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Sailor_Kenshin
Guest
To me, this revelation makes Mother Theresa seem at once more human and more heroic. I thought of her often and asked her for help when I was going through the RCIA.
Apparently the Catholic Church!So much for her letters being private. Who decided to do this?
Examining her private papers is a mandatory part of the canonization investigatory process.So much for her letters being private. Who decided to do this?
She was probably suffering a burnout , but she didn’t quit!They reveal a crisis of faith in her life that lasted fourty years, to the end of her life. (The first link may require a login; but a trial is free. I can cut and paste if you have difficulty viewing):
startribune.com/562/story/1395491.html
telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/08/24/wteresa124.xml
zerinus
I wasn’t questioning her virtue or sanctity. I thought it was an interesting story.She was probably suffering a burnout , but she didn’t quit!
She was ill and maybe wondered who was going to carry on, but she didn’t quit!
She saw 10 + babies die each and every day, but she didn’t quit!
She appealed and struggled with many governments, turned down and told not to prostelize her faith, but she DIDN’T quit, till her body could not go on anymore and then she said “I LOVE JESUS.”
Could you do this?
Could anyone other than a Saint do this?
Watch her movie DVD of here work and it will leave you speachless.
Better yet go to Porta Prince in the Dominican Republic and see some of her work that she did start. The truth will come out and the merciful shall see justice.
Dessert
Thanks, didn’t know that.Examining her private papers is a mandatory part of the canonization investigatory process.
That really says it all. Thank you, exiled. Faith is not about what we feel, but about what we do. The fact that she had the faith to go on giving when she got nothing in return is what makes her a saint. Remember everyone, that what makes a saint is “a life of heroic virtue”, not warm fuzzies.How many of us, in human relationships and in our relationship with God, put much emphasis on some “burning in our bosom”, as though it is the be-all-end-all in faith. And then, when we determine that we are not “being fed”, abandon Our Lord.
She lived by faith. That is, believed what she could not see or feel. She simply lived, “Jesus, I trust in you.”
“Crisis of faith” is, in my mind, a misnomer. “Crisis of feeling” might work, but I think her faith was far from in “crisis”.
They don’t reveal a “Crisis in Faith” the way the media is trying to present this. MANY Saints have written of similar experiences…it’s called the “the dark night of the soul” St. John of the Cross, Teresa of Avila, Padre Pio and many others experienced this same thing where their prayer life becomes dry and they feel as if God has abandoned them and yet still continue…in true faith…to do God’s will.They reveal a crisis of faith in her life that lasted fourty years, to the end of her life. (The first link may require a login; but a trial is free. I can cut and paste if you have difficulty viewing):