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BEATIFICATION OF MOTHER THERESA OF CALCUTTA
HOMILY
OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
World
Mission Sunday
Sunday, 19 October 2003
1. "Whoever would be first among you must be slave of all"
(Mk10: 44). Jesus' words to his disciples that have just rung out in this
Square show us the way to evangelical "greatness". It is the way walked by
Christ himself that took him to the Cross: a journey of love and service
that overturns all human logic. To be the servant of all!
Mother Teresa of Calcutta,
Foundress of the Missionaries of Charity whom today I have the joy of adding
to the Roll of the Blesseds, allowed this logic to guide her. I am
personally grateful to this courageous woman whom I have always felt beside
me. Mother Teresa, an icon of the Good Samaritan, went everywhere to
serve Christ in the poorest of the poor. Not even conflict and war could
stand in her way.
Every now and then she would come
and tell me about her experiences in her service to the Gospel values. I
remember, for example, her pro-life and anti-abortion interventions, even
when she was awarded the Nobel Prize for peace (Oslo, 10 December 1979). She
often used to say: "If you hear of some woman who does not want to keep her
child and wants to have an abortion, try to persuade her to bring him to me.
I will love that child, seeing in him the sign of God's love".
2. Is it not significant that her
beatification is taking place on the very day on which the Church celebrates
World Mission Sunday?
With the witness of her life, Mother Teresa
reminds everyone that the evangelizing mission of the Church passes
through charity, nourished by prayer and listening to God's word.
Emblematic of this missionary style is the image that shows the new Blessed
clasping a child's hand in one hand while moving her Rosary beads with the
other.
Contemplation and action,
evangelization and human promotion: Mother Teresa proclaimed the Gospel
living her life as a total gift to the poor but, at the same time,
steeped in prayer.
3. Whoever wants to be great
among you must be your servant" (Mk 10: 43). With particular emotion we
remember today
Mother Teresa, a
great servant of the poor, of the Church and of the whole world. Her life is
a testimony to the dignity and the privilege of humble service. She had
chosen to be not just the least but to be the servant of the least.
As a real mother to the poor, she bent down to those suffering various forms
of poverty. Her greatness lies in her ability to give without counting the
cost, to give "until it hurts". Her life was a radical living and a bold
proclamation of the Gospel.
The cry of Jesus on the Cross,
"I thirst" (Jn 19: 28), expressing the depth of God's longing for man,
penetrated Mother Teresa's soul and found fertile soil in her heart.
Satiating Jesus' thirst for love and for souls in union with Mary, the
Mother of Jesus, had become the sole aim of Mother Teresa's existence and
the inner force that drew her out of herself and made her "run in haste"
across the globe to labour for the salvation and the sanctification of the
poorest of the poor.
4. "As you did to one of the
least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mt 25: 40). This Gospel
passage, so crucial in understanding Mother Teresa's service to the poor,
was the basis of her faith-filled conviction that in touching the broken
bodies of the poor she was touching the body of Christ. It was to Jesus
himself, hidden under the distressing disguise of the poorest of the poor,
that her service was directed. Mother Teresa highlights the deepest meaning
of service - an act of love done to the hungry, thirsty, strangers, naked,
sick, prisoners (cf. Mt 25: 34-36) is done to Jesus himself.
Recognizing him, she ministered to
him with wholehearted devotion, expressing the delicacy of her spousal love.
Thus, in total gift of herself to God and neighbour, Mother Teresa found her
greatest fulfilment and lived the noblest qualities of her femininity.
She wanted to be a sign of "God's love, God's presence and God's
compassion", and so remind all of the value and dignity of each of God's
children, "created to love and be loved". Thus was Mother Teresa "bringing
souls to God and God to souls" and satiating Christ's thirst, especially for
those most in need, those whose vision of God had been dimmed by suffering
and pain.
5. "The Son of man also came...
to give his life as a ransom for many" (Mk 10: 45). Mother Teresa shared
in the Passion of the crucified Christ in a special way during long years of
"inner darkness". For her that was a test, at times an agonizing one, which
she accepted as a rare "gift and privilege".
In the darkest hours she clung even
more tenaciously to prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. This harsh
spiritual trial led her to identify herself more and more closely with
those whom she served each day, feeling their pain and, at times, even
their rejection. She was fond of repeating that the greatest poverty is
to be unwanted, to have no one to take care of you.
6. "Lord, let your mercy be on
us, as we place our trust in you". How often, like the Psalmist, did
Mother Teresa call on
her Lord in times of inner desolation: "In you, in you I hope, my God!".
Let us praise the Lord for this
diminutive woman in love with God, a humble Gospel messenger and a
tireless benefactor of humanity. In her we honour one of the most important
figures of our time. Let us welcome her message and follow her example.
Virgin Mary, Queen of all the
Saints, help us to be gentle and humble of heart like this fearless
messenger of Love. Help us to serve every person we meet with joy and a
smile. Help us to be missionaries of Christ, our peace and our hope. Amen!
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