Sam Heath
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samheath - > Sam Heath -> Mother Teresa Really Tried
Mother Teresa Really Tried

There are far too many unknowns for anyone to have faith in any specific religion. Mother Teresa tried, but her honest doubts in the face of so much evil she witnessed may have deprived her of the inner peace and harmony she tried to encourage in others. It would not surprise me if she thought the Nobel actually mocked her, an irony in the face of so much hopelessness for peace. She must have realized that people like Albert Schweitzer and her do not change the course of this world system for the better, but it is the tyrants and despots that continue to have their way no matter what good people attempt to do to change things in the face of determined evil. In my opinion she may have died with her doubts about God, but not about the Devil.

While Scripture has it the value of a person’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions, it is a material world and while denying the spiritual, not meaning religion, many are given to attempts to make their lives meaningful by the acquisition of things. But it has become quite a cliché pointing out the rich and famous have just as much difficulty finding love and happiness, any meaning in their lives as the poorest among us. But I incline to Thoreau’s observation that the wisest have always lived lives of simplicity, not encumbering themselves with the superfluities of living.

First moving to the Kern River Valley in 1948 with my grandparents to settle on a mining claim that is now Boulder Gulch Campground, I found this area every boy’s dream for hunting and fishing. The unspoiled forest, the wild Kern River running through here before there was a dam, and Bull Run Creek where trout abounded it is no wonder over the years despite encroaching “civilization” it remains my choice for quality of living; and I can hardly fault those moving here for the abundance of clean air and water, the lack of traffic and violent crime among other things.

Having long ago left off hunting and fishing, now preferring to watch the quail, dove, and those beautiful gray tree squirrels rather than viewing them as food supplying the family pot, the beauty of the surrounding mountains and so many other things remain as they were when I first saw them as a boy. Something else I have retained from those earliest years without electricity or indoor plumbing is an appreciation for simplicity in living, without any of the illusions of those that have not been forced to do so out of necessity. The Valley still affords people the opportunity to live simply and enjoy Nature despite the wood stoves and old flatirons, boiling water drawn by hand from a well for a bath are, for the present at least, no longer necessary.

Before plastering his cottage at Walden in preparation for his first winter there, Henry Thoreau wrote of how pleasing to the eye the rough, unfinished wood, the bark and knots exposed. I know what he meant. Having done so much building myself, there is something about the bare, raw wood of the construction, working it, the scent of it that makes the covering of it with things like plaster, drywall, stucco seem a somewhat melancholy task.

As a boy, I experienced the same thing with those marvelous balsa and tissue model airplanes. Once all the intricate work of construction was done, I would gaze at the model, all the various delicate parts fully exposed, all properly constructed and the nearly gossamer web work of formers, stringers, longerones, ribs that brought those carefully cut, placed, glued, and sanded parts together into an airplane and it was a somewhat melancholy task, the covering of such beautiful, intricate work of my fingers and mind with the tissue, and then the painting, concealing such a work of art constructed from what at first appeared to be a jumble of miscellaneous and seeming unrelated pieces with no discernable use or purpose.

Many years ago I would learn of the high prices being commanded for “used boards.” People would buy old barns and outbuildings in order to have the weathered boards, sometimes intricately grooved or holed by insects, such boards being pleasing to the eye. Some were used for decorative construction, some used by artists. My own little cottage in the country has such boards covering my screened front porch. I look up at the weathered, bare wood with the same pleasure Henry expressed, considering it a sin should these weathered boards, mottled and stained with the rains and snows of many winters, April and May showers and summer heat, ever be profaned by paint.

Admittedly, with increasing age I do find myself increasingly coarse in my manner of living, and this applies to this little cottage in the country as well, where spiders spin their webs unmolested, except for the occasional black widow or recluse, and I enjoy the company of forest birds and critters. As my manner of life coarsens in some ways, it becomes more refined in others as I take greater pleasure in things like butterflies and supplying fresh water daily to my wild, country companions.

I have lived in virtual palaces, with concomitant large mortgages, houses that would grace Malibu or Beverly Hills for which I could not even pay the property taxes today, that have not been so pleasing to my eyes as this decaying little cottage that seems to be gently weathering old age, keeping pace with me. What small amount of paint there is on exterior boards like fascia is peeling, the roof leaks, and these things seem in keeping with my own mood and lack of concern for such things in declining years, during which time the things I used to believe of so much importance and consumed so very much of my time, effort and money, so much of my life seem very nearly trivial to me now.

No, my mind still does good service and I have not forgotten why such things were once important to me. However, a writer lives in their mind, welcoming the solitude of their thoughts rather than society, and generally wishes to simplify their lives for the sake of writing. It just seems that I could have chosen a better path long before I did the one I have been following these past few years, a life of simplicity without the acquisition of things, and has other priorities than the lives most account “successful.”

I neither fault nor begrudge wealth to those who can responsibly use it beneficially; but this requires a talent, and it is a talent, that I lack. Regarding philanthropy and works of charity, however, come to think of it Henry did mention his offer of help to the poor of Concord, provided they would live as simply as he did. The poor declined his offer not seeming to realize if you don’t want much, especially through covetousness, you don’t need much.

And so I consider the recently publicized letters of Mother Teresa in the light of my own experiences with life, with the evil that always attends “Hell and destruction are never full; so the eyes of man are never satisfied.” It was a true observation in “Silence of the Lambs” where Hannibal Lecter points out Clarice Starling must feel the eyes of men moving over her, that her own eyes seek out and covet the things she wants. I don’t believe anyone will accuse Mother Teresa of the sin of covetousness; she lived her life for the benefit of others. But she could not doubt the fact of so much evil she had seen with her own eyes over which all her efforts seemed of no avail in the end, perhaps wondering as the Preacher “What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun?”

CBS London, August 23, 2007. Mark Phillips: Shortly after beginning work in Calcutta’s slums, the spirit left Mother Teresa. “Where is my faith?” she wrote. “Even deep down… there is nothing but emptiness and darkness... If there be God — please forgive me.” Eight years later, she was still looking to reclaim her lost faith. “Such deep longing for God… Repulsed, empty, no faith, no love, no zeal,” she said. As her fame increased, her faith refused to return. Her smile, she said, was a mask. “What do I labor for?” she asked in one letter. “If there be no God, there can be no soul. If there be no soul then, Jesus, You also are not true.” “These are letters that were kept in the archbishop’s house,” the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk told Phillips... According to her letters, Mother Teresa died with her doubts. She had even stopped praying, she once said...

When I first expressed my own thoughts that I no longer believed in prayer, that while I continue to speak to God and departed loved ones and friends I no longer make any requests of God including praying for either others or myself, it came as somewhat of a shock to people. Many thinking me to be “religious” how was it I did not believe in prayer? I have to suppose Mother Teresa understood.

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posted by samheath on Saturday, August 25, 2007 at 01:13 PM
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posted by woofwoof on Aug 25, 2007 at 03:28 PM

Being an atheist, I still think her wishes for having her letters burned should have been honored.  Or is it just another way for all Christians who have small doubt, they can seek solace in Mother Teresa's words?

Here's some other words I try to live by:  To live content with small means; to seek elegance rather than luxury; and refinement rather than fashion; to be worthy, not respectable; and wealthy, not rich; to study hard, think quietly, talk gently, act frankly; to listen to stars and birds, to babes and sages, with open heart; to bear all cheerfully, do all bravely, await occasion, hurry never; in a word, to let the spiritual, unbidden and unconscious grow up through the common. This is to be my symphony.

William Ellery Channing 

posted by sagefever on Aug 25, 2007 at 04:02 PM
Why I never would be a public person~ she didn't even get to "own" her doubts.  Those letters should have been burned.
posted by randomfactor on Aug 25, 2007 at 04:07 PM

Same here about her wishes not being honored--although their publication does show that good works can come without faith.

.

A question for the religious among you:  if she really did live her life for her works and not by faith, what is to happen now to her?  And for Sam, I don't know whether she believed in the devil--I doubt it, but they *DID* do an exorcism on MT.

posted by woofwoof on Aug 25, 2007 at 04:39 PM

Your kidding?  Off to research that statement....

[edit] Well, I'll be dadburned:   http://archives.cnn.com/200...

posted by courious on Aug 25, 2007 at 04:56 PM

Randomfactor,  without faith in the first place, M.T.   mho, never would have  worked in callcuta! Sam  loved story about  learning to be content with lesser and smaller things..... Older things having more value than new......  most times.....

 

posted by johnburnssucks on Aug 25, 2007 at 05:32 PM

One thing that Mother Teresa did that I liked was that she died shortly after Princess Diana. With all of the superfluous memorial services, 2,176,212 TV specials and other blahblahblah about Di going on, they couldn't preempt all of that drivel to do the same for Mother Teresa. Now THAT was a blessing.

I'm not surprised that Mother Teresa had her doubts. Many Jews that survived the holocaust chucked their faith out the window, figuring that any God who would allow millions to be exterminated like that wasn't worth [bleep], anyway.

posted by courious on Aug 25, 2007 at 05:56 PM
Most christians  have felt the same way...... But  Christ is the one way  for humans to  get to heaven.... No works in them selfs or prayers, or goodness will get us there.... We will never be clean enough with out being washed white as snow by Jesus Christ.....
posted by samheath on Aug 25, 2007 at 06:06 PM

Stating beliefs as beliefs is welcome. But dogmatic statements of belief as though they were facts quickly degenerate into argument. State beliefs if you will, but please refrain from being dogmatic about such beliefs.

posted by myxlnt1 on Aug 26, 2007 at 02:30 AM
Sam, again,you have made people think. no comment.
posted by samheath on Aug 26, 2007 at 08:32 AM
Thank you. I don't like to delete comments but I want to maintain a post where civil discourse and opinions are the rule.
posted by woofwoof on Aug 26, 2007 at 09:57 AM

I loved Penn and Teller's take on all things religion.  I was talking to PM last nite and we discussed Mother Teresa.  She told me about how all the money raised that was suppose to go to the poor actually went to the Vatican instead, for dispersement, which didn't seem to happen in the proper way.....all people who had AIDS were left to just die, because you had to know suffering to become closer to God, blah, blah, blah....no condoms handed out....because, oooooh that's against the Catholic way..... 

posted by samheath on Aug 26, 2007 at 01:42 PM
Then there is the matter of the hundreds of millions of dollars being paid out to the victims of perverted priests of the Roman Church here in America. But it is the person, Mother Teresa, I choose to think very kindly of because she did make an extraordinay effort to make things better for people notwithstanding the justifiable criticism of her religion.
posted by randomfactor on Aug 26, 2007 at 01:44 PM
Wonder how much of the money raised by MT went towards paying those judgements.
posted by paxchristi3 on Aug 26, 2007 at 06:28 PM
While Mother Teresa once said "a sacrifice to be real must cost, must hurt, must empty ourselves," it's not surprising that she'd echo what Christ said on the cross when he emptied of himself in his dying moments: "Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?" (My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?").

Now the mockers and blasphemers of Christ's day have been reincarnated in the forms of Christopher Hitchens, who uses Mother Teresa's trial to bolster their own atheistic dogmas, or Penn and Teller, who make me wonder how woofwoof can find anything of redeeming value in them when they drew the wrath of Bill Donohue for their vile comments as recalled here: http://www.catholicleague.c...

I'd seriously doubt that Mother Teresa ended up funneling contributions meant for the Missionaries of Charity to the Vatican, considering that no one dares mess with her. She sure wasn't afraid to speak her mind, like when she begged to differ that India was an impoverished country at a speech before the U.N. in the early '90s and had the Clintons squirming in their seats when she said it was the United States, with its abortion policies, that was impoverished. Perhaps she felt the same about the lax and loose American Catholic Church not in communion with Rome and wished it would've followed the Boy Scouts' example: http://www.cwnews.com/offth...

Well, Sam Heath, did I meet your criteria for a civil discourse?

posted by randomfactor on Aug 26, 2007 at 06:35 PM

But if she publicly proclaimed Christ yet privately had no faith in Him, is there a technical term for MT?  Agnostic, perhaps?  What would the Catholic Church's trademarked brand-o-God think about someone who did good works yet was privately agnostic?  (The question is, of course, of more than academic interest.)

.

Anyone who draws the wrath of Bill Donohue, ipso facto, has something of redeeming value to offer.  Once the Church starts its generation of atonement for covering up the institutionalized child abuse, I'll check and see if *THEY* have anything to offer.  Not before.

posted by samheath on Aug 26, 2007 at 06:40 PM
Pax: Not if you insist on using words like "idiots" and "imbecilic" for those with whom you disagree. Please change that wording and repost if you wish.
posted by paxchristi3 on Aug 26, 2007 at 07:55 PM
Sam Heath, I amended my choice of words, hopefully to your satisfaction. Now how about lancing woofwoof's link to the YouTube show of Penn and Teller ripping the Calcutta servant as "Motherf----g Teresa" in disagreeing with her?

Now I wonder if my unbelieving brethren will be praying that the Saint of the Gutter won't be getting that last verified miracle to pave the way for sainthood for her. That'd seem to doom the thought of making her a Saint of Those Devoid of Faith, no? http://www.hindu.com/thehin...
posted by freethinker on Aug 26, 2007 at 09:33 PM

Mother Theresa was a humble servant of God and a great example of the love God has for us  through Jesus. She sacrified herself out of love, not recognition, not to "fix" people, but to show people love and mercy to the people suffering. Everyone in the world wants love, and true love isn't from "things", its from acts of kindness. Isn't a small gesture from a friend or a stranger everlasting? We won't know what will come of it, but Mother Theresa touched hundreds of thousands of lives, and we will never know how much of an impact on the world it has had. The physical results like awards and such doesn't matter. You can't analyze love. Its limitless and powerful. It's all we have.

posted by samheath on Aug 27, 2007 at 05:20 AM

Thank you Pax; a point of view is far better maintained when a person refrains from language that detracts from the message. As to links provided in comments those are legitimate, oftentimes helpful, and the person choosing to use them can make up their own mind about them. Most of us realize any discussion of religion or politics is difficult when extremes come into conflict. But dogmaticism about matters of faith too often degenerate into argument rather than discussion. For my part, I am opposed to any form of dogmatic theology.

Freethinker: I especially appreciate your remarks centered on the person of Mary Teresa. Whether of religion or politics it is the person who will be held accountable despite the many abuses that can be found in any system of religion or politics. I believe Mother Teresa was betrayed by the system of religion and a misplaced faith, much like "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" without the happy ending.

posted by courious on Aug 30, 2007 at 08:00 PM
There is no one on earth, HOLY enough to kiss MOTHER TERESAS  FEET!
posted by courious on Aug 31, 2007 at 05:34 PM
bump !
1

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