I belive that we’re getting off topic here. The title of the thread is Mother Teresa and Holy Communion.
First, to readdress her statement, there are times when great saints will make statements that the Church considers colloquil statements. These are statements that are spontaneous and usually arise in conversation (colloquy). There are other times when saints make formal statements. These are statements that they make with intention of being observed, believed or put into practice.
When Mother spoke about Jesus thirst for souls she was making a formal statement. How do we know this? Because it is repeated formally in her constitution to the Society that she founded; because she left a religious order to found a Society to bring the souls of the poor to Christ; because she discussed these things at great length with her superiors, spiritual directors and confessors and we have the documents to prove it. The reference to communion in the hand is not included in her documents, at least none of the ones that have been open for public reading.
Second, Mother does speak a great deal about the Eucharist in her writings and in her talkss to her Society. But her talks on the Eucharist are always about communion with the Lover, Jesus Christ. In her talks about communion she also speaks a great deal about finding the poor in the Eucharist. She focuses the Eucharist toward the poor.
She wrote “We will try to spread through the slums the love and the true devotion to the Blessed Sacrament in thanksgiving for our Society.” This was in a letter that she wrote the the Archbishop of Calcutta regarding the Eucharist and the mission of her Society. The love for the Eucharist was to be shared with the poor. The sharing was an act of thanksgiving.
When she was very sick and near death she told one of her sisters, “Jesus is asking a bit too much.” The next day she said to the same sister, “I want Jesus”. The chaplain was summoned to celebrate mass for the sisters and Mother was able to receive a few drops of the Precious Blood through a tracheal tube. This was in 1996. The year before she died.
She shared with her sisters that she wanted believers and non believers to see that her strength to hang on, despite everything that the Lord was asking for came from the Eucharist.
In her mind, suffering is what Christ takes from humanity as a gift to him and the strength to accept suffering is what Christ gives to humanity through the Eucharist as a gift to man.
Her theology of the Eucharist is a formal statement. It was her intention that it be recorded for posterity and taught to others.
We are focussing on one of her less significant statements and missing her Eucharistic theology.
In fact, Mother always received on the tongue, but did not always kneel to receive. She taught her Society to be flexible. There are pictures of her receiving communion, even from our Holy Father John Paul II, standing.
Maybe we need to focus more on what she teaches about the Eucharist itself, rather than the hand or tongue. What she has to say about the Eucharist is formal teaching. The other was a spontaneous response from the gut, but not a major concern through her life. What she believed and taught about the Eucharist is true reverence.
Finally, remember that Mother was a Franciscan. She subscribed to Francis’ teaching that no matter how sinful the priest or circumstances, it was only through the priest that they could perceive any visible sign of Christ in the world. Notice how their focus is on Christ’s visible presence. The rest is important, but not so important as to forget the presence of Christ and his connection to suffering and poverty.
Sometimes we place too much importance on the question of hand or tongue and forget that the Christ in the Eucharist is suffering in the world around us. We may be receiving communion with great reverence on our tongue while kneeling and not revering Christ for we do not see the souls of the poor in the host. Mother Teresa did. She also saw thirst of Christ for the poor in the host. That vision is the greatest act of reverence when receiving the Eucharist.
Fraternally,
JR
