MOTHER TERESA DECLARED SAINT TERESA OF CULCUTTA
Pope Francis declared Mother Teresa a saint on Sunday, praising
the tiny nun for having taken in society’s most unwanted and for having shamed
world leaders for the “crimes of poverty they themselves created.”Pope Francis
held up Mother Teresa as the model for a Catholic Church that goes to the
peripheries to find poor, wounded souls during a canonisation Mass that drew an
estimated 120,000 people rich and poor, powerful and homeless to a sun-filled
St. Peter’s Square.“Let us carry her smile in our hearts and give it to those
whom we meet along our journey, especially those who suffer,” Pope Francis said
in his homily.
The
canonisation was the highlight of Pope Francis’ Holy Year of Mercy and may come
to define his papacy, which has been dedicated to ministering to society’s most
marginal, from prisoners to prostitutes, the refugees and the homeless.Applause
erupted in St. Peter’s Square even before Pope Francis finished pronouncing the
rite of canonisation, evidence of the admiration Mother Teresa enjoyed from
Christians and non-Christians alike during her life and after her death in
1997.At the Mother House of the Missionaries of Charity group that she founded
in Kolkata, hundreds of people watching the Mass on TV clapped with joy when
Pope Francis declared her a saint. They gathered around her tomb, which was
decorated with flowers, a single candle and a photo of the tiny wrinkled saint.“I
am so proud to be from Kolkata,” said Sanjay Sarkar, a high school student on
hand for the celebration. “Mother Teresa belonged to Kolkata, and she has been
declared a saint.”
For Pope
Francis, Mother Teresa put into action his ideal of the church as a merciful
“field hospital” for the poorest of the poor, those suffering both material and
spiritual poverty. He admitted even he would find it hard to call her “St.
Teresa” since her tenderness was so maternal.In his homily, Pope Francis
praised her as the merciful saint who defended the lives of the unborn, sick
and abandoned, recalling her strong anti-abortion stance which often put her at
odds with progressives around the world.“She bowed down before those who were
spent, left to die on the side of the road, seeing in them their god-given
dignity,” he said. “She made her voice heard before the powers of the world, so
that they might recognise their guilt for the crimes of poverty they themselves
created.”As if to emphasise the point, which Pope Francis himself has made
repeatedly, he repeated: “The crimes of poverty they themselves created.”“Her
heart, she gave it to the world,” said Charlotte Samba, a 52-year-old mother of
three who travelled with a church group from Gabon for the Mass. “Mercy,
forgiveness, good works: It is the heart of a mother for the poor.”
While big,
the crowd wasn’t even half of the 300,000 who turned out for Mother Teresa’s
2003 beatification, thanks in part to security fears in the wake of Islamic
extremist attacks in Europe. Those fears prompted a huge, 3,000-strong law
enforcement presence to secure the area around the Vatican and close the
airspace above.While Pope Francis is clearly keen to hold Mother Teresa up as a
model for her joyful dedication to society’s outcasts, he was also recognising
holiness in a nun who lived most of her adult life in spiritual agony sensing
that god had abandoned her.According to correspondence that came to light after
she died in 1997, Mother Teresa experienced what the church calls a “dark night
of the soul” a period of spiritual doubt, despair and loneliness that many of
the great mystics experienced. In Mother Teresa’s case, it lasted for nearly 50
years an almost unheard of trial.
For the
Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk, the Canadian priest who spearheaded Mother Teresa’s
saint-making campaign, the revelations were further confirmation of Mother
Teresa’s heroic saintliness. He said that by canonising her, Pope Francis is
recognising that Mother Teresa not only shared the material poverty of the poor
but the spiritual poverty of those who feel “unloved, unwanted, uncared for”.“What
she described as the greatest poverty in the world today (of feeling unloved)
she herself was living in relationship with Jesus,” he said in an interview on
the eve of the canonisation.Pope Francis has never publicly mentioned this
“darkness,” but he has in many ways modelled his papacy on Mother Teresa’s
simple lifestyle and selfless service to the poor- He eschewed the Apostolic
Palace for a hotel room, made welcoming migrants and the poor a hallmark and
has fiercely denounced today’s “throwaway” culture that discards the unborn,
the sick and the elderly with ease.In keeping with her spirit, he was treating
1,500 homeless people bussed into Rome for the Mass to a pizza lunch in the
Vatican auditorium afterward.
Born Agnes
Gonxhe Bojaxhiu on August 26, 1910, Mother Teresa came to India in 1929 as a
sister of the Loreto order. In 1946, she received what she described as a “call
within a call” to found a new order dedicated to caring for the most unloved
and unwanted, the “poorest of the poor.”In 1950 she founded the Missionaries of
Charity, which went onto become a global order of nuns priests, brothers and
lay co-workers.She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.She died in 1997
and was put on a fast-track for sainthood soon thereafter.
Prof. John Kurakar
No comments:
Post a Comment