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08-26-2007, 09:23 PM #1
Mother Teresa was an unbeleiver? Wow . . .
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...=mostpop_story
Letters Reveal Mother Teresa's Secret
Book Of Iconic Nun's Letters Shows She Was Tormented By Her Doubts In Her Faith
LONDON, Aug. 23, 2007
(CBS) In life, Mother Teresa was an icon — for believers — of God's work on Earth. Her ministry to the poor of Calcutta was a world-renowned symbol of religious compassion. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
In a rare interview in 1986, Mother Teresa told CBS News she had a calling, based on unquestioned faith.
"They are all children of God, loved and created by the same heart of God," she said.
But now, it has emerged that Mother Teresa was so doubtful of her own faith that she feared being a hypocrite, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips.
In a new book that compiles letters she wrote to friends, superiors and confessors, her doubts are obvious.
Shortly after beginning work in Calcutta's slums, the spirit left Mother Teresa.
"Where is my faith?" she wrote. "Even deep down… there is nothing but emptiness and darkness... If there be God — please forgive me."
Eight years later, she was still looking to reclaim her lost faith.
"Such deep longing for God… Repulsed, empty, no faith, no love, no zeal," she said.
As her fame increased, her faith refused to return. Her smile, she said, was a mask.
"What do I labor for?" she asked in one letter. "If there be no God, there can be no soul. If there be no soul then, Jesus, You also are not true."
"These are letters that were kept in the archbishop's house," the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk told Phillips.
The letters were gathered by Rev. Kolodiejchuk, the priest who's making the case to the Vatican for Mother Teresa's proposed sainthood. He said her obvious spiritual torment actually helps her case.
"Now we have this new understanding, this new window into her interior life, and for me this seems to be the most heroic," said Rev. Kolodiejchuk.
According to her letters, Mother Teresa died with her doubts. She had even stopped praying, she once said.
The church decided to keep her letters, even though one of her dying wishes was that they be destroyed. Perhaps now we know why.
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08-26-2007, 10:36 PM #2
It would be hard to believe in a God if you had to see the human misery and suffering she saw on a daily basis.
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08-27-2007, 12:22 AM #3
What a true testiment of the greatness of that woman. Although her faith called her to do that kind of work, after losing it, she continued to do it. That's amazing.
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I guess the old saying it true: You do get wiser with age
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09-04-2007, 02:06 AM #5Not Here
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she was also an alcoholic...
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09-04-2007, 03:04 PM #6
It didn't stop her from spouting the church's bulls**t policies on birth control to the world's poorest people. What a great idea, telling the wretchedly poor to have as many babies as possible...
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09-04-2007, 03:14 PM #7
faith is an inperfect thing, it can increase as well as decrease.i take my hat off to her for staying firm to her beliefs even though she had doubts, even lapses of faith.
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