary lodging
with the Little Sisters of the Poor. On 21 December she went for
the first time to the slums. She visited families, washed the
sores of some children, cared for an old man lying sick on the
road and nursed a woman dying of hunger and TB. She started each
day in communion with Jesus in the Eucharist and then went out,
rosary in her hand, to find and serve Him in “the unwanted,
the unloved, the uncared for.” After some months, she was
joined, one by one, by her former students.
On 7 October 1950 the new congregation of the Missionaries of
Charity was officially established in the Archdiocese of Calcutta.
By the early 1960s, Mother Teresa began to send her Sisters to
other parts of India. The Decree of Praise granted to the Congregation
by Pope Paul VI in February 1965 encouraged her to open a house
in Venezuela. It was soon followed by foundations in Rome and
Tanzania and, eventually, on every continent. Starting in 1980
and continuing through the 1990s, Mother Teresa opened houses
in almost all of the communist countries, including the former
Soviet Union, Albania and Cuba.
In order to respond better to both the physical and spiritual
needs of the poor, Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity
Brothers in 1963, in 1976 the contemplative branch of the Sisters,
in 1979 the Contemplative Brothers, and in 1984 the Missionaries
of Charity Fathers. Yet her inspiration was not limited to those
with religious vocations. She formed the Co-Workers of Mother
Teresa and the Sick and Suffering Co-Workers, people of many faiths
and nationalities with whom she shared her spirit of prayer, simplicity,
sacrifice and her apostolate of humble works of love. This spirit
later inspired the Lay Missionaries of Charity. In answer to the
requests of many priests, in 1981 Mother Teresa also began the
Corpus Christi Movement for Priests as a “little way of
holiness” for those who desire to share in her charism and
spirit.
During the years of rapid growth the world began to turn its
eyes towards Mother Teresa and the work she had started. Numerous
awards, beginning with the Indian Padmashri Award in 1962 and
notably the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979, honoured her work, while
an increasingly interested media began to follow her activities.
She received both prizes and attention “for the glory of
God and in the name of the poor.”
The whole of Mother Teresa’s life and labour bore witness
to the joy of loving, the greatness and dignity of every human
person, the value of little things done faithfully and with love,
and the surpassing worth of friendship with God. But there was
another heroic side of this great woman that was revealed only
after her death. Hidden from all eyes, hidden even from those
closest to her, was her interior life marked by an experience
of a deep, painful and abiding feeling of being separated from
God, even rejected by Him, along with an ever-increasing longing
for His love. She called her inner experience, “the darkness.”
The “painful night” of her soul, which began around
the time she started her work for the poor and continued to the
end of her life, led Mother Teresa to an ever more profound union
with God. Through the darkness she mystically participated in
the thirst of Jesus, in His painful and burning longing for love,
and she shared in the interior desolation of the poor.
During the last years of her life, despite increasingly severe
health problems, Mother Teresa continued to govern her Society
and respond to the needs of the poor and the Church. By 1997,
Mother Teresa’s Sisters numbered nearly 4,000 members and
were established in 610 foundations in 123 countries of the world.
In March 1997 she blessed her newly-elected successor as Superior
General of the Missionaries of Charity and then made one more
trip abroad. After meeting Pope John Paul II for the last time,
she returned to Calcutta and spent her final weeks receiving visitors
and instructing her Sisters. On 5 September Mother Teresa’s
earthly life came to an end. She was given the honour of a state
funeral by the Government of India and her body was buried in
the Mother House of the Missionaries of Charity. Her tomb quickly
became a place of pilgrimage and prayer for people of all faiths,
rich and poor alike. Mother Teresa left a testament of unshakable
faith, invincible hope and extraordinary charity. Her response
to Jesus’ plea, “Come be My light,” made her
a Missionary of Charity, a “mother to the poor,” a
symbol of compassion to the world, and a living witness to the
thirsting love of God.
Less than two years after her death, in view of Mother Teresa’s
widespread reputation of holiness and the favours being reported,
Pope John Paul II permitted the opening of her Cause of Canonization.
On 20 December 2002 he approved the decrees of her heroic virtues
and miracles |