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THE SAINTS: STORIES, IMAGES, MEDITATIONS

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    The_Bood
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    00 20/07/2010 19:44
    Thanks for sharing that beautiful article PapaBear. I've always been curious about Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha. [SM=g27811]



    "To believe in the brotherhood of man without the Fatherhood of God would make men a race of bastards." -Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen
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    maryjos
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    00 21/07/2010 22:17


    LILY OF THE MOHAWKS

    Here is a prayer card of Blessed Kateri. EWTN has a lovely little film about her; it's often used between the main programmes.

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    maryjos
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    00 03/08/2010 23:52
    NOVENA TO SAINT CLARE
    Please join us in praying the nine day Novena to Our Holy Mother Saint Clare.

    Novena Prayer to Saint Clare

    Faithful Saint Clare, daughter of
    the Church, friend and confidante
    of Popes, intercede for holy Church.
    Look graciously from heaven on our holy father Pope Benedict.
    Enlighten us to remove from our souls all that hinders the progress
    of the Church on earth.
    Grant that we may share your great love for the Church of God and
    spread His kingdom on earth by a holy life.
    You who worked miracles in the
    presence of the Popes on earth,
    obtain for us the graces we need,
    now that you stand in the presence
    of the most high God in heaven.
    Amen.

    Peace and good,

    The Spokane Poor Clare Sisters


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    PapaBear84
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    00 06/08/2010 06:44
    Sta Maria Magiore ...
    With flower-petal 'snow,' Cardinal Law leads Mass at St. Mary Major


    White flower pedals fall around Cardinal Bernard F. Law as he celebrates Mass at the Basilica of St. Mary Major in Rome Aug. 5 to mark the feast of the church's dedication. (CNS/Paul Haring)

    By Cindy Wooden
    Catholic News Service

    ROME (CNS) -- Romans and pilgrims, including hundreds of German altar servers in Rome for a pilgrimage, packed the Basilica of St. Mary Major to mark the feast of the church's dedication and to watch "snow" fall from the ceiling.

    The Mass was celebrated as normal Aug. 5 by U.S. Cardinal Bernard F. Law, archpriest of the basilica, even though three U.S.-based groups who represent victims of clerical sex abuse had asked the cardinal to step aside and called on Pope Benedict XVI to remove him from office.

    The groups made their appeals in a public statement Aug. 4.

    Cardinal Law resigned as archbishop of Boston in 2002 amid criticism of his handling of clergy sex abuse cases; Pope John Paul II named him archpriest of St. Mary Major in 2004.

    During the singing of the "Gloria" at the beginning of the Mass, two basilica employees hiding in the space between the coffered ceiling and the roof moved one of the ceiling panels and released thousands of white flower petals on worshippers.

    The feast of the basilica's dedication is also the feast of Our Lady of the Snows, commemorating the tradition that says Mary indicated where she wanted the basilica built using the miracle of an August snow in Rome.

    No protesters were seen at the Mass or outside the basilica, and during the liturgy the cardinal made no mention of the U.S. groups' appeal.
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    benefan
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    00 10/08/2010 06:22

    Australia prepares for Blessed Mary MacKillop's canonization in October

    Rome, Italy, Aug 9, 2010 / 02:09 pm (CNA).- Great excitement is emanating from Australia as the date for the canonization of Blessed Mary MacKillop approaches. She will be officially welcomed into the ranks of the saints by Pope Benedict XVI in a little over two months.

    Bl. Mary MacKillop, the foundress of the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart, will become Australia's first saint when she is canonized in Rome along with five others on Oct. 17. Included among the other five is Blessed Andre Bessette of Montreal.

    The Archdiocese of Sydney has acclaimed Blessed MacKillop's canonization as "a milestone in our nation's history" and "an uplifting and celebratory occasion," promoting her influence and legacy on the entire population of the island continent.

    "Mary epitomizes the strength of our forebears which made Australia the nation it is today," according to the archdiocese.

    Catholics in Sydney will be celebrating a feast day Mass late in the afternoon at St. Mary's Cathedral in the heart of the city before the canonization ceremony is televised there. In traditional Aussie fashion, a "sausage sizzle" will accompany the viewing.

    AAP reported that further south, Archbishop of Melbourne Denis J. Hart announced over the weekend that a morning Eucharistic Celebration will take place at St. Patrick's Cathedral and will be followed by a "colorful procession" beginning at Blessed MacKillop's first home.

    The Royal Exhibition Building in Carlton Gardens, will be the venue for music and entertainment, a prayer service, followed by the live feed of the ceremony from Rome.

    The canonization ceremony, which will celebrated in Rome in the morning, is to be broadcast after 7 p.m. Australian time. The ceremony will consist of a brief biography read about each of the candidates for sainthood, the presentation of readings or prayers, and then Pope Benedict XVI will proceed with the Rite of Canonization.

    The canonization is also drawing interest from outside the Church. For example, social network www.xt3.com launched an initiative at the end of July called the "Looking for Mary" video competition. From Aug. 18 to Sept. 20, participants will be able to submit a two to three minute video on how they see Blessed MacKillop in the world. A $5,000 cash prize will go to the winner.

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    benefan
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    00 18/08/2010 21:53

    MOTHER TERESA WASN'T AFRAID TO DIE

    World Commemorates Centenary of Saint

    By Renzo Allegri

    ROME, AUG. 18, 2010 (Zenit.org).- In many parts of the world events are under way to recall the centenary of Mother Teresa's birth on Aug. 26, 1910.

    Great ceremonies are taking place in Calcutta, India, where Mother lived for the greater part of her earthly existence and where she is buried. The little initiatives are very numerous in Albania, where she was born, but everywhere, at the popular level, in parishes and in volunteer workers associations, above all organized by young people to remember this extraordinary figure.

    Together with Padre Pio and John Paul II, Mother Teresa was one of the persons who profoundly marked the history of Christianity of our time: Padre Pio, with the flame of his lofty mystical experience; John Paul II with the impetuous wind of action and continuous apostolic journeys; Mother Teresa with love, naked and absolute, towards the least. Their activities, their teachings, their example touched believers and non-believers, and continue to be vivid.

    All those who knew Mother Teresa are in possession of extraordinary memories, especially the persons who lived close to her. But also journalists who approached her for work.

    In fact, we journalists, thanks to our profession, find ourselves meeting the most disparate personalities. For forty years I was the special envoy of important weeklies and have known and interviewed an endless crowd of famous persons: artists, politicians, scientists, sports champions, stars of the entertainment world, protagonists of news events, murderers and also saints.

    Among the saints were Padre Pio, Mother Teresa, John XXIII, but also others whose process of beatification is underway, such as John Paul II, Mother Speranza, Giorgio La Pira, Marcello Candia, Friar Cecilio Cortinovis and others. I have written articles and also books on all of them.

    I have special memories of them all, because these persons have an irresistible charism, and once known it is impossible to forget them. They represent life in its essential and eternal meaning, and transmit hopes that go beyond the barriers of time. Above all, the most vivid memory is that linked to Mother Teresa.

    By a series of strange coincidences, I had several meetings, long conversations, trips by car with her. I can say that I have profound affection for her, and she showed me such benevolence, which I judged to be friendship, and my superficial vanity drove me at times to take advantage of, asking also for favors which in part I myself already judged to be "impossible." Yet, in her infinite kindness, Mother always found the way to satisfy me.

    Incredible. I am certain that all those who approached Mother Teresa witnessed her loving willingness. She certainly was a great saint but also a woman with a most exquisite human sensibility, of a goodness of spirit so great as to feel sad if she did not succeed in satisfying anyone who asked her for something.

    I have written so many articles on Mother Teresa, and also some books. Now, for the centenary of her birth, I have gathered in a volume, published [in Italian] by Ancora Publishing House, some memories and above all "the words" that in different meetings Mother gave me.

    She did not like to speak much. But when she did, she was extremely fascinating with her essential and incisive way of expressing her thoughts. She spoke preferably through images. Her reasoning was a sequence of facts that bore an inevitable conclusion.

    My book is titled "Madre Teresa Mi Ha Detto" [Mother Teresa Has Told Me]. A pretentious title. Perhaps only someone who has lived a long time near the Sister of Calcutta could use such a title for a book, and it's not my case. I knew Mother Teresa; I interviewed her several times, but nothing more. However, as I said, precisely and only because of her benevolence, I felt very close to her and that title, "Mother Teresa Has Told Me," reflects an extraordinary reality.

    In 1965, while reading a book of Pier Paolo Pasolini, I found a few lines dedicated to Mother Teresa which the writer found during one of his trips to India. I began to gather information and every new fact made my curiosity increase. I decided that I had to meet and interview that sister. I succeeded after waiting for fifteen years. But it was not an interview. It was the beginning of a series of meetings.

    The aspects that struck me immediately in her were a very great human sensitivity and boundless kindness. I was just another journalist, in practice a nuisance that made her waste her time. But even when I went on to ask perhaps useless questions and at times not very pertinent ones, I never saw on her face the slightest sign of annoyance.

    When she was in Rome, and I asked to see her, she gave me appointments in the Celio convent, at the motherhouse of the Missionaries of Charity, the congregation she founded. She said: "I expect you tomorrow at 5:30." At that time the Mass in the convent was reserved for the sisters, and Mother wanted us to be united in prayer before speaking with me.

    I arrived on time and found, at the door of the convent, a sister who was waiting for me and accompanied me to the chapel. I followed the Mass next to Mother, who was kneeling on the floor in the back of the chapel. For me, instead, she had a comfortable kneeler prepared and also a chair.

    From my place, I was able to observe all the sisters and also Mother, who did nothing special. She was huddled up in a ball, and was concentrated in prayer as if she didn't exist. But in fact from that position of even physical annulment, she transmitted a powerful energy and infinite considerations that long conversations would not have been able to suggest.

    After the Mass, the sister who received me accompanied me to a small room of the convent, where infallibly, shortly after, Mother arrived with a tray for breakfast.

    Mother Teresa served me breakfast. She did not allow one of the sisters to do so, not even the one who had received me at the door of the convent. She wanted to do it herself. The first time I was confused and tried to stop her, saying that I was not hungry, that I never ate in the morning. But she intuited my embarrassment and there was no way of stopping her.

    She served me with moving maternal love: coffee, milk, marmalade, slices of toast. She was concerned that I eat. And her attentions spoke more than the interviews. Then, at the end of breakfast, she gave me her time. I took my notes with the questions, turned on the recorder and she answered.

    Listening again to these conversations, I realize that my questions at times were stupid, useless, superficial, but she always answered calmly, leading the conversation to important topics or evidencing, of certain events, the aspect in which the teaching was concentrated.

    As I said, when I acquired a certain confidence, I also asked her for favors not very pertinent to her religious state.

    One day I asked her if she would accept to be the godmother in a baptism. At Christmas of 1985, Al Bano, the famous singer from Puglia, became a father for the third time: a girl, Cristel. We were good friends since the start of his career. I was also a witness at his marriage to Romina Power and he held one of my children at baptism. A friendship that, with time, became almost a kinship.

    In May of 1986, Cristel was already five months old and was not yet baptized. I knew that Al Bano had a solid and concrete religious faith. I asked him, therefore, why he had not yet baptized his daughter. He told me that he continued to postpone the ceremony of baptism because he didn't want the religious rite to be transformed in to a hubbub, with photographers and journalists, as happened for his marriage. He was looking for an occasion for a private religious ceremony, and he asked me to help him organize it, perhaps in Rome. I did so gladly.

    I spoke with Slovak Bishop Pavel Hnilica, an extraordinary person, also a saint, friend of Mother Teresa, and it was he who introduced me to the sister. I asked the prelate if he could baptize my friend's daughter. And I also asked him if it would be possible to have Mother Teresa as the godmother.

    "I don't think it's appropriate," said the bishop, "but I advise you to ask her directly; she is an unpredictable woman." Mother was in Rome. I whipped up my courage and asked her. She looked at me seriously, then she answered: "As a religious, I cannot take on this juridical responsibility. But I can be a spiritual godmother." And so it happened.

    The baptism was celebrated in the bishop's private chapel. The baby was given the names Cristel, Maria Chiara and Teresa. Only one photographer was present and the photographs were then circulated freely throughout the world, published everywhere, also in Japan.

    Two years later, in August of 1988, some friends told me a very moving story. A young couple of a region near the Bracciano Lake had quintuplets. As often happens in these cases, the little ones were kept in incubators for some time. They were saved by the very great love of the parents and the care of the doctors.

    When they finally left the hospital, thought was given to their baptism. "There must be a great celebration," said friends of the couple. One of them asked me to organize something to attract the attention of the newspapers. I thought of Mother Teresa. I was certain that, once she knew the story, she would accept. And it was like that. The ceremony was held in the little old church of Santa Maria di Galeria.

    Each one of the quintuplets had a godfather, as the Church establishes, but all had Mother Teresa of Calcutta as their "spiritual godmother." Mother, though full of commitments, dedicated half a day to that baptism. She asked to be accompanied Bracciano Lake and participated in the whole ceremony. The newspapers of course wrote about it, published photographs, and there was a great celebration.

    When I think of Mother Teresa, the image that comes to mind immediately is seeing her at prayer. The first time I traveled by car with her, I had the honor of sitting next to her. We had to go from Casilina, on the outskirts of Rome, where there is a house of the Missionaries of Charity, to the Vatican, where Mother was to be received by the Pope. We spoke at length that morning and we were late. We left by car. Bishop Hnilica's brother was driving. The bishop sat next to his brother, and I next to Mother Teresa.

    The car left at great speed because we were in a hurry; we were late. The Pope could absolutely not be kept waiting. Mother Teresa looked out of the window. Her face was calm. After a few minutes, Mother asked us to pray with her. We made the sign of the cross and from the pocket of her sari she took out a rosary. She prayed slowly, with a soft voice, reciting the "Our Father" and the "Hail Mary" in Latin. We prayed with her.

    The car swerved nervously in the chaotic and intense traffic. At times it stopped brusquely, swerved jerkily, took off again imperiously, went around curves recklessly, was grazed by other cars, impatient and aggressive, which threatened us with piercing honkings of the horn. I grabbed hold of the handle and looked with concern at the driver, very good but reckless. Mother Teresa, instead, was absorbed in prayer and didn't remember a thing.

    Crouched on the seat, she was in conversation with God. Her eyes were half-closed. Her wrinkled face, bent over her chest, was transfigured. It seems almost as if it emanated light.

    The words of the prayer came from her lips precisely, clearly, slowly, almost as if she paused to savor the meaning of each one. They did not have the cadence of a continuously repeated formula, but the freshness of dialogue, of a lively, passionate conversation. It seemed that Mother was really speaking with an invisible presence.

    One day I asked her spontaneously: "Are you afraid of dying?"

    I had been in Rome for some days. I met her a couple of times and had gone to greet her because I was returning to Milan. She looked at me almost as wishing to understand the reason for my question. I felt I had done wrong in speaking of death and tried to correct my mistake. "I see you rested," I said. "Yesterday, instead, you seemed very tired."

    "I slept well last night," she answered.

    "In recent years you have undergone some rather delicate surgical interventions, such as the one on the heart; you must take care of yourself, travel less."

    "Everyone says this to me, but I must think of the work that Jesus has entrusted to me. When I can no longer serve, he will stop me."

    And, changing the angle, she asked: "Where do you live?"

    "In Milan," I answered.

    "When are you going home?"

    "I hope this very evening. I would like to catch the last flight so that tomorrow, which is Saturday, I can be with the family."

    "Ah, I see that you are happy to go home, to your family," she said smiling.

    "I have been away for almost a week," I answered to justify my enthusiasm.

    "Good, good," she added. "It's right that you are happy. You are going to see your wife, your children your dear ones, your home. It's right that it be so."

    She remained again for some seconds in silence; then, going back to the question that I asked her, she continued: "I would be as happy as you if I could say that I will die this evening. Dying I too would go home. I would go to paradise.

    "I would go to meet Jesus. I have consecrated my life to Jesus. Becoming a sister, I became the spouse of Jesus. See, I have a ring on my finger like married women. And I am married to Jesus. All that I do here, on this earth, I do it out of love for him.

    "Therefore, by dying I return home to my spouse. Moreover, up there, in paradise, I will also find all my loved ones. Thousands of persons have died in my arms. It is now more than forty years that I have dedicated my life to the sick and the dying.

    "I and my sisters have picked up from the streets, above all in India, thousands and thousands of persons at the end of life. We have taken them to our houses and helped them to die peacefully. Many of those persons expired in my arms, while I smiled at them and patted their trembling faces. Well, when I die, I am going to meet all these persons. It is there that they await me.

    "We loved one another well in those difficult moments. We continued to love one another in memory. Who knows what celebration they will make for me when they see me.

    "How can I be afraid of death? I desire it; I await it because it allows me finally to return home."

    In general, in the interviews and also in the conversations, Mother Teresa was concise, gave brief and rapid answers. On that occasion, to answer my strange question, she made a genuine speech. And while she said those things, her eyes beamed with amazing serenity and happiness.

    * * *

    Renzo Allegri is an Italian journalist and author who has published more than 40 books, including the following books in English: "John Paul II: A Life of Grace" (2005), "Fatima, the Story Behind the Miracles" (2002), "Padre Pio: A Man of Hope" (2000), and "Teresa of the Poor: The Story of Her Life" (1999).

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    benefan
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    00 20/08/2010 05:17

    European Catholics prepare host of celebrations for Mother Teresa's 100th birthday

    Rome, Italy, Aug 19, 2010 / 04:42 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The founder of the Missionaries of Charity will be remembered in celebrations all over Europe, and all over the world, on her birthday and feast day coming up in the next three weeks. At least a dozen cardinals will be presiding over Masses across Europe in her memory.

    Blessed Mother Teresa was born Gonxhe Bojaxhiu on Aug. 26, 1910 in the city of Skopje, in what is now the Republic of Macedonia. On that same day this year, she will be remembered for what would have been her 100th birthday.

    Motherteresa.org, the official site for the saintly sister, details the broad cross-section of principally European celebrations that began earlier this year and will continue until the final days of 2010. The majority of the memorials have been organized for Rome and former Eastern Bloc nations, but Masses, Novenas and art exhibitions and other initiatives are taking place all over the continent.

    Many celebrations will take place on the actual anniversary of her birth, Aug. 26. For example, on that day in Skopje, after flowers are laid at the memorial statue of Mother Teresa, the Macedonian Parliament will observe a ceremonial session and award the national "Mother Teresa" prize. That afternoon, Archbishop of Belgrade Stanislav Hočevar will preside over Mass at the city's Sacred Heart Cathedral.

    Eucharistic celebrations will be offered for Blessed Mother Teresa in a variety of other countries as well. Among the high-ranking prelates celebrating Masses in her honor on Aug. 26 will be Cardinal Angelo Comastri at the Church of St. Lawrence in Damascus in Rome and the Emeritus Archbishop of Munich, Cardinal Friedrich Wetter, who will preside over Mass at the Church of St. Margaret in Munich, Germany.

    These two Church leaders will be joined by 10 other cardinals celebrating Masses around her birthdate or for the Sept. 5 Feast of Blessed Mother Teresa, including the prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, Cardinal Ivan Dias, and Cardinal André Vingt Trois, who will preside over Mass at the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris.

    According to the Mother Teresa website, memorial initiatives will be staged from Switzerland to Bulgaria, Albania and the United Kingdom, with a special Christmas Concert being held in Rome on Dec. 19 to mark the final days of the 2010 centenary celebrations.


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    maryjos
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    00 22/08/2010 19:09
    OUR LADY QUEEN AND MOTHER


    In how many Masses today did we hear that it's the Feast of Our Lady Queen and Mother? I certainly didn't! It was just the 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C. A great, great pity!

    Mary, Queen of Heaven and Mother of Our Lord, keep our Holy Father in your tender care at this special time.


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    benefan
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    00 24/08/2010 06:39

    Mother Teresa left no future plans for her order, recalls Mother Mary Prema

    Vatican City, Aug 23, 2010 / 05:05 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Missionaries of Charity, the religious order founded by Blessed Mother Teresa, has no set plan for the future, revealed the current Mother Superior. In an interview released on Monday by Fides news agency, she said that Mother Teresa left them only with her constant advice: to become ever more holy.

    German-born Sister Mary Prema spoke with Fides as the 100th anniversary of Bl. Mother Teresa's birth, celebrated on Aug. 26, approaches.

    Mother Teresa's "only goal" of loving Jesus and transmitting that love to others is the legacy she left to the Missionaries of Charity, said Sr. Mary.

    Asked what major challenges the order under her direction expects in the future, she answered that the Missionaries of Charity don't make plans too far in advance. "We try to remain open to what God asks of us," she explained.

    "Only Jesus will tell me what is the next step. So, in the spirit of Mother, I'm not the one who controls things. God is the one who decides."

    Mother Teresa, she explained, "never gave us any indications of future plans besides the fact that we should always strive to become more holy! This was her constant advice."

    As Mother Superior she continues to follow the example of Mother Teresa as the head of the order, making informed decisions based on discussion and considering all the information available, she explained.

    In responding to the challenges offered by the world in her day, the founder had a way of listening to Jesus and to the world, recalled Sister Mary. "She was very generous towards God and towards those suffering beside her. In this, we want to imitate her."

    Remembering the strong witness of the founder, she said, "Through her life, her work, her charisma, she brought those around her to God. She did not preach, but she testified with her own life."

    People continue to approach Sister Mary today to recount their experiences of moments shared with Mother Teresa. Many, she said, Hindus included, were only in her presence for a short time, but "that one moment changed their lives forever."

    While they may not have converted, she said, "they began to see their lives and their work with different eyes and have become other people, living in a different way, based on love and mercy, within their own families."

    Asked when the blessed might be canonized, Sr. Mary said she didn't think that it was important. "Everyone knows that she is a saint - both Hindus and Christians here in Calcutta and in most places where we are present - this is beyond doubt. Everyone expects a miracle … but Mother Teresa was the same miracle for the world and humanity."


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    benefan
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    00 26/08/2010 20:10

    PONTIFF SAYS MOTHER TERESA "INVALUABLE" FOR WORLD

    Sends Message to Missionaries for Her 100th Birthday

    VATICAN CITY, AUG. 26, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Mother Teresa of Calcutta was an "invaluable gift" for the world during her lifetime, and she continues to be so through the ministry of the order she founded, says Benedict XVI.

    The Pope affirmed this in a message to the superior-general of the Missionaries of Charity, Sister Mary Prema. The message was made public today, the 100th anniversary of the birth of Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, the future Blessed Teresa.

    The Holy Father's message invites the Missionaries of Charity to continue to follow Blessed Teresa's example.

    He said: "Having responded with trust to the direct call of the Lord, Mother Teresa exemplified excellently the words of St. John: 'Beloved, if God so loved us, we also must love one another. ... f we love one another, God remains in us and his love is brought to perfection in us.'"

    "May this love continue to inspire you, Missionaries of Charity, to give yourselves generously to Jesus, to all those you see and serve, that is, to the poor, the marginalized, the abandoned. I encourage you to draw constantly from the spirituality and the example of Mother Teresa and, following in her footsteps, to accept Christ's invitation: 'Come and be my light.'"

    The Pontiff expressed his trust that the year of the centenary "will be for the Church and for the world an occasion of fervent gratitude to God for the invaluable gift that Mother Teresa was in the course of her life and that she continues to be through the loving and tireless work that you, her spiritual daughters, carry out."

    At home

    According to AsiaNews, the message was read this morning by Archbishop Lucas Sirkar of Calcutta during a Mass presided over by Cardinal Telesphore Toppo, archbishop of Ranchi, India, in the Motherhouse of the Missionaries of Charity.

    Some 1,000 people attended the Mass, celebrated in the center where Mother Teresa's remains rest, UCAN agency reported.

    Before the start of the ceremony, a simple homage took place during which Sisters Nirmala Joshi and Mary Prema, Mother Teresa's first and second successors as superiors of the Missionaries of Charity, released a white dove and balloons.

    For his part, Cardinal Toppo lit a candle and put it next to the tomb. "In this centenary, we must listen to Mother's message that we have been created for greater things, to love and to be loved," he said.

    The Mass was presided over by the cardinal and concelebrated by Archbishop Sirkar, as well as retired Archbishop Henry D'Souza of Calcutta, Bishop Salvadore Lobo of Baruipur, and by the postulator of Mother Teresa's cause for canonization, Father Brian Kolodiejchuk.

    [Modificato da benefan 26/08/2010 20:11]
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    benefan
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    00 27/08/2010 03:36

    BECOMING MOTHER TERESA'S COLLABORATOR (PART 1)

    Interview With Close Ally of the Calcutta Nun

    By Irene Lagan

    WASHINGTON, D.C., AUG. 26, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Today marks the 100th birthday of Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, better known as Mother Teresa of Calcutta. Thirteen years after her death, Mother Teresa’s influence and voice -- like her contemporary Pope John Paul II -- continue to resound throughout the globe.

    Her life spanned a remarkable period of history. Born Aug. 26, 1910, in Skopje, Albania, Gonxha’s beginnings were obscure, likened in a recent special issue of Time Magazine, to Jesus’ inauspicious beginnings in Nazareth.

    By the time she died on Sept. 5, 1997, modernity’s greatest triumphs were dashed by wars, genocides, the rise and fall of totalitarian regimes, modernism and finally, the rise of the culture of death.

    To mark the anniversary of the nun's birth, ZENIT spoke with one of Mother Teresa's close collaborators and allies, Jim Twoey. Twoey is a former White House correspondent and was recently the president of St. Vincent's, a small Catholic college in Pennsylvania. He and his wife, Mary, have recently relocated back to the Washington D.C. area.

    Part 2 of this interview will be published Friday.

    ZENIT: How did you first come to know Mother Teresa?

    Twoey: I was working for U.S. Senator Mark Hatfield, who was a real advocate of strong refugee policy for the country. He sent me overseas to do some fieldwork in Thailand at the Cambodia border. At the time, I was a lukewarm Catholic and saw this figure of Mother Teresa who seemed to be living the Gospel, so I wanted to meet her. Senator Hatfield had a friendship with her, so I thought I’d try meet her in Calcutta with a letter of introduction on my way back from Thailand.

    The only problem was that I did not want to be around the poor, which is impossible in Calcutta. But I talked myself into it by deciding I’d go to Calcutta for one day, meet Mother, then go back to the U.S. through Hawaii and spend five days there. So that’s what I planned.

    On Aug. 20, 1985, I walked into the motherhouse for their 5:30 A.M. Mass, and met Mother afterward. She was a delightful, tiny little woman with big, soft hands and incredible focus. It was the week she turned 75 years old, yet she bounded out to meet me with the energy and enthusiasm of a school girl.

    After I met Mother, she asked, “Have you been to my home for the dying?” I said that I hadn’t, so she sent me over there to see Sister Luke. I thought I was going to get a tour, but Sister Luke thought I was there to volunteer. So when I introduced myself, Sr. Luke told me to “go clean that fellow in bed 46 who has scabies” and handed me the medicine and the cotton. I was too proud to admit to her that I did not want to touch the poor, and only wanted a tour of the house. So, I found myself cleaning the dying man, then feeding some other dying men.

    While I was very happy to get out of Calcutta the next day, I was uncomfortable in Hawaii because the pineapples were healthier than the people I’d just left. And, the hotel’s lawn was being watered while I had just left these people that were fighting to find potable water. So, I was really plunged into this confusion that challenged my understanding of the world and my responsibilities to my brothers and sisters in places like Calcutta.

    One of the immediate changes was that I began to work with the poor in the U.S. every Saturday. I did this for years. I was also among the first group of volunteers to work in the AIDS home and ultimately lived in that house. In fact, in the 1980s it was hard to find people to work with those suffering from AIDS, and it was a real joy to accompany so many men and women as they died. It was a real grace.

    ZENIT: How did your relationship with Mother Teresa develop?

    Twoey: I can only say it was the mercy of God that allowed me to have the relationship with her that I had. It was also just providence of God that I would be on the scene when they needed a lawyer to help with the opening of AIDS homes, with immigration issues and with protecting Mother’s name from those who wanted to fundraise with it. I was available and free; I was single; Mother trusted me, and so off that went.

    Then, I was two years full time with the Missionaries from 1989-90. During that time, I had the opportunity to travel some with Mother, to live in her AIDS home, and to live with her priests in Tijuana, Mexico, where Mother was opening four homes. It was a privilege to watch her and to observe her sanctity and loveliness.

    ZENIT: What was it like for you to be in Mother Teresa’s presence?

    Twoey: Being in Mother Teresa’s presence was a very stark judgment that she was everything that I was not. She was focused; she was prayerful; her life had such clear purpose. Even though I was a successful lawyer and legislative director of the chairman of the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee, and had more money and influence than I’d ever had in my life, it was empty. Meeting Mother made me realize that. So, at first I was reintroduced to Catholic practice, which I had lost interest in. I rediscovered praying, adoration, and most of all a beautiful rediscovery of the riches of the Eucharist.

    Really if you look at the Missionaries of Charity, their entire life is centered around the Eucharist. They receive the broken body of Christ in the Eucharist and then go and touch the broken body of Christ in the poor. Their entire prayer life is an effort to maintain that connection and consciousness.

    ZENIT: Now it seems that the Missionaries in the U.S. are almost overrun with young people wanting to volunteer. What about Mother Teresa’s message is drawing so many people even today?

    Twoey: What’s happened over time is that many young people are discovering that they’ve been sold a bill of goods by the culture. And they are in search of something that is authentic and true. And many have come to find authentic and true experiences working alongside the sisters caring for the sick and suffering.

    One time I was driving Mother through one of the poorest areas of Washington D.C.. She was looking out the window and remarked, "It’s so hard to reach your poor here." I think she was recognizing that while the material poverty here is vastly different than that in India, the spiritual poverty is much worse. It’s the sense that so many people in America feel unloved, unwanted, unwelcome. It is hard to reach that.

    She often said in India we can give them a bowl of rice and they eat that day, and that addresses their hunger. But here, in America, the bread of friendship is harder for the poor to digest since they are so broken, so poor and so wounded. That is why that is the focus of so much of the Missionaries’ efforts in the U.S.. They are dealing with AIDS, and the homeless and unwed mothers, but they are really trying to rehabilitate individuals to help them see that they truly are children of God, and they are made to love and be loved. The Missionaries of Charity help them to restore their dignity by helping them know they are welcome in the world and needed in the world. I saw that over and over in the AIDS home and with the homeless: Each one would discover that he or she is a gift and not a burden.

    ZENIT: What lasting lessons do you continue to draw on from your experience?

    Twoey: With Mother it all began with prayer. So, for me, it first of all began with developing a prayer life. By the grace of God I need daily Mass to survive. I just try to imitate what Mother did. So, there is Mass, the rosary and adoration, along with spiritual reading. Once you have the prayer life, you try to open your eyes to see where the will of God is leading you and who you are engaged with.

    For the past 15 years, my life is engaged with my family. My wife, Mary, and I have been engaged in the lives of our children, who for me, are the poorest of the poor. And we’ve gone as a family on mission trips to work with the poor. We’ve gone to Ecuador, Tijuana, and Mexico, as well as worked in soup kitchens and shelters here in America. You certainly want to have an ongoing relationship with the poor, and a recognition of our responsibility to them on both the material and spiritual levels of poverty. So, I’ve tried to follow where the Lord has led. And, he’s taken me to the White House as well as to academia. Now we are back in D.C. and happy to be back with the sisters. My 17-year-old son plays the piano for the sisters’ choir practice. It’s nice to see a second generation involved with the sisters.

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    00 27/08/2010 03:40

    Cardinal Comastri recounts how Mother Teresa saved his priesthood

    Rome, Italy, Aug 26, 2010 / 05:46 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Archpriest of St. Peter's Basilica remembered at Mass on Thursday how a promise he made to Mother Teresa 40 years ago preserved his vocation. She taught him that without prayer, charity cannot exist.

    Cardinal Comastri presided over the Eucharistic celebration at Rome's San Lorenzo in Damaso Church, which had a very welcoming feel with the presence of more than 100 Missionaries of Charity sisters, over 20 concelebrating priests, local government leaders and a very diverse collection of faithful.

    Church-goers were pleasantly surprised by the presence of newly-arrived prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, Cardinal Marc Ouellet, who also concelebrated and read a message from the Pope at the beginning of Mass.

    In a homily which emphasized that love is the foundation of our existence, Cardinal Comastri remembered a personal encounter he had with the Missionaries of Charity's founder when he was just a young priest.

    His first contact with Mother Teresa came when he mailed her a letter just after he was ordained a priest. Her "unexpected" response was especially striking, he recalled, because it was written on "very poor paper, in a very poor envelope."

    At a later date, Cardinal Comastri sought her out when she was visiting Rome to thank her for the answer. When he found her, she asked him a question that left him "a little embarrassed."

    "How many hours do you pray a day?" she asked.

    Then, in 1969-70, he recalled, the Church was in a time of "dispute," so thinking that it was "near heroism, then-Father Comastri explained to her that he said daily Mass in addition to praying the Liturgy of the Hours and the Rosary.”

    To this, she responded flatly, "That's not enough.”

    "Love cannot be lived minimally," she said, and then asked him to promise to do half an hour of adoration every day.

    "I promised," said Cardinal Comastri, "and today I can say that this saved my priesthood."

    Trying to defend his case at the time, he told Mother Teresa that he thought she was going to ask him how much charity he did. She answered him, "And do you think if I didn't pray I would be able to love the poor? It's Jesus that puts love in my heart when I pray."

    She helped the poor, but it was "always Jesus' love," the saintly sister told him.

    Then, he said, Mother told him something that he would never forget: to read Scripture.

    Through Jesus' teachings, she said, we are reminded that "without God we're too poor to help the poor.” This, she explained, "is why so much assistance falls into the void. It doesn't change anything, it doesn't contribute anything because it doesn't bring love and it isn't born of prayer."

    Concluding, Cardinal Comastri said, "Through this little woman ... we are reminded that charity is the apostolate of the Church and that charity is only born if we pray."

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    ‘Do ordinary things with extraordinary love’

    The Things that Made Mother Teresa Tick

    BY JOHN BURGER
    National Catholic Register
    Posted 8/25/10 at 11:00 PM

    Father Brian Kolodiejchuk never expected to become a priest in Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity Fathers.

    Now he is superior of the congregation — as well as postulator of the cause of canonization of Mother Teresa.

    He first met her when his sister entered the Missionaries of Charity. Along the way, he had ample time and opportunity to get to know the “saint of the gutters.”

    In this third and last part of Register news editor John Burger’s interview with him, Father Kolodiejchuk discusses what he discovered.


    What led you to the Missionaries of Charity and how did you come to know Mother Teresa?

    I was born in Winnipeg in Canada. I was raised in the Ukrainian Catholic Church. My parents were first-generation (Canadians). Each of my parents had one parent born in Canada, the other born in Europe. I have one sister, who is an MC also. Right now she happens to be in Bridgeport (Connecticut), in charge of the house of prayer they have there.

    She joined the MCs first, in 1976. My parents and I went to Rome the next year to visit her. So that year, ’77, Mother Teresa was beginning the first group of contemplative brothers, and at the opening, Mother Teresa, who knew I was the brother of one of her sisters, said, “Oh, I would like to pin a cross on you,” because that was the ceremony, beginning with one priest and five Italian lay people. The MCs wear a cross on their shoulder.

    My first reaction was to say nothing. Only the next day, she was in the convent, and she was alone, so I just went up and asked her, and she invited me to come and join the brothers, which I did in the fall. I was there two years, and I still wanted to be a priest, so I went home to continue philosophy for two years.


    You had already been thinking of the priesthood.

    I was with the Ukrainian-rite Redemptorists, in the minor seminary and three years in Toronto in their pre-novitiate program.

    So then I came back and went back to the brothers. They had opened to having priest candidates, but after a couple years more, it still wasn’t my place. So then I left, and a few weeks later, Mother said Yes to having MC fathers, or the group of priests, so then we started in ’83, but as a secular institute the first year; then in ’84 we became MC fathers. I was ordained in ’85 in Newark, in the Ukrainian church there, in the Eastern rite. I have permission to serve and minister in the Latin rite, without giving up the rite, because they don’t allow you to change rites now, especially going from Eastern rite to Latin rite. Depending on the circumstances, you may serve in the Latin rite, but they don’t want you to change rites. I wouldn’t want to anyway.


    Do you still celebrate Divine Liturgy in the Eastern rite?

    Recently, not so much, but I do occasionally, and earlier, I did much more often, even with the seminarians, and they learned how to sing, in English, the Divine Liturgy from beginning to end. It was very nice, actually.

    So then I happened to be the superior of the formation house in Rome at the time, in ’97, when Mother died. And I was already working on my Ph.D., near finishing, so I had a certain academic background. Mother died Sept. 6, 1997, and in October, the archbishop of Calcutta went to the Congregation for Saints and asked, “What about beginning the cause?” Because the law is waiting for five years. They didn’t give an answer until the following year, Dec. 12, 1998. But they said, “In the meantime you can do some preliminary work and start to get things in order.”

    So, the archbishop appointed two sisters and myself as a little committee for gathering documentation and things so they wouldn’t be lost, especially people who could be witnesses, and if we had to wait for five years, as it turned out, we wouldn’t have had their testimony.

    I took the four-month course the congregation offers every year for people involved in causes, and during that course, we were told they were going to make an exception to the five-year rule. Then the question was: “Who’s going to be the postulator?” Initially, we were kind of wondering, well maybe other people, and then we went to the Jesuits — Father Molinari was the Jesuit postulator general, and Father [Peter] Gumpel — and they said, “No, we won’t take it. It actually should be one of you, because if you’re presenting a person and a charism, it’s like a Dominican being a postulator for a Jesuit, which of course would never happen.”

    So, they said, “We’ll help you,” and as a matter of fact, they were very generous in helping if I had a question.

    We had Msgr. Sarno in the Congregation for Saints, who’s an American, who was also very helpful.

    So, even though I was a greenhorn, we proceeded, and as it turned out without any major mistakes.


    You had some experiences getting to know Mother Teresa, working with her.

    Since 1977 until 1997, I had personal contact for 20 years, and, thankfully, I was always in a place where she would come quite often because she would be traveling two or three times a year through Rome, initially, then in New York she would come; later on, when we moved to Tijuana, she also came. So I had a chance: Being one of the first members, you had more contact [with her]; just being in a position of responsibility also.


    What were some of the things that surprised you about her?

    One of the impressive things was — before learning anything from the documentation afterwards —that she really was motherly, that personal attention and care. She was very observant. You couldn’t pull the wool over her eyes if you wanted to. Some people think saints are in the clouds, but normally saints are very down-to-earth, and Mother was very down-to-earth and very practical.

    The second thing was how very ordinary she was in the way she acted. Sometimes, for example, if you didn’t know what she looked like, and you went to the convent and saw a bunch of nuns, you might not pick her out in the beginning. But if you paid attention and watched closely, you would start picking up little things that were very ordinary but done specially. For example, how she would make a genuflection or, say, taking the holy water when entering the chapel.


    How was it?

    You can genuflect almost automatically. It can be more a prayer than really a prayer, a devotion, just because it’s routine. But those little simple things, she would do them attentively. I remember, along those lines, just in the last months she was in Rome, in May and July, one of the sisters remarked to me how edified she was — by that time Mother needed help getting dressed, and she was in the wheelchair — and yet, first thing in the morning, when they were helping her get dressed, she would put in the sari the little safety pins, and she was impressed just how attentively or devotedly she would put in those pins. How many hundreds or maybe thousands of times did she do that over 50 years? And even though she was old, sick, forgetful at times, and yet those things, completely routine in one sense, that she would do that with that devotion. In the MC prayer book, they have little prayers for when you’re putting on the habit, each part of the habit. They’re little things in themselves, but that’s what makes the difference between, say, a regular religious and a holy religious. You don’t have to do extraordinary things. Before, one of the criteria for holiness was extraordinary deeds, and Pope Benedict XV changed it. What did he do? And the answer was, roughly, if you do what you have to do when you have to do it — God’s will according to your state in life — out of love, with fidelity and constancy, that’s canonizable already. It sounds easy, but it’s not so easy. For religious, priests, laypeople, it’s the same thing, same principle.


    And that may be one of the things that comes out of her canonization that will help people live a Christian life.

    Yes, because sometimes they made a distinction between saints who are admirable and others who are admirable and imitable. So, say, Simeon the Stylite you wouldn’t imitate … being on a pole. But other saints — St. Thérèse, Mother Teresa and others — we can imitate them. I know Mother Teresa often would say — a good disciple of St. Thérèse — “Do ordinary things with extraordinary love.” Or she would say, “For God nothing is small; for us they’re small.” But what gives them value is the love with which you do them. And that’s for anybody and everybody. The most simple, ordinary thing: in the house, at work, wherever you go.


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    00 27/08/2010 16:09
    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 2010

    Quote of the Day

    “Today there is so much suffering - and I feel that the passion of Christ is being relived all over again - are we there to share that passion, to share that suffering of people?

    Around the world, not only in the poor countries, but I found the poverty of the West so much more difficult to remove. When I pick up a person from the street, hungry, I give him a plate of rice, a piece of bread, I have satisfied. I have removed that hunger. But a person that is shut out, that feels unwanted, unloved, terrified, the person that has been thrown out from society - that poverty is so hurtable and so much, and I find that very difficult....

    You must come to know the poor, maybe our people here have material things, everything, but I think that if we all look into our own homes, how difficult we find it sometimes to smile at each, other, and that the smile is the beginning of love. And so let us always meet each other with a smile, for the smile is the beginning of love, and once we begin to love each other naturally we want to do something....

    This is something that you and I - it is a gift of God to us to be able to share our love with others. And let it be as it was for Jesus. Let us love one another as he loved us. Let us love Him with undivided love. And the joy of loving Him and each other - let us give now... Let us keep that joy of loving Jesus in our hearts. And share that joy with all that we come in touch with. And that radiating joy is real, for we have no reason not to be happy because we have Christ with us. Christ in our hearts, Christ in the poor that we meet, Christ in the smile that we give and the smile that we receive. Let us make that one point: That no child will be unwanted, and also that we meet each other always with a smile, especially when it is difficult to smile.”
    --Mother Teresa, MC
    Lecture for the Nobel Peace Prize
    Oslo, Norway
    11 December 1979

    Beginning with a Mass at this hour in Calcutta, and from there across the globe, tonight sees the start of a yearlong centenary celebration marking the life of Blessed Teresa -- Mother Teresa -- born a hundred years ago tomorrow.

    While just this first day's worldwide roster of liturgies includes high-profile rites everywhere from Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu's native Albania to New York and beyond, the principal Stateside celebration of the milestone comes instead on Bl Teresa's 5th September feast at Washington's Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception with an afternoon Mass, followed by the formal presentation and first-issue of a US Postal Service first-class stamp (which is already available for pre-order).

    The feast-day novena to the "Saint of the Gutters" coincidentally begins today... and lest anyone else's up to join in, here are the prayers; and here, her liturgical "collect" (opening prayer) -- which, given the restriction of the beatified to a "local" cult -- technically isn't supposed to be used outside India and the Missionaries of Charity... but still:
    O God,
    who called blessed Teresa, virgin
    to respond to the love of your Son thirsting on the cross
    with outstanding charity to the poorest of the poor,
    grant us, we beseech you, by her intercession,
    to minister to Christ in his suffering brothers.

    Through our Lord Jesus Christ your Son
    who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
    one God, for ever and ever.
    -30-
    POSTED BY ROCCO PALMO AT 20:33
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    Part I of this interview is posted above.


    BECOMING MOTHER TERESA'S COLLABORATOR (PART 2)

    Interview With Close Ally of the Calcutta Nun

    By Irene Lagan

    WASHINGTON, D.C., AUG. 27, 2010 (Zenit.org).- As the world marked on Thursday the 100th anniversary of the birth of Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, it was clear that her legacy is far from fading away.

    Following her namesake, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, whose doctrine of the “little way” provided direction to people daunted by the austerity of the great spiritual masters and made sanctity seem possible, Mother Teresa taught us how to love the seemingly unlovable, the poorest of the poor.

    To mark the anniversary of the nun's birth, ZENIT spoke with one of Mother Teresa's close collaborators and allies, Jim Twoey. Twoey is a former White House correspondent and was recently the president of St. Vincent's, a small Catholic college in Pennsylvania. He and his wife, Mary, have recently relocated back to the Washington D.C. area.

    ZENIT: Do you think Mother Teresa’s life and work will have a lasting impact on society?

    Twoey: I think she will have a greater influence in the 21st century than she had in the 20th century. As the age wave sweeps across America, and you see our elderly and disabled exiled to the margins of society, they will discover in Mother Teresa that she too knew the darkness and the desolation that they are living, and that she can be a guide in finding hope in what would otherwise be a hopeless situation.

    Mother was asked once what the worst disease is: leprosy, or AIDS. She said it was neither, that loneliness was worse. That’s going to be the disease of the 21st century. In America alone there are some 78 million baby boomers. And, as that cohort, which did not have a lot of children, ages and retires, many will find themselves alone. Plus, they have been so heavily influenced by the culture of death. So, Mother’s pronouncements of the culture of life will be a source of hope and encouragement, along with her reminder that the poor are a gift to us and not a burden. We need them and they need us.

    Also, she had the ability in her own life to find God when she could not feel his presence, and to seek him and love him. These are lasting examples that will heavily influence how people in the 21st century survive loneliness and poverty.

    The revelation of her darkness and inner solitude -- a surprise to all of us who knew her -- will bear a lot of fruit in this next century. I think she will come to be seen as a mystic because of the experience she had with Christ early on in 1947, and having conversations with Christ. All of this is knowledge about Mother's life that is going to be very rich for years and years to come.

    I remember what Mother said, "If Jesus puts you in the palace, be all for Jesus in the palace, and if he takes your life and cuts it up into 1,000 pieces, they are all his." There’s eternal wisdom in what she says.

    ZENIT: Along with teaching us how to love the poor and those in our midst, Mother Teresa was a strong voice for the culture of life. What lasting impact will this aspect of her message have?

    Twoey: I think her fearless witness of the sanctity of life from the moment of conception to the moment of natural death has buttressed the conviction of many Church officials and politicians. I think they’ve received great consolation and courage from her words. For those who heard them [her teachings] and did not respond to the unmistakable truth of her words, it reminds you of the seed that was sown on the footpath: They had the opportunity and chose not to accept it.

    I think her words will have the same lasting influence that you find in the writings of Augustine and Aquinas in their understanding of theology, or St. Francis De Sales on marriage and family life, and Blessed John Henry Newman on university life. She will join with Francis of Assisi and others regarding the poor and our obligation to the poor and the beauty and liberation of poverty in the consecrated life.

    But I think she will be a great influence to all those who have great interior aridity and dryness. And I think for those who met Mother and didn’t respond, it is like the parable of the rich man who went away sad because his possessions were many. She made an urgent appeal to them and they went away sad.

    ZENIT: In working so closely with her, you never knew how much she was suffering interiorly?

    Twoey: We had a gathering at St. Vincent’s College a few years ago with many of her closest companions. Her successor, Sister Nirmala was there, her niece Aggi, Sandi McMurtrie who traveled with her, and others. All said the same thing: None of them knew of her inner darkness. We all knew Mother lived a mortified life. Her body was in a state of disrepair: It was a race to see which would give out first, her heart or her lungs. She’d had heart attacks, malaria dozens of times; she was breaking bones year after year.

    We knew her life was mortified and all of us assumed she was getting all the sweet consolations the saints get. And when we found out after her life the exact opposite was true -- that after her conversations with Jesus in 1947 she was led into a desert she never left, it was a shocking revelation to all of us. It made us all rethink her life, and in the process, to love her even more. We realized that despite the darkness and emptiness inside, she was so cheerful, joyful, energetic. She really was given a share of the poor’s suffering because inside they often feel that same darkness and hopelessness. It characterizes the lives of so many poor today. We knew that her life was hard, but we had no idea that interiorly it was worse. I was in her hospital room in 1996. She had a tabernacle in the room and an image of Our Lady of Guadalupe. There was no question where her faith was.

    If you read "Come Be My Light" and her letters, it is remarkable that through the rest of her life, she learned how to befriend the darkness: how to seek and find and love Christ in the darkness.

    ZENIT: What challenges do the Missionaries of Charity face now, and have they remained faithful to her vision?

    Twoey: There’s been no change in the Missionaries’ fidelity to Mother’s vision. In fact, I’ve seen it deepen. These are women and men who knew Mother so closely and have such a personal attachment to her that it is for them a matter of obligation to carry forward the vision and the mission.

    Over the years, the Missionaries have fed the poor, treated the sick and suffering, worked with the homeless. Their vow of wholehearted and free service means that they do this for free, and have never charged anyone, including the government, a cent. That’s why Mother was so adamant at the end of her life that the U.S. waive fees for visas. She felt it was an issue of justice. It didn’t happen in her lifetime but Congress passed the religious worker [legislation] after her death. The reality is that America has tremendous debt to Mother Teresa and to the Missionaries.

    That doesn’t mean the order is not facing new challenges. For example, when Mother started the order many of the first sisters were girls she taught at the school as a Loreto sister. Now many of the nuns are sick and elderly, so the younger sisters are learning to care for the sick and elderly among them. Many of them can’t go out and do all the work they once did, so they become much more contemplative. That’s an example of an emerging challenge.




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    MOTHER TERESA'S POWERFUL MESSAGE

    Interview With Missionary of Charity Father Joseph Langford

    By Karna Swanson

    TIJUANA, Mexico, SEPT. 2, 2010 (Zenit.org).- If Blessed Teresa of Calcutta could leave the world with one last message, she would most likely encourage all who would listen to embrace suffering, especially that of the poor, says Father Joseph Langford.

    Father Langford is co-founder with Mother Teresa (1910-1997) of the priestly branch of the Missionaries of Charity, as well as the author of "Mother Teresa's Secret Fire" (Our Sunday Visitor), which reveals the inspiration behind Mother Teresa's work and the details of the call she received from God in 1946 to found the Missionaries of Charity.

    As the world prepares to mark the 13th anniversary of Mother Teresa's death (Sept. 5), Father Langford reflects in this interview with ZENIT about what Mother Teresa meant to him personally, as well as the power of the message that the nun transmitted with her life of service to the poor and suffering.

    ZENIT: There are thousands of missionaries around the world who work to help the poor and sick. What sets Mother Teresa's call, her mission, and her life apart from others who have given their entire lives to serve the poor?

    Father Langford: This has been entirely God's doing; not ours, not hers. It has not been her qualities, nor even of her holiness, since many generous and holy missionaries have gone before her. Not in a thousand years, however, not since St. Francis of Assisi, has God sought to guide us through dark times by so universally raising up a saint -- before the Church, the world, other religions, even nonbelievers, and before rich and poor alike.

    There are elements of her own life, however, that do set her apart. She lived a tremendous love for God and neighbor, in darkness, for 50 years. Her apostolate -- to work alone in the streets of Calcutta, as a religious, outside of her convent -- was entirely new in the 1950s and 1960s. But this was entirely God's plan, in every detail. She only did what was asked of her by God. He directed her in all, even in what she was to wear. For his own greater purposes, some of which we might surmise, as with Francis, it has been God who set her on the world stage, and holds her there, as her stature only continues to grow.

    ZENIT: For those who never met Mother, could you describe what it was like to talk to her, to be around her, to watch her?

    Father Langford: To encounter Mother was to feel the warmth of God, the love, the acceptance of God. People felt God's presence around her … often to the point of tears. When you were with her, even in a crowd, there was an easy and instant intimacy, as though you were the only person in her world. You felt drawn to God, embraced and cherished by God, not unlike what people must have felt around Jesus.

    ZENIT: When most people think of Mother Teresa, they think of the nun that won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her humanitarian work. What do you think of when you remember her?

    Father Langford: A mystic with her sleeves rolled up. But she was first of all a mother, always there for you, always ready to support you, ready to see the good in you, to overlook your faults, to encourage you. She never seemed to tire of hearing from you, or speaking with you.

    She was someone who always reserved a special place in her heart for all those who came near to her. That is how she changed my life, without even trying, and set me on a completely different course; and joyfully, I never looked back.

    She radiated both the presence of Our Lady, with whom she had a deep, unique, relationship -- as I outline in my first book, "Mother Teresa: In the Shadow of Our Lady," (OSV Press) -- as well as the presence of her Son, who had sent her to "be his light." She was a doorway into God's heart -- from us to him, and from him to us -- a pathway that was accessible and observable and inviting to all.

    But what comes to mind most in remembering her is not her -- but the One who sent her: What does God want to tell us in sending her, in raising her up -- about himself, about the way he sees us, loves us? What could be so important for us to know about him that he would anoint the carrier of his message so abundantly, and so publicly? If Mother Teresa was, as she described herself, "a pencil in God's hand, to write his love letter to the world," my constant question was what was the content of that letter written on the pages of her life, if not that first revealed to her on her train ride to Darjeeling, Sept. 10, 1946?

    ZENIT: You wrote in your book "Mother Teresa's Secret Fire" about Sept. 10, 1946, the day she would refer to as "Inspiration Day." Mother rarely spoke of that event, but she revealed more about it as she neared the end of her life. What happened on that day?

    Father Langford: The grace of Sept. 10 was Mother Teresa's overwhelming encounter with the unimagined depth of God's love. This fire in the heart of God, pointed to throughout Scripture (Our God is a consuming fire), but often forgotten. This was the source of her magnetism, and of all the initiative and the good she did around the world.
    She herself gave a name to the secret of Sept. 10: It was the mystery of God's infinite thirst for us. "The strong grace of Divine Light and Love … received on the train journey to Darjeeling on Sept. 10, 1946, is where the Missionaries of Charity [her world-wide work of charity] begins -- in the depths of God's infinite longing to love and to be loved."

    Speaking of all of us, but especially of the very poor, Jesus had lamented to Mother Teresa, "They don't know me, so they don't want me." In Jesus' plan, then, she was sent first to the thousands who are born, live, and draw their last breath on Calcutta's sidewalks. The poverty and pain of their surroundings -- ordained by man, not by the Creator -- and the indifference of those who pass them by every day, give no hint, leave no clue that they could be so loved by anyone, much less by the Supreme Being. God, in his wisdom, sent Mother Teresa to show them, in deeds more than words, the immensity of his tenderness and longing for them. And by witnessing Mother Teresa's service to the poorest, the rest of us as well come to understand God's tender longing, not just for the most disadvantaged, but for us all.

    "Try to deepen your understanding of these two words, 'Thirst of God'" (cf. John 19:28). The symbol of divine thirst is simple and universal, spanning every time and culture; though it has lost much of its urgency and power in our first world where all is ready at hand to satisfy our needs. But stop and think. As a thirsty man longs for water, so God longs for us. As a thirsty man seeks out the water, so does God seek for us. As a thirsty man thinks only of water, so God's entire being is focused on us. As a thirsty man in the desert will give anything in exchange for water, so God has gladly given all he has, and all he is, in exchange for us. This is the divine symbol entrusted to Mother Teresa on Sept. 10 -- so that in an age grown cold she might both remind us of God's yearning, and reawaken our own.

    ZENIT: You were the one who Mother Teresa asked to tell others about the events of that day. What have you done to spread that message? What can others do to help in the task?

    Father Langford: As soon as her Nobel Prize was announced, I began traveling with the BBC film, "Something Beautiful for God," showing it to audiences of all kinds. Soon, I discovered that people had difficulty connecting the poverty and the radical charity they saw on the screen with their own more comfortable Christian lives. And so I began giving a talk after each screening, explaining that every place was a Calcutta in miniature, and that Mother Teresa was called to carry her message not only to the slums of the Third World, but to the threshold of every hurting heart. That she had brought God's yearning for us to the doorsteps of the whole world.

    I explained that there was no need to go to India, nor even across town. There were hidden "Calcuttas" all around them -- in their own homes and families, in the blind man down the street, in the unforgiven aunt behind the walls of the retirement home. Nor was it necessary to send a check -- to compensate for not serving in foreign lands. God had not sent us a check in our need, but his Son. He gave of himself, without measure -- as any of us can, anytime, anywhere. There we are all called to be. There we are sent, as surely as was Mother Teresa. She would tell us to take some step, no matter how small, to serve those around us in their daily struggles. We need nothing special in the way of talent or resources; "we need only begin," as Mother Teresa would say -- even in the smallest, most insignificant ways.

    Mother's message is both word and deed. People need to understand why Mother Teresa did what she did, and in whose name. We have been trying to produce pamphlets and books to help lift the veil beyond this mystery of charity. In addition to the books, the Missionary of Charity Fathers have prepared a pamphlet with a guided meditation ("I Thirst for You") to help encounter the thirst of Christ for you, and understand its meaning on a deeper level. The mediation is available by writing: webmaster@mcpriests.com for only the price of shipping. A high quality, four color version is also available for purchase from OSV Press. Readers can request the Missionary of Charity Fathers for any number of pamphlets to distribute in parishes, among friends and families, in nursing homes, hospitals, prisons, etc., and wherever God leads them and needs them.

    Of course, the most direct way to share Mother Teresa's message, and carry God's presence into a barren world as she did, will always be to share even the smallest acts of love with Jesus in his crucified mystical body in the poor and suffering, for "Every work of love brings a person face to face with God."

    ZENIT: If Mother Teresa could leave the world with one last message, what would that be?

    Father Langford: Be the light of God's love to the world in its present darkness. People cannot resist love. Bring Jesus and his message ("I Thirst for You") to others. Be holy for the God who made you is holy.

    Don't be afraid of suffering. Don't turn away from the suffering of the poor because Jesus is there. He is always with them and within them ("Whatever you do to the least of my brothers, you do it to me").

    Don't let your own pain and suffering isolate you, rather let it become a bridge into the pain of others, and even into the pain of the One whose heart was pierced for you on Calvary.

    Mother Teresa's message has never been more important, as we face our own personal Calcutta in the economic and political upheavals that face us. In the midst of global uncertainty, people are searching for something more -- more lasting, more valuable, more fulfilling, for a greater security, a deeper purpose -- for a way to not only survive but to contribute, as did Mother Teresa in the slums of Calcutta; in a word, to leave a legacy, the legacy of Christ's love alive in my life.

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    PapaBear84
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    00 10/09/2010 19:40
    From Whispers in the Loggia
    WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 08, 2010

    On Women... and Renewal
    For the second Wednesday running in his "Great Saints" series of catecheses, B16 turned at today's General Audience to the figure of Hildegard of Bingen, the visionary 12th century mystic, musician and theologian.

    Here, via AsiaNews, a sum-up of today's talk:
    An authentic renewal of the Church "is not achieved by change in structures rather from a sincere spirit of penance and active path of conversion". This lesson of St. Hildegard of Bingen "is a message that we should never forget," said Benedict XVI, as he dedicated a second week of general audience reflections to the twelfth-century mystic nun. Again during his Wednesday meeting with pilgrims he expressed the hope that "the Holy Spirit will inspire in the Church holy and courageous women like Hildegard, who give their valuable contribution to the spiritual growth of the Church of our time."

    Hildegard, whom the Pope described as a “founder of monasteries, preacher, and counsellor to the personalities of her time, a naturalist, musician and painter", is also an example of how" even theology can receive content peculiar to women, because they are able to speak of God and faith with their special sensitivity".

    Hildegard, a Benedictine nun who "distinguished herself for her spiritual wisdom and holy life" in her writings that describe her mystical visions "interpreted the Holy Scriptures in the light of God, applying them to the various circumstances of life." "Rich in theological content, her writings refer to the main events of salvation history" and "those who heard her felt bound to live a Christian life."

    In her work, "with the characteristic traits of feminine sensibility, she develops the theme of mystical marriage between God and humanity, consummated on the cross". Furthermore, in her "vision of God who animates the cosmos, she highlights the deep relationship between man and God and reminds us that the whole creation of which man is the summit, receives life from the Trinity."

    Hildegard illustrates the "cultural vitality of the female monasteries of the Middle Ages, contrary to the prejudices that are still present regarding that era". Her popularity pushed many people to write, there are numerous letters addressed to the monastic community from men and women, bishops and abbots. They contain considerations that are still valid today, such as for example " spiritual life must be nurtured and cared for with great dedication: at the beginning it is a bitter fatigue" because it forces us to sacrifice, but one must be open to the search for holiness, to find true happiness in God.
    Over recent weeks, the Pope's "Great Saints" thread of Wednesday talks has focused on Pius X, Duns Scotus, and St Joseph Cafasso, a relatively obscure 19th century Turinese whose depth of faith was expressed both in contagious devotion and concrete action... and whose ministry birthed the mission of the famous "friend of youth," St John Bosco.

    -30-
    POSTED BY ROCCO PALMO AT 17:15
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    benefan
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    00 28/09/2010 02:59

    Pope asks young people to learn from beatified teen

    By Catholic News Service
    Sept. 27, 2010

    CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (CNS) -- Blessed Chiara Badano, an Italian who died of bone cancer just before her 19th birthday, witnessed to the world the fact that God's love is stronger than suffering and death, Pope Benedict XVI said.

    "Only Love with a capital L gives true happiness," and that's what Blessed Badano showed her family, her friends and her fellow members of the Focolare Movement, the pope said Sept. 26 during his midday Angelus address.

    At Rome's Shrine of Divine Love Sept. 25, Archbishop Angelo Amato, prefect of the Congregation for Saints' Causes, presided over the beatification of the young Italian who died in 1990.

    Pope Benedict said young people can find in Blessed Badano "an example of Christian consistency," because she was certain of God's love and trusted in that love even as she was dying.

    "We give praise to God because his love is stronger than evil and death; and we give thanks to the Virgin Mary who leads young people, even in the midst of difficulty and suffering, to fall in love with Jesus and discover the beauty of life," the pope said.

    At the beatification Mass, Archbishop Amato called Blessed Badano a missionary of Jesus, "who invites us to rediscover the freshness and enthusiasm of the faith."

    Even as she lost the use of her legs and was dying, she shared her faith and God's love with the dozens of people who would visit her each day, he said.

    "Her last gift was her corneas, the only organs that were still transplantable" because they were not damaged by the cancer that had spread throughout her body, the archbishop said. "They were given to two young people who can see today thanks to her."

    Blessed Badano's parents, Teresa and Ruggero, attended the beatification Mass.

    Her mother told Vatican Radio that Chiara's religiosity grew gradually and normally.

    When Chiara got sick, she said, "She taught us how to do God's will, like she did, because you don't just say 'yes' when everything is going well."

    After the beatification, about 8,000 young members of the Focolare Movement gathered in the Vatican audience hall for a nighttime celebration of Blessed Badano's life with readings and singing.


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    maryjos
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    00 28/09/2010 23:44
    The story of Chiara is very moving. Thank you for reporting it, benefan.

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    benefan
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    00 30/09/2010 15:13

    Here's an update on that story, Mary.


    Pope Benedict personally thanks parents of teenage blessed

    Vatican City, Sep 29, 2010 / 04:49 pm (CNA).- Expecting to offer their appreciation to the Holy Father for the beatification of their daughter, the parents of Blessed Chiara "Luce" Badano were thanked instead by the Pontiff himself. They expressed their surprise to be chosen to participate in their daughter's "contagious Christian experience."

    L'Osservatore Romano (LOR) reported on the encounter between the blessed's parents and Pope Benedict XVI which followed Wednesday's audience in St. Peter's Square.

    Greeting the Pope after a line of prelates had done so, Maria Teresa and Ruggero Badano were visibly pleased to meet the Holy Father. They meant to thank Pope Benedict for their daughter's beatification last Saturday, but, reported LOR, it was the Holy Father who thanked them.

    The parents remarked that they were "surprised that two poor people like ourselves were chosen to participate in the contagious Christian experience of our only daughter."

    Recalling the years they waited hopefully before their baby was born and then remembering their suffering during her illness and death, they said, "now we are more than ever with her in the joy for her beatification."

    During the brief audience in the square, they gave the Pope a card signed by Chiara in which she entrusts herself to the Virgin Mary to have "the strength necessary to never give in."

    After a bout with bone cancer, the blessed died in 1990 at the age of 18, but is remembered for her constant joy and close relationship with Christ. She was beatified by Archbishop Angelo Amato last Saturday in a celebration at Rome's Divine Love shrine.

    Among others present who had also attended her beatification included: fellow Focolare Movement members from 42 countries, the movement’s president Maria Voce, Chiara's former bishop who began her cause and the postulators who continue to promote her cause for canonization.


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