Jesus
has a very special love for you. As for me, the silence and the emptiness is so
great that I look and do not see, listen and do not hear. (Mother Teresa to the Rev. Michael Van Der Peet, September 1979)
On
Dec. 11, 1979, Mother Teresa, the "Saint of the Gutters," went to
Oslo. Dressed in her signature blue-bordered sari and shod in sandals despite
below-zero temperatures, the former Agnes Bojaxhiu received that ultimate
worldly accolade, the Nobel Peace Prize. In her acceptance lecture, Teresa,
whose Missionaries of Charity had grown from a one-woman folly in Calcutta in
1948 into a global beacon of self-abnegating care, delivered the kind of
message the world had come to expect from her. "It is not enough for us to
say, 'I love God, but I do not love my neighbor,'" she said, since in
dying on the Cross, God had "[made] himself the hungry one — the naked one
— the homeless one." Jesus' hunger, she said, is what "you and I must
find" and alleviate. She condemned abortion and bemoaned youthful drug
addiction in the West. Finally, she suggested that the upcoming Christmas
holiday should remind the world "that radiating joy is real" because
Christ is everywhere — "Christ in our hearts, Christ in the poor we meet,
Christ in the smile we give and in the smile that we receive."
Yet
less than three months earlier, in a letter to a spiritual confidant, the Rev.
Michael van der Peet, that is only now being made public, she wrote with weary
familiarity of a different Christ, an absent one. "Jesus has a very
special love for you," she assured Van der Peet. "[But] as for me,
the silence and the emptiness is so great, that I look and do not see, — Listen
and do not hear — the tongue moves [in prayer] but does not speak ... I want
you to pray for me — that I let Him have [a] free hand."
The
two statements, 11 weeks apart, are extravagantly dissonant. The first is
typical of the woman the world thought it knew. The second sounds as though it
had wandered in from some 1950s existentialist drama. Together they suggest a
startling portrait in self-contradiction — that one of the great human icons of
the past 100 years, whose remarkable deeds seemed inextricably connected to her
closeness to God and who was routinely observed in silent and seemingly
peaceful prayer by her associates as well as the television camera, was living
out a very different spiritual reality privately, an arid landscape from which
the deity had disappeared.
And
in fact, that appears to be the case. A new, innocuously titled book, Mother
Teresa: Come Be My Light (Doubleday), consisting primarily of correspondence
between Teresa and her confessors and superiors over a period of 66 years,
provides the spiritual counterpoint to a life known mostly through its works.
The letters, many of them preserved against her wishes (she had requested that
they be destroyed but was overruled by her church), reveal that for the last
nearly half-century of her life she felt no presence of God whatsoever — or, as
the book's compiler and editor, the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk, writes,
"neither in her heart or in the eucharist."
That
absence seems to have started at almost precisely the time she began tending
the poor and dying in Calcutta, and — except for a five-week break in 1959 —
never abated. Although perpetually cheery in public, the Teresa of the letters
lived in a state of deep and abiding spiritual pain. In more than 40
communications, many of which have never before been published, she bemoans the
"dryness," "darkness," "loneliness" and "torture"
she is undergoing. She compares the experience to hell and at one point says it
has driven her to doubt the existence of heaven and even of God. She is acutely
aware of the discrepancy between her inner state and her public demeanor. "The
smile," she writes, is "a mask" or "a cloak that covers
everything." Similarly, she wonders whether she is engaged in verbal
deception. "I spoke as if my very heart was in love with God — tender,
personal love," she remarks to an adviser. "If you were [there], you
would have said, 'What hypocrisy.'" Says the Rev. James Martin, an editor
at the Jesuit magazine America and the author of My Life with the Saints, a
book that dealt with far briefer reports in 2003 of Teresa's doubts: "I've
never read a saint's life where the saint has such an intense spiritual
darkness. No one knew she was that tormented." Recalls Kolodiejchuk, Come
Be My Light's editor: "I read one letter to the Sisters [of Teresa's
Missionaries of Charity], and their mouths just dropped open. It will give a
whole new dimension to the way people understand her."
The
book is hardly the work of some antireligious investigative reporter who
Dumpster-dived for Teresa's correspondence. Kolodiejchuk, a senior Missionaries
of Charity member, is her postulator, responsible for petitioning for her
sainthood and collecting the supporting materials. (Thus far she has been
beatified; the next step is canonization.) The letters in the book were
gathered as part of that process.
The
church anticipates spiritually fallow periods. Indeed, the Spanish mystic St.
John of the Cross in the 16th century coined the term the "dark
night" of the soul to describe a characteristic stage in the growth of
some spiritual masters. Teresa's may be the most extensive such case on record.
(The "dark night" of the 18th century mystic St. Paul of the Cross
lasted 45 years; he ultimately recovered.) Yet Kolodiejchuk sees it in St.
John's context, as darkness within faith. Teresa found ways, starting in the
early 1960s, to live with it and abandoned neither her belief nor her work.
Kolodiejchuk produced the book as proof of the faith-filled perseverance that
he sees as her most spiritually heroic act.
Two
very different Catholics predict that the book will be a landmark. The Rev.
Matthew Lamb, chairman of the theology department at the conservative Ave Maria
University in Florida, thinks Come Be My Light will eventually rank with St.
Augustine's Confessions and Thomas Merton's The Seven Storey Mountain as an
autobiography of spiritual ascent. Martin of America, a much more liberal
institution, calls the book "a new ministry for Mother Teresa, a written
ministry of her interior life," and says, "It may be remembered as
just as important as her ministry to the poor. It would be a ministry to people
who had experienced some doubt, some absence of God in their lives. And you
know who that is? Everybody. Atheists, doubters, seekers, believers,
everyone."
Not
all atheists and doubters will agree. Both Kolodiejchuk and Martin assume that
Teresa's inability to perceive Christ in her life did not mean he wasn't there.
In fact, they see his absence as part of the divine gift that enabled her to do
great work. But to the U.S.'s increasingly assertive cadre of atheists, that
argument will seem absurd. They will see the book's Teresa more like the woman
in the archetypal country-and-western song who holds a torch for her husband 30
years after he left to buy a pack of cigarettes and never returned. Says
Christopher Hitchens, author of The Missionary Position, a scathing polemic on
Teresa, and more recently of the atheist manifesto God Is Not Great: "She
was no more exempt from the realization that religion is a human fabrication
than any other person, and that her attempted cure was more and more professions
of faith could only have deepened the pit that she had dug for herself."
Meanwhile, some familiar with the smiling mother's extraordinary drive may
diagnose her condition less as a gift of God than as a subconscious attempt at
the most radical kind of humility: she punished herself with a crippling
failure to counterbalance her great successes.
Come
Be My Light is that rare thing, a posthumous autobiography that could cause a
wholesale reconsideration of a major public figure — one way or another. It
raises questions about God and faith, the engine behind great achievement, and
the persistence of love, divine and human. That it does so not in any
organized, intentional form but as a hodgepodge of desperate notes not intended
for daylight should leave readers only more convinced that it is authentic —
and that they are, somewhat shockingly, touching the true inner life of a
modern saint.
Prequel:
Near Ecstatic Communion
[Jesus:]
Wilt thou refuse to do this for me? ... You have become my Spouse for my love —
you have come to India for Me. The thirst you had for souls brought you so far
— Are you afraid to take one more step for Your Spouse — for me — for souls? Is
your generosity grown cold? Am I a second to you?
[Teresa:]
Jesus, my own Jesus — I am only Thine — I am so stupid — I do not know what to
say but do with me whatever You wish — as You wish — as long as you wish. [But]
why can't I be a perfect Loreto Nun — here — why can't I be like everybody
else.
[Jesus:]
I want Indian Nuns, Missionaries of Charity, who would be my fire of love
amongst the poor, the sick, the dying and the little children ... You are I
know the most incapable person — weak and sinful but just because you are that
— I want to use You for My glory. Wilt thou refuse? (in
a prayer dialogue recounted to Archbishop Ferdinand Perier, January 1947)
On
Sept. 10, 1946, after 17 years as a teacher in Calcutta with the Loreto Sisters
(an uncloistered, education-oriented community based in Ireland), Mother Mary
Teresa, 36, took the 400-mile (645-km) train trip to Darjeeling. She had been
working herself sick, and her superiors ordered her to relax during her annual
retreat in the Himalayan foothills. On the ride out, she reported, Christ spoke
to her. He called her to abandon teaching and work instead in "the
slums" of the city, dealing directly with "the poorest of the
poor" — the sick, the dying, beggars and street children. "Come,
Come, carry Me into the holes of the poor," he told her. "Come be My
light." The goal was to be both material and evangelistic — as
Kolodiejchuk puts it, "to help them live their lives with dignity [and so]
encounter God's infinite love, and having come to know Him, to love and serve
Him in return."
It
was wildly audacious — an unfunded, single-handed crusade (Teresa stipulated
that she and her nuns would share their beneficiaries' poverty and started out
alone) to provide individualized service to the poorest in a poor city made
desperate by riots. The local Archbishop, Ferdinand Périer, was initially
skeptical. But her letters to him, preserved, illustrate two linked
characteristics — extreme tenacity and a profound personal bond to Christ. When
Périer hesitated, Teresa, while calling herself a "little nothing," bombarded
him with notes suggesting that he refer the question to an escalating list of
authorities — the local apostolic delegation, her Mother General, the Pope. And
when she felt all else had failed, she revealed the spiritual topper: a
dramatic (melodramatic, really) dialogue with a "Voice" she
eventually revealed to be Christ's. It ended with Jesus' emphatic reiteration
of his call to her: "You are I know the most incapable person — weak and
sinful but just because you are that — I want to use You for My glory. Wilt
thou refuse?"
Mother
Teresa had visions, including one of herself conversing with Christ on the
Cross. Her confessor, Father Celeste Van Exem, was convinced that her mystical
experiences were genuine. "[Her] union with Our Lord has been continual
and so deep and violent that rapture does not seem very far," he
commented. Teresa later wrote simply, "Jesus gave Himself to me."
Then
on Jan. 6, 1948, Périer, after consulting the Vatican, finally gave permission
for Teresa to embark on her second calling. And Jesus took himself away again.
The
Onset
Lord,
my God, who am I that You should forsake me? The Child of your Love — and now
become as the most hated one — the one — You have thrown away as unwanted —
unloved. I call, I cling, I want — and there is no One to answer — no One on
Whom I can cling — no, No One. — Alone ... 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.
So
many unanswered questions live within me afraid to uncover them — because of
the blasphemy — If there be God — please forgive me — When I try to raise my
thoughts to Heaven — there is such convicting emptiness that those very
thoughts return like sharp knives & hurt my very soul. — I am told God
loves me — and yet the reality of darkness & coldness & emptiness is so
great that nothing touches my soul. Did I make a mistake in surrendering
blindly to the Call of the Sacred Heart? ( addressed to Jesus, at the suggestion of a confessor, undated)
In
the first half of 1948, Teresa took a basic medical course before launching
herself alone onto the streets of Calcutta. She wrote, "My soul at present
is in perfect peace and joy." Kolodiejchuk includes her moving description
of her first day on the job: "The old man lying on the street — not wanted
— all alone just sick and dying — I gave him carborsone and water to drink and
the old Man — was so strangely grateful ... Then we went to Taltala Bazaar, and
there was a very poor woman dying I think of starvation more than TB ... I gave
her something which will help her to sleep. — I wonder how long she will
last." But two months later, shortly after her major triumph of locating a
space for her headquarters, Kolodiejchuk's files find her troubled. "What
tortures of loneliness," she wrote. "I wonder how long will my heart
suffer this?" This complaint could be understood as an initial response to
solitude and hardship were it not for subsequent letters. The more success
Teresa had — and half a year later so many young women had joined her society
that she needed to move again — the worse she felt. In March 1953, she wrote
Périer, "Please pray specially for me that I may not spoil His work and
that Our Lord may show Himself — for there is such terrible darkness within me,
as if everything was dead. It has been like this more or less from the time I
started 'the work.'"
Périer
may have missed the note of desperation. "God guides you, dear
Mother," he answered avuncularly. "You are not so much in the dark as
you think ... You have exterior facts enough to see that God blesses your work
... Feelings are not required and often may be misleading." And yet
feelings — or rather, their lack — became her life's secret torment. How can
you assume the lover's ardor when he no longer grants you his voice, his touch,
his very presence? The problem was exacerbated by an inhibition to even
describe it. Teresa reported on several occasions inviting a confessor to visit
and then being unable to speak. Eventually, one thought to ask her to write the
problem down, and she complied. "The more I want him — the less I am
wanted," she wrote Périer in 1955. A year later she sounded desolate:
"Such deep longing for God — and ... repulsed — empty — no faith — no love
— no zeal. — [The saving of] Souls holds no attraction — Heaven means nothing —
pray for me please that I keep smiling at Him in spite of everything."
At
the suggestion of a confessor, she wrote the agonized plea that begins this
section, in which she explored the theological worst-possible-case implications
of her dilemma. That letter and another one from 1959 ("What do I labour
for? If there be no God — there can be no soul — if there is no Soul then Jesus
— You also are not true") are the only two that sound any note of doubt of
God's existence. But she frequently bemoaned an inability to pray: "I utter
words of Community prayers — and try my utmost to get out of every word the
sweetness it has to give — But my prayer of union is not there any longer — I
no longer pray."
As
the Missionaries of Charity flourished and gradually gained the attention of
her church and the world at large, Teresa progressed from confessor to
confessor the way some patients move through their psychoanalysts. Van Exem
gave way to Périer, who gave way in 1959 to the Rev. (later Cardinal) Lawrence
Picachy, who was succeeded by the Rev. Joseph Neuner in 1961. By the 1980s the
chain included figures such as Bishop William Curlin of Charlotte, N.C. For
these confessors, she developed a kind of shorthand of pain, referring almost
casually to "my darkness" and to Jesus as "the Absent One."
There was one respite. In October 1958, Pope Pius XII died, and requiem Masses
were celebrated around the Catholic world. Teresa prayed to the deceased Pope
for a "proof that God is pleased with the Society." And "then
and there," she rejoiced, "disappeared the long darkness ... that
strange suffering of 10 years." Unfortunately, five weeks later she
reported being "in the tunnel" once more. And although, as we shall
see, she found a way to accept the absence, it never lifted again. Five years
after her Nobel, a Jesuit priest in the Calcutta province noted that
"Mother came ... to speak about the excruciating night in her soul. It was
not a passing phase but had gone on for years." A 1995 letter discussed
her "spiritual dryness." She died in 1997.
Explanations
Tell
me, Father, why is there so much pain and darkness in my soul? (to
the Rev. Lawrence Picachy, August 1959)
Why
did Teresa's communication with Jesus, so vivid and nourishing in the months
before the founding of the Missionaries, evaporate so suddenly? Interestingly,
secular and religious explanations travel for a while on parallel tracks. Both
understand (although only one celebrates) that identification with Christ's
extended suffering on the Cross, undertaken to redeem humanity, is a key aspect
of Catholic spirituality. Teresa told her nuns that physical poverty ensured
empathy in "giving themselves" to the suffering poor and established
a stronger bond with Christ's redemptive agony. She wrote in 1951 that the
Passion was the only aspect of Jesus' life that she was interested in sharing:
"I want to ... drink ONLY [her emphasis] from His chalice of pain."
And so she did, although by all indications not in a way she had expected.
Kolodiejchuk
finds divine purpose in the fact that Teresa's spiritual spigot went dry just
as she prevailed over her church's perceived hesitations and saw a successful
way to realize Jesus' call for her. "She was a very strong personality,"
he suggests. "And a strong personality needs stronger purification"
as an antidote to pride. As proof that it worked, he cites her written comment
after receiving an important prize in the Philippines in the 1960s: "This
means nothing to me, because I don't have Him."
And
yet "the question is, Who determined the abandonment she
experienced?" says Dr. Richard Gottlieb, a teacher at the New York
Psychoanalytic Society & Institute who has written about the church and who
was provided a copy of the book by TIME. "Could she have imposed it on
herself?" Psychologists have long recognized that people of a certain
personality type are conflicted about their high achievement and find ways to
punish themselves. Gottlieb notes that Teresa's ambitions for her ministry were
tremendous. Both he and Kolodiejchuk are fascinated by her statement, "I
want to love Jesus as he has never been loved before." Remarks the priest:
"That's a kind of daring thing to say." Yet her letters are full of inner
conflict about her accomplishments. Rather than simply giving all credit to
God, Gottlieb observes, she agonizes incessantly that "any taking credit
for her accomplishments — if only internally — is sinful" and hence,
perhaps, requires a price to be paid. A mild secular analog, he says, might be
an executive who commits a horrific social gaffe at the instant of a crucial
promotion. For Teresa, "an occasion for a modicum of joy initiated a
significant quantity of misery," and her subsequent successes led her to perpetuate
it.
Gottlieb
also suggests that starting her ministry "may have marked a turning point
in her relationship with Jesus," whose urgent claims she was finally in a
position to fulfill. Being the active party, he speculates, might have scared
her, and in the end, the only way to accomplish great things might have been in
the permanent and less risky role of the spurned yet faithful lover.
The
atheist position is simpler. In 1948, Hitchens ventures, Teresa finally woke
up, although she could not admit it. He likens her to die-hard Western
communists late in the cold war: "There was a huge amount of cognitive
dissonance," he says. "They thought, 'Jesus, the Soviet Union is a
failure, [but] I'm not supposed to think that. It means my life is meaningless.'
They carried on somehow, but the mainspring was gone. And I think once the
mainspring is gone, it cannot be repaired." That, he says, was Teresa.
Most
religious readers will reject that explanation, along with any that makes her
the author of her own misery — or even defines it as true misery. Martin,
responding to the torch-song image of Teresa, counterproposes her as the
heroically constant spouse. "Let's say you're married and you fall in love
and you believe with all your heart that marriage is a sacrament. And your
wife, God forbid, gets a stroke and she's comatose. And you will never
experience her love again. It's like loving and caring for a person for 50
years and once in a while you complain to your spiritual director, but you know
on the deepest level that she loves you even though she's silent and that what
you're doing makes sense. Mother Teresa knew that what she was doing made
sense."
Integration
I
can't express in words — the gratitude I owe you for your kindness to me — for
the first time in ... years — I have come to love the darkness — for I believe
now that it is part of a very, very small part of Jesus' darkness & pain on
earth. You have taught me to accept it [as] a 'spiritual side of your work' as
you wrote — Today really I felt a deep joy — that Jesus can't go anymore
through the agony — but that He wants to go through it in me. (to
Neuner, Circa 1961)
There
are two responses to trauma: to hold onto it in all its vividness and remain
its captive, or without necessarily "conquering" it, to gradually
integrate it into the day-by-day. After more than a decade of open-wound agony,
Teresa seems to have begun regaining her spiritual equilibrium with the help of
a particularly perceptive adviser. The Rev. Joseph Neuner, whom she met in the
late 1950s and confided in somewhat later, was already a well-known theologian,
and when she turned to him with her "darkness," he seems to have told
her the three things she needed to hear: that there was no human remedy for it
(that is, she should not feel responsible for affecting it); that feeling Jesus
is not the only proof of his being there, and her very craving for God was a
"sure sign" of his "hidden presence" in her life; and that
the absence was in fact part of the "spiritual side" of her work for
Jesus.
This
counsel clearly granted Teresa a tremendous sense of release. For all that she
had expected and even craved to share in Christ's Passion, she had not
anticipated that she might recapitulate the particular moment on the Cross when
he asks, "My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?" The idea that
rather than a nihilistic vacuum, his felt absence might be the ordeal she had
prayed for, that her perseverance in its face might echo his faith unto death
on the Cross, that it might indeed be a grace, enhancing the efficacy of her
calling, made sense of her pain. Neuner would later write, "It was the
redeeming experience of her life when she realized that the night of her heart
was the special share she had in Jesus' passion." And she thanked Neuner
profusely: "I can't express in words — the gratitude I owe you for your
kindness to me — for the first time in ... years — I have come to love the darkness.
"
Not that
it didn't continue to torment her. Years later, describing the joy in Jesus
experienced by some of her nuns, she observed dryly to Neuner, "I just
have the joy of having nothing — not even the reality of the Presence of God
[in the Eucharist]." She described her soul as like an "ice
block." Yet she recognized Neuner's key distinction, writing, "I
accept not in my feelings — but with my will, the Will of God — I accept His
will." Although she still occasionally worried that she might "turn a
Judas to Jesus in this painful darkness," with the passage of years the
absence morphed from a potential wrecking ball into a kind of ragged
cornerstone. Says Gottlieb, the psychoanalyst: "What is remarkable is that
she integrated it in a way that enabled her to make it the organizing center of
her personality, the beacon for her ongoing spiritual life." Certainly,
she understood it as essential enough to project it into her afterlife.
"If I ever become a Saint — I will surely be one of 'darkness.' I will continually
be absent from Heaven — to [light] the light of those in darkness on
earth," she wrote in 1962. Theologically, this is a bit odd since most
orthodox Christianity defines heaven as God's eternal presence and doesn't
really provide for regular no-shows at the heavenly feast. But it is,
Kolodiejchuk suggests, her most moving statement, since the sacrifice involved
is infinite. "When she wrote, 'I am willing to suffer ... for all
eternity, if this [is] possible,'" he says, "I said, Wow."
He
contends that the letters reveal her as holier than anyone knew. However
formidable her efforts on Christ's behalf, it is even more astounding to
realize that she achieved them when he was not available to her — a bit like a
person who believes she can't walk winning the Olympic 100 meters. Kolodiejchuk
goes even further. Catholic theologians recognize two types of "dark
night": the first is purgative, cleansing the contemplative for a
"final union" with Christ; the second is "reparative," and
continues after such a union, so that he or she may participate in a state of
purity even closer to that of Jesus and Mary, who suffered for human salvation
despite being without sin. By the end, writes Kolodiejchuk, "by all
indications this was the case with Mother Teresa." That puts her in
rarefied company.
A
New Ministry
If
this brings You glory — if souls are brought to you — with joy I accept all to
the end of my life. (to
Jesus, undated)
But
for most people, Teresa's ranking among Catholic saints may be less important
than a more general implication of Come Be My Light: that if she could carry on
for a half-century without God in her head or heart, then perhaps people not
quite as saintly can cope with less extreme versions of the same problem. One
powerful instance of this may have occurred very early on. In 1968, British
writer-turned-filmmaker Malcolm Muggeridge visited Teresa. Muggeridge had been
an outspoken agnostic, but by the time he arrived with a film crew in Calcutta
he was in full spiritual-search mode. Beyond impressing him with her work and
her holiness, she wrote a letter to him in 1970 that addressed his doubts
full-bore. "Your longing for God is so deep and yet He keeps Himself away
from you," she wrote. "He must be forcing Himself to do so — because
he loves you so much — the personal love Christ has for you is infinite — The
Small difficulty you have re His Church is finite — Overcome the finite with
the infinite." Muggeridge apparently did. He became an outspoken Christian
apologist and converted to Catholicism in 1982. His 1969 film, Something
Beautiful for God, supported by a 1971 book of the same title, made Teresa an
international sensation.
At
the time, Muggeridge was something of a unique case. A child of privilege who
became a minor celebrity, he was hardly Teresa's target audience. Now, with the
publication of Come Be My Light, we can all play Muggeridge. Kolodiejchuk
thinks the book may act as an antidote to a cultural problem. "The
tendency in our spiritual life but also in our more general attitude toward
love is that our feelings are all that is going on," he says. "And so
to us the totality of love is what we feel. But to really love someone requires
commitment, fidelity and vulnerability. Mother Teresa wasn't 'feeling' Christ's
love, and she could have shut down. But she was up at 4:30 every morning for
Jesus, and still writing to him, 'Your happiness is all I want.' That's a
powerful example even if you are not talking in exclusively religious
terms."
America's
Martin wants to talk precisely in religious terms. "Everything she's
experiencing," he says, "is what average believers experience in
their spiritual lives writ large. I have known scores of people who have felt
abandoned by God and had doubts about God's existence. And this book expresses
that in such a stunning way but shows her full of complete trust at the same
time." He takes a breath. "Who would have thought that the person who
was considered the most faithful woman in the world struggled like that with
her faith?" he asks. "And who would have thought that the one thought
to be the most ardent of believers could be a saint to the skeptics?"
Martin has long used Teresa as an example to parishioners of self-emptying
love. Now, he says, he will use her extraordinary faith in the face of
overwhelming silence to illustrate how doubt is a natural part of everyone's
life, be it an average believer's or a world-famous saint's.
Into
the Light of Day
Please
destroy any letters or anything I have written. (to
Picachy, April 1959)
Consistent
with her ongoing fight against pride, Teresa's rationale for suppressing her
personal correspondence was "I want the work to remain only His." If
the letters became public, she explained to Picachy, "people will think
more of me — less of Jesus."
The
particularly holy are no less prone than the rest of us to misjudge the
workings of history — or, if you will, of God's providence. Teresa considered
the perceived absence of God in her life as her most shameful secret but
eventually learned that it could be seen as a gift abetting her calling. If her
worries about publicizing it also turn out to be misplaced — if a book of
hasty, troubled notes turns out to ease the spiritual road of thousands of
fellow believers, there would be no shame in having been wrong — but happily,
even wonderfully wrong — twice.
Fonte: Time.

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