Blessing must arise from within your own mind. It is not something that comes from outside. When the positive qualities of your mind increase and the negativities decrease, that is what blessing means. The Tibetan word for blessing … means transforming into magnificent potential. Therefore, blessing refers to the development of virtuous qualities you did not previously have and the improvement of those good qualities you have already developed.
― Dalai Lama XIV
Saturday, January 6, 2018
Mother Teresa, We have been created to love and be loved
10 of the Most Beautiful Mother Teresa Quotes on Love
Blessed Teresa of Calcutta was world renowned for her love of the poor. Her work turned out to be even more impressive, when in 2007, ten years after her death, her writings revealed that she had experienced a lengthy time of spiritual dryness. Letters to her confessors were collected into a book, Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light, and posthumously published. From near the start of her ministry in Calcutta up through her death, she felt abandoned by God. This news was greeted with shock by the rest of the world. One of the brightest, Christ-like lights shining in the world, going through a decades-long dark night of the soul? She is the epitome of heroic virtue if she could live such a holy life while feeling desolate inside. We have much to learn from Mother Teresa when it comes to love.
1. “Not all of us can do great things. But we can do small things with great love.
2. “Spread love everywhere you go. Let no one ever come to you without leaving happier.”
3. “Being unwanted, unloved, uncared for, forgotten by everybody, I think that is a much greater hunger, a much greater poverty than the person who has nothing to eat.
Mother Teresa marveled at the spiritual poverty of the western world. Usually, our perspective on the “important things” in life arrives at funerals, tragedies, or hardships. Just think of our country’s reaction to the 9/11 terror attacks. For a time, life slowed down... it inevitably sped back up. In the middle of daily life, it can be hard to remember what truly matters—and, even further, what truly makes us happy. That’s a short list, and money and possessions aren’t on it.
4. “I am a little pencil in the hand of a writing God Who is sending a love letter to the world.”
Trust is implicit in love, but it’s not automatic when it comes to faith. We have to develop trust in God, to unite ourselves to His will, and serve Him as best we’re able. And when we talk about the need for us to love & trust God, let’s not forget God’s infinite love for the world (see John 3:16).
5. “Intense love does not measure, it just gives.”
The particular character of Christ’s love has a special Greek, theological term: kenosis. It means a self-emptying. The fruits of Christ’s redemption is due to His eternal offering of Himself during the Passion. Being His disciples, we are called to love in the same way. And yes, that’s possible with the help of grace! St. Monica is a famous example. She loved her son Augustine, and prayed for fifteen years for his conversion to Christianity. St. Monica only sought the good of her son, and gave of herself. Mother Teresa reminds us to do the same—think of the good of the other, and don’t keep score.
6. “Every work of love done with a full heart brings people closer to God.”
7. “Let us always meet each other with a smile, for a smile is the beginning of love.”
8. “You can love all men perfectly if you love the one God in them all.”
9. “I believe God loves the world through us—through you and me.”
10. “At the end of life, we are going to be judged on the basis of our love for one another.”
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