Glenn Beck
Mother Teresa a Political Philosopher?
Normally I would not deal with political issues in this blog, but since the subject of Mother Teresa was brought up by Anita Dunn, a White House media strategist, I am making an exception. It seems that Ms. Dunn gave a talk this spring to some high school students in which she stated that her two favorite political philosophers are Mao Tse-tung and Mother Teresa. In the clip shown on Glenn Beck’s show and which is available on YouTube for the entire world to see, Ms. Dunn continued her address by extolling Mao to the students and elaborating on his philosophy.
I am not going to address the myriad issues here of how a communist sympathizer came to be addressing impressionable youth, nor why the students are being exposed to uncritical and positive remarks about communism and a brutal communist leader who was responsible for the deaths of millions of Chinese and a total degradation of the people of his country. Instead I want to correct the falsehood that Mother Teresa was a political philosopher. She was no such thing any more than Jesus was.
Granted, we all tend to filter reality and information through our areas of expertise. Mathematicians and scientists apply their knowledge to events through their scientific filters, musicians and artists through their aesthetic filters, and politicians through their power filters. It is no surprise that a person as deeply involved in politics for her total career as Ms. Dunn has been would interpret Mother Teresa’s words and actions from within her own political construct.
Mother Teresa gave her life to bring Christ to others. She started every day with several hours of prayer and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. She went into the streets of Calcutta and brought back the sick and the dying to care for them and honor their dignity as a human being. Many times she said that she always saw Christ in the faces of the poor she ministered to, and that she was aware that she was bringing Christ to them. Mother Teresa was never a political force. She was a moral force, accomplishing what she did by the grace of God.
By the power of God Mother Teresa was able to establish so many charitable foundations in over 700 countries. Bishops from all over the world contacted her and invited her to bring her Missionaries of Charity to their dioceses to help with the poor and the sick. Governments welcomed her foundations because she could do what the state could not – inspire many young women and men to give their lives selflessly for the good of others and care for the poor.
As for herself personally, Mother Teresa lived her vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience daily. She attracted wealth from many different sources and used it all for the people she so lovingly cared for. Once Pope Paul VI gave her an expensive automobile that had been given to him for his trip through India. Mother Teresa and her sisters raffled it off and used the proceeds for the poor. She slept on the floor wherever she stayed and always lived simply. She required her religious community to live among the poor they served.
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