2007-02-11 - "The dynamic love that Mother Teresa shared ..."
Many times over the space of about nine years I had the privilege of
offering Holy Mass, preaching, and working with Blessed Teresa of
Calcutta. Once while we were having a conversation I noticed that she
had placed an international award she had received on the floor as a
doorstop. She had graciously accepted the object made of some
expensive-looking crystal, and would not hurt anyone’s feelings by
getting rid of it, but she did make good use of what otherwise would
have been useless to her.
The dynamic love that Mother Teresa shared confounded the
sentimentalists who had a romantic notion of “social work.” She and her
religious sisters patiently tried to form in true virtue volunteers who
wanted to “feel good” by acts of philanthropy. Mother did not
romanticize destitution nor did she condone vice when she cared for its
victims. She meant it when she spoke of Christ in the “distressing”
disguise of the poor. One writer has said that when the needy are
difficult and even offensive, “that’s the point at which the
self-congratulatory do-gooders quit and go home and where the real
charity kicks in. That’s the point at which it’s impossible to see the
face of Jesus in the destitute (or sick, or deranged) except as a pure
act of faith. And that’s the point at which it matters whether Jesus is
divine or not, because belief in the repulsively disguised spark of
divinity is the only reason to keep on giving love in exchange for
contempt.”
Unheralded but heroic among the Church’s countless benefactions in New
York City is the work of the consecrated sisters of the Missionaries of
Charity which Blessed Teresa founded. One of their works is a “Gift of
Love” hospice for the dying, on Washington Street. Our parish has the
privilege of helping them in little ways. The current Superior, Sister
Mary Vineeth, recently sent me the following letter:
“We wish you many blessings and graces in a Happy New Year filled with the peace and love of Jesus Christ. Thank you, Father, for at Christmas providing for so many presents to be given to our residents here at ‘Gift of Love.’ We are deeply grateful to all those who helped in this work of love among the poor.
“Many of the men in our home have no family contact—either the family rejects them or they are immigrants to this country. Some are in such darkness because of their lifestyle and they do not know the right and true path our Saviour has pointed out to us. The Church sometimes can be their only light. Please keep them in your prayers as they go through their daily struggles. They are grateful for the help they receive and the time of quiet and prayer they find in our homes.”
Fr. George W. Rutler
