Inspired from youth by Albert Camus' sense of the Absurd, I try to be a voice for REASON in the growing darkness and moral insanity of global capitalism .
Friday, December 5, 2025
Did Mother Teresa Secretly Stop Believing? [ Her self-confessed " dark night of the soul " has nothing in common with claims of her New Atheist detractors ]
Mother Teresa was made a saint by the Catholic Church. Her self-confessed " dark night of the soul " has nothing in common with claims of her New Atheism Cult evangelist detractors like the drunken , ex-Trotskyist Christopher Hitchens .
The saint in heaven will pray for you !
READ :
lisbethsalamanderr
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3y ago
[ " It’s absurd. Mother Teresa was a wonderful woman. People who disparage her are hell bent on spreading anti Catholic sentiment.
Many people say she was a miser and that she allowed the poor to suffer and die, but what’s often lost in translation is that all of this was taking place in a third world country. What exactly could she do except minister to them? People are acting like she single-handedly could have saved every sick person in India.
Also, her role was to provide people with spiritual assistance, not to be a physician. It’s one of those situations where people are like ‘well I would’ve done this if I were her’ like we suddenly know better than she.
I find the people who spread hate towards her are people who are adamantly atheist, pro abortion, and are so unintelligent that they just repeat the pablum they hear instead of doing their due diligence through research. " ]
Why the Catholic Church made Mother Teresa a saint ?
[ On September 4, 2016, Mother Teresa, a Roman Catholic nun who dedicated her life to caring for the destitute in India, officially becomes Saint Teresa of Calcutta, almost two decades after her death on September 5, 1997.
Pope Francis declared Mother Teresa of Calcutta a saint of the Roman Catholic Church in front of thousands of people in St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City—to much applause.
“Mother Teresa, in all aspects of her life, was a generous dispenser of divine mercy, making herself available for everyone through her welcome and defence of human life, those unborn and those abandoned and discarded… She bowed down before those who were spent, left to die on the side of the road, seeing in them their God-given dignity…,” Pope Francis said in his homily that day. “Today, I pass on this emblematic figure of womanhood and of consecrated life to the whole world of volunteers: may she be your model of holiness!” ]
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