
Impact Of Mother Teresa's
Work, Prayer Still Felt
By Carol Zimmermann
Catholic News Service
WASHINGTON (CNS) — Thirteen
years after her death, the impact of Blessed
Teresa of Calcutta's work and prayer is still
felt around the world.
Mother Teresa would have
turned 100 Aug. 26. The order she started 60
years ago — the Missionaries of Charity —
continues its outreach to the "poorest of the
poor." Her spiritual life also continues to gain
attention as her sainthood cause progresses.
Many say Mother Teresa's
legacy is the combination of her extreme
devotion to the poor and her spirituality since
both were so deeply intertwined.
For young people, the nun is a
model for how to live out one's faith.
"What strikes them is that she
practiced what she preached," said Eileen
Burke-Sullivan, an associate professor of
theology at Jesuit-run Creighton University in
Omaha, Neb.
She said students connect with
Mother Teresa because they grew up seeing her
image on television or in the newspaper and they
knew she "lived and died working for poor."
Burke-Sullivan told Catholic
News Service that students appreciate how Mother
Teresa made the connection between the practice
of faith and justice.
Students at Benedictine
College in Kansas have a vivid reminder of the
founder of the Missionaries of Charity in the
school's Mother Teresa Center for Nursing and
Health Education dedicated August 26 as part of
the college's new nursing program.
Stephen Minnis, president of
Benedictine College, said school officials
searching for a name for their new nursing
center kept talking about Mother Teresa even
though she wasn't a nurse.
"Who is a better caregiver
than Mother Teresa," he said, adding that she is
a "wonderful example" for students and hopes
they will be inspired by her quote displayed at
the building's entrance: "Give your hands to
serve and your heart to love."
David Gentry-Akin, a theology
professor at St. Mary's College of California in
Moraga, said for all the accolades about Mother
Teresa, she also received a fair amount of
criticism. Although many thought her work was
noble, they also wanted her to do more to
"change the system" and some in the church
thought she was too traditional.
But as he sees it, the nun's
enduring legacy is her spirituality. "The work
she did is phenomenal," he said, adding that it
was more effective because it was "motivated out
of deep faith and holiness."
Gentry-Akin said a telling
feature of Mother Teresa's spirituality is
revealed in a prayer she is said to have prayed
each day asking God's light to shine through her
so that those she came in contact with would
"see no longer me but only Jesus."
The prayer's imagery serves as
title for a book of her writings published in
2007: "Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light." It
describes, in her own words, the crises of faith
she experienced and how she often felt that God
had abandoned her.
After its publication, some
said the revelations made Mother Teresa seem
less genuine, but Gentry-Akin said it only made
her more inspirational.
"The fact that she could go
through that and remain faithful makes her
sanctity all the greater," he said.
Margaret Thompson, a history
professor at Syracuse University, said: "We are
only now beginning to learn how complex she
really was, and as historians we're not ready to
issue final word on her."
Thompson finds irony in those
who dismissed Mother Teresa for being too
traditional, saying she was initially viewed as
controversial when she left her religious order
to start her own order and walked through
impoverished neighborhoods in India wearing a
sari.
She said Mother Teresa's work
was not about making good impressions but
meeting the needs of people wherever they were.
And those needs are still
carried out by 5,029 sisters of her order in 766
convents in 137 countries. The order's work also
has expanded to priests and brothers of the
Missionaries of Charity as well as lay
Missionaries of Charity who run orphanages, AIDS
hospices and centers for refugees and the
disabled. Currently, there are 377 active
brothers serving in 21 countries, 44
contemplative brothers in five countries and 38
Missionary of Charity fathers in five countries.
At the time of Mother Teresa's death, there were
3842 sisters, 363 active brothers, 14
contemplative brothers and 13 priests in the
order.
Five years after her death,
the Vatican began the process of beatification
for the woman often described as a "living
saint." In 2002, the Vatican recognized one
miracle attributed to her intercession. Her
canonization is currently awaiting proof of a
second miracle.
A sister at Queen of Peace,
the North American motherhouse for the
Missionaries of Charity in the New York City
borough of the Bronx, told CNS that there is no
shortage of miracles attributed to Mother
Teresa. The sister, who did not want to be
identified, said she spent a year in Calcutta
working on the nun's sainthood cause and spent
three days simply entering miracles into the
computer that people attributed to Mother
Teresa's intercession.
The sister said she's
convinced the order continues its work through
her prayers.
"We constantly feel her
spirit," she said.
- - - Contributing to this
story was Chaz Muth.