Saturday, 3 September 2016

Mother Teresa of Calcutta (Saint of the Gutters).



Mother Teresa of Calcutta (Saint of the Gutters).

Early Life
Catholic nun and missionary Mother Teresa was born on August 26, 1910, in Skopje, the current capital of the Republic of Macedonia. The following day, she was baptized as Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu. Her parents, Nikola and Dranafile Bojaxhiu, were of Albanian descent; her father was an entrepreneur who worked as a construction contractor and a trader of medicines and other goods. The Bojaxhius were a devoutly Catholic family, and Nikola was deeply involved in the local church as well as in city politics as a vocal proponent of Albanian independence. In 1919, when Agnes was only 8 years old, her father suddenly fell ill and died. In the aftermath of her father's death, Agnes became extraordinarily close to her mother, a pious and compassionate woman who instilled in her daughter a deep commitment to charity.
Religious Calling
Agnes attended a convent-run primary school and then a state-run secondary school. As a girl, she sang in the local Sacred Heart choir and was often asked to sing solos. The congregation made an annual pilgrimage to the Church of the Black Madonna in Letnice, and it was on one such trip at the age of 12 that she first felt a calling to a religious life. Six years later, in 1928, an 18-year-old Agnes Bojaxhiu decided to become a nun and set off for Ireland to join the Sisters of Loreto in Dublin. It was there that she took the name Sister Mary Teresa after Saint Thérèse of Lisieux.
A year later, Sister Mary Teresa travelled on to Darjeeling, India, for the novitiate period; in May 1931, she made her First Profession of Vows. Afterward she was sent to Calcutta, where she was assigned to teach at Saint Mary's High School for Girls, a school run by the Loreto Sisters and dedicated to teaching girls from the city's poorest Bengali families. Sister Teresa learned to speak both Bengali and Hindi fluently as she taught geography and history and dedicated herself to alleviating the girls' poverty through education.
On May 24, 1937, she took her Final Profession of Vows to a life of poverty, chastity and obedience. As was the custom for Loreto nuns, she took on the title of "Mother" upon making her final vows and thus became known as Mother Teresa. Mother Teresa continued to teach at Saint Mary's, and in 1944 she became the school's principal. Through her kindness, generosity and unfailing commitment to her students' education, she sought to lead them to a life of devotion to Christ. "Give me the strength to be ever the light of their lives, so that I may lead them at last to you," she wrote in prayer.

A New Calling
However, on September 10, 1946, Mother Teresa experienced a second calling, the "call within a call" that would forever transform her life. She was riding in a train from Calcutta to the Himalayan foothills for a retreat when she said Christ spoke to her and told her to abandon teaching to work in the slums of Calcutta aiding the city's poorest and sickest people. 
But since Mother Teresa had taken a vow of obedience, she could not leave her convent without official permission. After nearly a year and a half of lobbying, in January 1948 she finally received approval to pursue this new calling. That August, donning the blue-and-white sari that she would wear in public for the rest of her life, she left the Loreto convent and wandered out into the city. After six months of basic medical training, she voyaged for the first time into Calcutta's slums with no more specific a goal than to aid "the unwanted, the unloved, the uncared for."
The Missionaries of Charity
Mother Teresa quickly translated this somewhat vague calling into concrete actions to help the city's poor. She began an open-air school and established a home for the dying destitute in a dilapidated building she convinced the city government to donate to her cause. In October 1950, she won canonical recognition for a new congregation, the Missionaries of Charity, which she founded with only a handful of members—most of them former teachers or pupils from St. Mary's School.
In 1952, Mother Teresa found a woman dying in the streets, half-eaten by rats and ants, with no one to care for her. She picked her up and took her to the hospital, but nothing could be done. Realizing that there were many others dying alone in the streets, Mother Teresa opened within days Nirmal Hriday (Pure Heart), a home for the dying. In the first 20 years alone, over 20,000 people were brought there, half of whom died knowing the love of the Missionaries of Charity. Nirmal Hriday is where one dying man, lying in the arms of Mother Teresa after being plucked from the gutters and bathed and clothed and fed, told her, “I have lived like an animal, but now I am dying like an angel.”
Later, Santhi Nagar (leprosy home) for leprosy patients and Nirmal Shishu Bhavan (home for the orphans) were also started. As the ranks of her congregation swelled and donations poured in from around India and across the globe, the scope of Mother Teresa's charitable activities expanded exponentially. Over the course of the 1950s and 1960s, she established a leper colony, an orphanage, a nursing home, a family clinic and a string of mobile health clinics.
Nirmal Hriday was the focus of the 1969 British television documentary produced by the late Malcolm Muggeridge, Something Beautiful for God. It made Mother Teresa famous, though by then she had already spent 23 years in the slums, living off alms and toiling in obscurity.
In 1971, Mother Teresa traveled to New York City to open her first American-based house of charity, and in the summer of 1982, she secretly went to Beirut, Lebanon, where she crossed between Christian East Beirut and Muslim West Beirut to aid children of both faiths. In 1985, Mother Teresa returned to New York and spoke at the 40th anniversary of the United Nations General Assembly. While there, she also opened Gift of Love, a home to care for those infected with HIV/AIDS. 
International Charity and Recognition
In February 1965, Pope Paul VI bestowed the Decree of Praise upon the Missionaries of Charity, which prompted Mother Teresa to begin expanding internationally. By the time of her death in 1997, the Missionaries of Charity numbered more than 4,000—in addition to thousands more lay volunteers—with 610 foundations in 123 countries around the world.
The Decree of Praise was just the beginning, as Mother Teresa received various honors for her tireless and effective charity. She was awarded the Jewel of India, the highest honor bestowed on Indian civilians, as well as the now-defunct Soviet Union's Gold Medal of the Soviet Peace Committee. And in 1979, Mother Teresa won her highest honour when she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of her work "in bringing help to suffering humanity."
Controversy
Despite this widespread praise, Mother Teresa's life and work have not gone without its controversies. In particular, she has drawn criticism for her vocal endorsement of some of the Catholic Church's more controversial doctrines, such as opposition to contraception and abortion. "I feel the greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion," Mother Teresa said in her 1979 Nobel lecture.
In 1995, she publicly advocated a "no" vote in the Irish referendum to end the country's constitutional ban on divorce and remarriage. The most scathing criticism of Mother Teresa can be found in Christopher Hitchens's book The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice, in which Hitchens argued that Mother Teresa glorified poverty for her own ends and provided a justification for the preservation of institutions and beliefs that sustained widespread poverty.
Death and Legacy
After several years of deteriorating health, in which she suffered from heart, lung and kidney problems, Mother Teresa died on September 5, 1997, at the age of 87. In 2002, the Vatican recognized a miracle involving an Indian woman named Monica Besra, who said she was cured of an abdominal tumor through Mother Teresa's intercession on the one year anniversary of her death in 1998. She was beatified as "Blessed Teresa of Calcutta" on October 19, 2003 in a ceremony led by Pope John Paul II
Since her death, Mother Teresa has remained in the public spotlight. In particular, the publication of her private correspondence in 2003 caused a wholesale re-evaluation of her life by revealing the crisis of faith she suffered for most of the last 50 years of her life.
In one despairing letter to a confidant, she wrote, "Where is my Faith—even deep down right in there is nothing, but emptiness & darkness—My God—how painful is this unknown pain—I have no Faith—I dare not utter the words & thoughts that crowd in my heart—& make me suffer untold agony." While such revelations are shocking considering her public image, they have also made Mother Teresa a more relatable and human figure to all those who experience doubt in their beliefs.
For her unwavering commitment to aiding those most in need, Mother Teresa stands out as one of the greatest humanitarians of the 20th century. She combined profound empathy and a fervent commitment to her cause with incredible organizational and managerial skills that allowed her to develop a vast and effective international organization of missionaries to help impoverished citizens all across the globe.
However, despite the enormous scale of her charitable activities and the millions of lives she touched, to her dying day she held only the most humble conception of her own achievements. Summing up her life in characteristically self-effacing fashion, Mother Teresa said, "By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian. By faith, I am a Catholic nun. As to my calling, I belong to the world. As to my heart, I belong entirely to the Heart of Jesus."
On December 17, 2015, Pope Francis issued a decree that recognized a second miracle attributed to Mother Teresa, clearing the way for her to be canonized as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church. The second miracle involved the healing of Marcilio Andrino, a Brazilian man who was diagnosed with a viral brain infection and lapsed into a coma. His wife, family and friends prayed to Mother Teresa, and when the man was brought to the operating room for emergency surgery, he woke up without pain and cured of his symptoms, according to a statement from the Missionaries of Charity Father. Mother Teresa will be canonized as a saint on September 4, 2016, a day before the 19th anniversary of her death. Pope Francis will lead the canonization service, which will be held in front of St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City. 

Reflection:

To Love and to be Loved: Mother Teresa offered tender, loving care to those most in need, the poorest of the poor, all over the world independently of their race, colour, nationality, cast or creed. In each human being, she saw a child of God, created for greater things: to love and to be loved. Respecting this innate value and dignity of each person, she endeavoured to bring this love where it was lacking, offering her humble service to whoever was in need, without considering their religious affiliation. She remarked, “The greatest disease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis, but rather the feeling of being unwanted, uncared for and deserted by everybody,” she would explain. “The greatest evil is the lack of love and charity, the terrible indifference towards one’s neighbour.”


Against Abortion and Contraception:  She spoke out against abortion as the “greatest destroyer of peace during her speech in Oslo at the Nobel ceremony. She shocked the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington when she reminded them of the Christian tradition on the immorality of contraception.


Saint of Gutters: She insisted that she was in the gutters for one reason alone — to bring the love of Christ to each of the souls abandoned there.

Religious Habit Symbol of Religious Vows: The religious dress of the Missionaries of Charity bears special significance. The colour of their sari - white - stands for truth and purity while the three blue borders each signify the vows that the nuns of the Order take: the first band represents Poverty, the second Obedience and the third broad band represents the vows of Chastity and of Wholehearted free service to the poorest of the poor. The Cross worn on the left shoulder symbolises that for the Missionaries of Charity Jesus on the Cross is the key to the heart.


Please note that the content of this blog has been adopted from the following website

Adopted from : http://www.biography.com/people/mother-teresa-9504160

Following websites are worth refering
http://www.motherteresa.org/
http://blog.americancatholic.org/the-mother-teresa-i-knew

Wednesday, 6 July 2016

Marriage Sermon



 Dear Jyotsana and Aditya, my priestly brethren, brothers and sisters in Jesus Christ. Today is a memorable day for both Jyotsana and Aditya. I am sure that they will cherish these memorable moments lifelong.  As they begin a new journey in life, receiving the sacrament of marriage at the sanctuary of the Lord, in tpresence of family members, relatives, friends, and well-wishers- they are overwhelmed with happiness. We too share in your happiness and offer our prayers and blessings on this auspicious day.
Through this sacrament of marriage Aditya and Jyotsana are entering into a covenantal relationship which is more than a contract. You know a covenant is irrevocable.  You are giving your personal consent to live together as partners for whole life with openness to life and commitment to faithful love. This relationship of love is an unconditional offering you make to one another.
As you are getting ready to make the sacred vow to be united as husband and wife for the rest of your lives I would like to share the advice given by St Paul. According to him, the spouses should accept the vocation to be a prophetic, visible sign of the unbreakable covenant between Jesus and His Church. We are aware of the covenantal relationship between Jesus and Church. Church submitting herself to Jesus and Jesus loving his Church even at the cost of His life.  The model of Christian marriage as per St. Paul is the way Jesus loved the Church and the church submitted herself to Jesus: He advises wives to submit to their husbands……He is highlighting the example of church… Just as the church submits to Christ, wives should submit to their husbands. St. Paul is giving advice to husbands also… Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church… even at the cost of sacrificing His own life. Yes, he demands a total mutual self-giving.
My dear young couple, the intimate union of marriage, as a mutual giving of two persons demand total fidelity and an unbreakable union from your part. You are called to grow continually in your communion through day to day fidelity to your marriage promise of total mutual self-giving. The sacrament of matrimony gives you the grace to love each other with the love with which Christ loved His church. The grace of the sacrament perfects your human love and strengthens your indissoluble unity.
I too have something to share with you…Aditya…Jyotsana… you might have been interacting for quite some time… you might have shared your dreams …. But still Aditya, you are a mystery to Jyotsana… and Jyotsana you are still a mystery to Aditya. However, this mystery will be revealed day by day…..The bright and dark shades of your personalities will be revealed…. And after years of marriage you may feel that your partner has changed a lot. Success of marriage depends on how patiently you have accepted this change. You might have heard married couples criticizing their spouses telling ….. John…I am fed up …. You have changed a lot…. you were not like this at the time of marriage…John may rebuke and shout back…..Hey…Maria, you too have changed… As years pass by partners may become cold in their relationships losing all warmth and affection. This can happen in your life also…..The basic thing you must keep in mind is… life partners are not perfect couples in all respects. There may be shortcomings in their personalities. In the early state of married life, one will see only the positive shades of the partner's personality. However, day by day partners are revealed to each other. As years pass by it becomes difficult for many to adjust with their life partner. Life becomes miserable such that one will see only the negative side of his or her partner. Lack of patience among the couples makes situations further worse. Simple solution is to have the courage and patience to accept the mystery of the personality of the partner being revealed day by day….Your prayer to Lord who has united in the sacrament of marriage is to give patience and courage to love and accept my life partner as he or she is…
 Recently I have read a blog of a renowned American author Richard Paul Evans titled 'How I saved my marriage’. He shares about the troubled days of his married life and how he has struggled to save his married life through self-understanding and mutual respect. In one of his troubled days, he experiences the loving provenience of God that enlightens him that he cannot change his partner but he can change only himself. This brings a tremendous change in his attitude towards his life partner. Everyday morning he began to ask his wife: “How can I make your day better?" Though initially, his wife did not respond positively later she was moved by her husband's ingenuity and openness. Then onwards there occurs a marked change in their life.
Before concluding I would like to appreciate parents of both Aditya and Jyotsana. They have undertaken a lot of sacrifices from their part in upbringing their children. Now they have a feeling of satisfaction in fulfilling their responsibility. Of course, they are the happiest people in the lot…. Moreover, I would like to remind Aditya and Jyotsana to ensure the loving providence of God in your life and strengthen your faith in Jesus to experience the blessings of the sacrament of marriage throughout your life. May the intercession of Mary, Mother of God who was at the wedding of Cana, be always with you always….
Once again on behalf of the entire community I wish you a happy married life. May… God Almighty shower his blessings to have a fruitful married life.

Sunday, 20 March 2016

Meditations on Palm Sunday

 


On Palm Sunday, we meditate on the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. This marks the beginning of the Passion Week. Jesus the prince of peace was on his journey to fulfil his mission entrusted by God the Father. Jesus begins his journey from Galilee (Lk. 9/51) and slowly proceeds  to Jerusalem. On his way, He taught his disciples and exhorted those who came to him and followed him. Jesus preached the word of God and healed many. Gospel of Luke reports the progress of his journey to Jerusalem through Jericho (Lk. 13/22) and finally to the outskirts of Jerusalem near the Mount of Olives (Lk. 19/28-29).
In the Old Testament (1Mac 13/51) the entry of Jews under the leadership of Simon with Palm leaves and music is depicted. They entered the fort in triumph defeating their enemies. Usually, when the King and his army march toward the capital city after winning the war people will gather around to pay homage and greet their leader.
Jesus entry into the city of Jerusalem is marked with pomp and glory. People have heard of Jesus, His teachings and acts of healing, He has performed in and around Galilee and on His way to Jerusalem. They were eager to welcome a Messiah who will politically deliver from the clutches of Roman rule. But Jesus was not as they expected. Jesus was there to remove them  from the clutches of sin. He was the prince of peace who came riding on a donkey fulfilling the prophecy of Zechariah. Zechariah 9:9: (reads) "Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout aloud, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your king is coming to you; righteous and having salvation is he, humble and mounted on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey." People hoping for a redeemer welcomed Him with palm leaves and throwing cloaks in the path as an act of homage and submission. They cried out singing Psalms 118/25-26, seeking his redemption.

Of course, Jesus was on his mission to redeem the entire humanity. He travelled from Galilee to Jerusalem to offer himself as paschal lamb in the holy city of Jerusalem for the sins of the humanity to deliver them completely from the clutches of darkness and sin.

Dear brethren as we meditate the triumphal entry of Jesus to Jerusalem to offer himself as the paschal lamb- complete offering to God, think about the triumph entries we have made in our lives and mode of  the offering.  The Sacrament of marriage, the sacrament of holy orders, religious vows, commitment to the offices we are entrusted…responsibilities… It is time to make a journey into our lives….Let this Holy week during which we revisit the passion and sufferings of Jesus be a time to ponder about the triumphed entries we have made in our lives and our commitment towards them.

Monday, 21 December 2015

Christmas: Revelation of God's Mercy

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It is Christmas time..... Hope all of you are creeping slowly to the Christmas mood. This year His Holiness Pope Francis has specially mentioned the importance of "MERCY" by declaring a Jubilee Year. Christmas is the time we revisit revelation of  God's Mercy...... of course revisit the face of God's Love.....in the incarnation of Jesus His only Son....For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son (Jn 3/16 a)......Yes God is so merciful to show his love to the entire humanity....that the the Good News proclaimed by the Angels on the silent Christmas night..."I bring you news of great joy, a joy to be shared by the whole people.11 Today in the town of David a Saviour has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord". (Lk. 2/10-11).. Yes the Good News is that "God has put his tent among the people". He has become Emmanuel.  Remembering the love and Mercy of God our father we too have to be Merciful. Mercy is a  virtue influencing one's will to have compassion for, and, if possible, to alleviate another's misfortune. Lord does not look the merit of the person...He sees him/her  in his or her own state and shower his grace with out considering his or her past, present or future..for he himself is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked.(Lk  6/35). In the parable of Good Samaritan (Lk 10/25.....) Jesus projects the Samaritan who has shown compassion to alleviate the misfortune of  the badly wounded man lying on the roadside as truly merciful and he is the neighbor. In the act of incarnation the merciful God gives his only Son in flesh to be with his Creation in space and time to be a true neighbor to alleviate their misfortunes.

 Christmas is the time to revisit our own lives to understand how God has showered his love and peace over us all through out the years. This Understanding will help us to celebrate Christmas with a renewed heart.... strengthening our relationship with God and our brethren...and showing a face of Mercy to all in and around....This is the spirit of Christmas......I would like to remember  the plot of the novel Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens where he portrays the character of  of Ebenezer Scrooge a miser........which I have studied in my school days...... Now I am able to feel the spirit of the story in my heart ...I want you too to share my feeling by sharing a brief summary of the novel..


Ebenezer Scrooge, a miserly, cold-hearted creditor, continues his stingy, greedy ways on Christmas Eve. He rejects a Christmas dinner invitation, and all the good tidings of the holiday, from his jolly nephew, Fred; he yells at charity workers; and he overworks his employee, Bob Cratchit. At night, Scrooge's former partner Jacob Marley, dead for seven years, visits him in the form of a ghost. Marley's spirit has been wandering since he died as punishment for being consumed with business and not with people while alive. He has come to warn Scrooge and perhaps save him from the same fate. He tells him Three Spirits will come to him over the next three nights.
Scrooge falls asleep and wakes up to find the Ghost of Christmas Past, a small, elderly figure. The Ghost shows Scrooge scenes from the past that trace Scrooge's development from a young boy, lonely but with the potential for happiness, to a young man with the first traces of greed that would deny love in his life. Scrooge shows newfound emotion when revisiting these scenes, often crying from identification with his former neglected self.
Scrooge goes to sleep and is awakened by the Ghost of Christmas Present, a giant with a life span of one day. He shows Scrooge several current scenes of Christmas joy and charity, then shows him the Cratchit household. The Ghost informs Scrooge that unless the future is changed, the Cratchit's crippled and good-hearted young son, Tiny Tim, will die. He also shows Scrooge the party at Fred's house. Finally, a ragged boy and girl crawl out from the Ghost's robes. The Ghost calls them Ignorance and Want and warns Scrooge to beware of Ignorance.
The silent, black-clad Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come replaces the other ghost. He shows Scrooge several scenes of people discussing someone's death; no one seems pained by the death, and most are happy about it. Scrooge does not know, however, who the man is. He learns that Tiny Tim has died, but the Cratchits maintain their unity and love. Scrooge finally discovers that he is the one who has died and whose death has only pleased people. He expresses the hope that these scenes of the future can be changed, and vows to incorporate the lessons of the past, present, and future into his adoption of the Christmas spirit.
Scrooge wakes up in his bedroom and learns that the whole adventure took only one night, not threeit is Christmas Day. In addition to smiling and being friendly to everyone he sees, he sends a large turkey to the Cratchits, gives a sizable donation to the charity worker he previously insulted, and has a wonderful time at Fred's party. The next day he gives Cratchit a raise. Scrooge continues his kindly ways after Christmas, befriending everyone and becoming a second father to Tiny Tim, who does not die. He never sees the ghosts again, but he keeps the spirit of Christmas alive in his heart as well as anyone.
 (courtesy: http://www.gradesaver.com/a-christmas-carol/study-guide/summary)

Ebenezer Scrooge changes his attitude and lives the rest of his life with generosity, good cheer, and compassion toward the worse off. Truly, he's become all about the spirit of Christmas.

Let us reform ourselves in the light of Christmas celebration and become renewed persons doing works of Mercy
  • To feed the hungry;
  • To give drink to the thirsty;
  • To clothe the naked;
  • To harbour the harbourless;
  • To visit the sick;
  • To ransom the captive;
  • To bury the dead.
The spiritual works of mercy are:

Wish you all a Merciful Christmas and the greeting of Jubilee year of Mercy. Let the babe of Bethlehem, be among your midst....... 

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