'Icon of mercy': Missionaries superior describes Blessed Teresa
Friday, Sep. 02, 2016
ROME (CNS) — Blessed Teresa of Kolkata was a woman who truly felt wed to Jesus, and the freedom she experienced in loving him led her to radical poverty, a courageous outreach and an immense love for the poor, said the superior general of the order Mother Teresa founded.
“She was very happy to be a woman and to be a mother to so many souls,” Missionaries of Charity Sister Mary Prema Pierick told Catholic News Service.
“Her freedom of loving opened the doors of hearts and avenues of service, which maybe were not so common, especially in sharing the radical poverty of the poor,” said the blue-eyed, German-born sister, who was elected superior general in 2009.
Mother Teresa, who will be canonized Sept. 4, began her order in the 1940s, walking into the slums of Kolkata, “having no convent walls to protect her,” Sr. Prema said. “But it was love for Jesus and love and compassion for the suffering of the poor that brought her to do what she did.”
At the main Missionaries of Charity house in Rome – a whitewashed oasis above the roar of traffic around the Circus Maximus and near the crush of tourists at the Colosseum – Sr. Prema spoke of how natural it was that Mother Teresa would be declared a saint during the Year of Mercy.
Mother Teresa is “an icon of mercy,” she said. “Even people who would have no faith would see the compassion and the mercy which Mother spread around her. She would not leave a suffering person without giving attention to them. On the contrary, she would go out to search for them and try to bring them to the realization that they are loved and they are appreciated.”
A growing number of Missionaries of Charity continue Mother Teresa’s work around the world. According to Sr. Prema, the number of sisters has increased from 3,914 at the time of Mother Teresa’s death to 5,161 as of Aug. 5. The number of Missionary of Charity brothers has grown by 53 to 416. When Mother Teresa was alive, her order was working in 120 countries; today they are present in 139 nations.
Like millions of people around the world, Sr. Prema believed Mother Teresa was “a living saint.” She was beatified in 2003 – six years after she died. The time it took for her sainthood cause to make its way through the exacting Vatican process “have been years of going deeper into understanding who she is,” her successor said.
As it turned out, the years were especially important in coming to understand Mother Teresa’s spiritual thirst and what she described as “the darkness” of feeling unloved by God. Sr. Prema, who first met Mother Teresa in 1980, said the founder’s spiritual pain was something she kept well-hidden from all except her spiritual directors.
“In all things, Mother did not draw attention to herself but gave herself completely to others, forgetting about her own pain,” Sr. Prema said.
Her continuing prayer and work, even with the experience of God being so far away, “speaks about her faith, her faithfulness to the commitment she had taken and to the person to whom she was wed: Jesus.”
The “darkness” became part of Mother Teresa’s ministry, the grace that gave it power.
“It was part of her mission to the poorest of the poor, especially sinners who experienced their unwantedness and their rejection. Sharing their experience of darkness and of being away from God made her an instrument of grace for them,” Sr. Prema said. “And she had great compassion for those who did not know God and did not experience the love of God for them.”
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