Mother
Teresa Shows Families How to Be Holy
NEW YORK, Mar. 22, 2010, 15:50 Hrs (Zenit.org):
Mother Teresa
encouraged working with the poor not only in the slums of India,
but primarily in our own families, says the author of a new
book about the nun.
Donna-Marie
Cooper O'Boyle is the author of the recently published "Mother
Teresa and Me: Ten Years of Friendship" (Circle Press).
She told
about her experiences with Mother Teresa, now recognized as
Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, and the ways in which the nun taught
the Missionaries of Charity, the congregation she founded, and
others to love Christ in the poor.
Mother Teresa
encouraged O'Boyle, a wife and mother, to live her vocation
well and to help other families thrive. Over the years, the
author has also written other books with this goal, including
"The Heart of Motherhood: Finding Holiness in the Catholic
Home," "The Domestic Church: Room By Room," and
"Grace Cafe: Serving Up Recipes for Faithful Mothering."
As well,
she is a host for Eternal Word Television Network, and will
soon be premiering a new series, "Everyday Blessings for
Catholic Moms."
O'Boyle
has written for several newspapers and magazines, and maintains
various personal blogs, including a new saints' Web site for
youth.
In this
interview with ZENIT, she spoke about the holiness of Mother
Teresa, and the ways in which her teachings can be implemented
in families today.
ZENIT:
In one point in your book, you talk about Mother Teresa's unshakeable
faith coupled with a feisty attitude; in another part you mention
that she was called extraordinarily ordinary. Yet you also say
that you have no doubt about Mother Teresa's eventual canonization.
What makes you so certain? How does the normality of your relationship
affect your belief that she is a saint?
O'Boyle:
My relationship with Mother Teresa was certainly normal but
I feel that it was extraordinary as well because I never had
a doubt that I was visiting and corresponding with a living
saint.
I saw great
holiness in everything about Mother Teresa -- in her speech,
her posture, her demeanor, the "glow' about her that radiated
Christ's love, peace, and joy.
I knew that
she truly lived the Gospel of Matthew: "Whatever you do
to the least of these that are in my family, you do to me."
She lived
her life, her every moment to satiate the thirst of Christ for
souls.
She prayed
that Jesus would live through her while she also served the
Jesus living in all she met, which of course was from that same
Gospel message (Matthew 25: 31-46): "You did it to me."
Since her life echoed the crux of that passage I just knew that
she was an absolute living saint who brought countless souls
to God.
I also knew
about her deep prayer life centered on the Eucharist as well
as her intimate devotion to our Blessed Mother.
And even
with all of this holiness, she wasn't an abstract saint from
hundreds of years ago and no stranger to the realities of modern
life. She met each person right where they were coming from
and ministered to them at their unique level and state of life.
ZENIT:
You describe how Mother Teresa saw Jesus in the face
of each poor person, and this was the reason behind all of the
work that she did and taught her Missionaries of Charity to
do. How did she teach people to see others in this way? Many
of us have a hard time seeing Jesus in our own family members,
let alone the social outcasts of the world. Is there something
she told you that helped you to understand her secret?
O'Boyle:
Yes, the answer is very simple: Jesus taught us all how to see
him in others in the Gospel of Matthew.
He taught
us that everything we do to others we do to Jesus. Mother Teresa
believed this concept wholeheartedly and served Our Lord in
everyone.
Mother Teresa
often said that it is far easier to serve or love Jesus in strangers
and outcasts than it is to serve him in our own families, easier
to give a dish of rice to a poor person on the other side of
the world or to a complete stranger than to give that "dish
of rice" to someone who is starving for love right under
our own roof.
In very
simple ways, she taught others to do the same as she did. She
would simply raise up her hand and holding up each finger she
would say, "You-did-it-to- me," in this manner teaching
us that we can even be reminded of our duty to love Jesus in
others every time we look upon our hands.
ZENIT:
So many of us are surrounded by those "creature comforts"
that Mother Teresa rejected for herself and her missionaries.
Yet, especially when the economy is tough, we could all use
her example of trust in Divine providence. Could you say more
about the way she lived this virtue, and how modern families
can live it as well?
O'Boyle:
Blessed Mother Teresa would not own or use anything that she
considered to be unnecessary or extravagant in her daily life
and would not allow the Missionary of Charity Sisters to either.
She believed
that they shouldn't own or use anything that the poor didn't
own themselves.
They don't
use the things that we might consider to be staple items, such
as carpeting, hot water, and fans or air conditioning.
She wanted
the sisters to truly understand the plight of the poor and also
felt that to be free of belongings would also allow the soul
to be free to cling to Our Lord for everything, as well as help
one to develop a deeper and more genuine love for God.
Modern day
families might consider how they can live with a little less.
If we had
less material objects to worry about, we might find that we
have more time to tend to essential things and to be more present
to one another.
Families
today can pray together for an increase in faith, hope, and
love. They can pray to offer their lives to God in full surrender,
accepting God's holy will in their lives, asking him for all
of their needs.
As Mother
Teresa and her nuns have felt a deep freedom in giving their
lives completely over to God and accepting whatever he gives
them, families can strive to emulate that virtuous way of living
as well.
ZENIT:
Mother Teresa told you that your first apostolate should be
to your family, husband and children, and she also placed importance
on your writing for mothers, women and families. Why do you
think she emphasized this?
O'Boyle:
Mother Teresa often said, "Love begins at home."
That's where
God puts us -- right in the middle of our family's life, right
in the heart of the home. She instructed others to focus on
the ones that are in our midst, starting with our families and
then to reach out to others in need.
She knew
that we shouldn't run off to do charity work when we may have
family members at home needing our presence.
Yes, Mother
Teresa encouraged me to write for women and families because
she was acutely aware of the breakdown of the family in our
day and the fact that we need to help and encourage the family
-- the vital cell of society.
We need
to steer mothers and women in the right direction so that families
will be protected from further breakdown.
Mothers
and women in general can use much encouragement in a world that
tears down the family, promotes killing our own unborn children
through abortion and abortifacients, and euthanizing the elderly.
We must pray and help the family.
ZENIT:
You often brought your children, even at a young age, while
following Mother Teresa in different venues around the country.
How did you see your children affected by their nearness to
holy people? Did they ever protest these religious events?
O'Boyle:
I always felt that I should bring my children as near to holiness
as possible as I raised them.
I brought
my children to daily Mass whenever I could, visits to the Blessed
Sacrament, and near to any living "saint" I knew!
They never
protested. It was their way of life. We must train our children
in lives of holiness and prayer so that it will become as natural
as breathing to them.
ZENIT:
Mother Teresa said that we need to take care of the poor in
our own homes first, but it seems easier sometimes to send a
monetary donation to Haiti. How would she suggest that we go
about taking those steps toward reaching out to the "poor"
around us?
O'Boyle:
"Love begins at home," she would say.
It is much
easier to write out a check or even venture out to do charity
work in some far-off land but it would be wrong to neglect our
own families in the process.
To reach
out to the "poor" around us we only need to open our
eyes and hearts to see where there is a need.
Do we have
a child that requires more of us, a spouse who feels neglected?
Is there someone who is cranky but is really starving for our
love? Do we have elderly parents who are lonely and crave a
visit or some attention?
We have
to trust Our Lord that he knows what he is doing in putting
us together with our family members and neighbours. We all help
to work out one another's sanctification too.
I believe
that it starts first thing in the morning in the words of the
Morning Offering, giving everything over to Our Lord so that
he will sanctify all of our prayers, works, joys, and sufferings
of the day.
We must
also respond with love to each person we meet along the way,
particularly the ones who contradict us, antagonize us and annoy
us!
God calls
us to holiness in the here and now of our lives right in the
nitty-gritty details.