Mother Teresa's Dark Night of the Soul
Jesus has a very special love for you. As for me, the silence and the emptiness is so great that I look and do not see, listen and do not hear.
— Mother Teresa to the Rev. Michael Van Der Peet, September 1979
On Dec. 11, 1979, Mother Teresa, the "Saint of the Gutters," went to Oslo. Dressed in her signature blue-bordered sari and shod in sandals despite below-zero temperatures, the former Agnes Bojaxhiu received that ultimate worldly accolade, the Nobel Peace Prize. In her acceptance lecture, Teresa, whose Missionaries of Charity had grown from a one-woman folly in Calcutta in 1948 into a global beacon of self-abnegating care, delivered the kind of message the world had come to expect from her. "It is not enough for us to say, 'I love God, but I do not love my neighbor,'" she said, since in dying on the Cross, God had "[made] himself the hungry one — the naked one — the homeless one." Jesus' hunger, she said, is what "you and I must find" and alleviate. She condemned abortion and bemoaned youthful drug addiction in the West. Finally, she suggested that the upcoming Christmas holiday should remind the world "that radiating joy is real" because Christ is everywhere — "Christ in our hearts, Christ in the poor we meet, Christ in the smile we give and in the smile that we receive."
Yet less than three months earlier, in a letter to a spiritual
confidant, the Rev. Michael van der Peet, that is only now being made
public, she wrote with weary familiarity of a different Christ, an
absent one. "Jesus has a very special love for you," she assured Van der
Peet. "[But] as for me, the silence and the emptiness is so great, that
I look and do not see, — Listen and do not hear — the tongue moves [in
prayer] but does not speak ... I want you to pray for me — that I let
Him have [a] free hand."
The two statements, 11 weeks apart, are extravagantly dissonant. The
first is typical of the woman the world thought it knew. The second
sounds as though it had wandered in from some 1950s existentialist
drama. Together they suggest a startling portrait in self-contradiction —
that one of the great human icons of the past 100 years, whose
remarkable deeds seemed inextricably connected to her closeness to God
and who was routinely observed in silent and seemingly peaceful prayer
by her associates as well as the television camera, was living out a
very different spiritual reality privately, an arid landscape from which
the deity had disappeared.
And in fact, that appears to be the case. A new, innocuously titled book, Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light
(Doubleday), consisting primarily of correspondence between Teresa and
her confessors and superiors over a period of 66 years, provides the
spiritual counterpoint to a life known mostly through its works. The
letters, many of them preserved against her wishes (she had requested
that they be destroyed but was overruled by her church), reveal that for
the last nearly half-century of her life she felt no presence of God
whatsoever — or, as the book's compiler and editor, the Rev. Brian
Kolodiejchuk, writes, "neither in her heart or in the eucharist."
That absence seems to have started at almost precisely the time she
began tending the poor and dying in Calcutta, and — except for a
five-week break in 1959 — never abated. Although perpetually cheery in
public, the Teresa of the letters lived in a state of deep and abiding
spiritual pain. In more than 40 communications, many of which have never
before been published, she bemoans the "dryness," "darkness,"
"loneliness" and "torture" she is undergoing. She compares the
experience to hell and at one point says it has driven her to doubt the
existence of heaven and even of God. She is acutely aware of the
discrepancy between her inner state and her public demeanor. "The
smile," she writes, is "a mask" or "a cloak that covers everything."
Similarly, she wonders whether she is engaged in verbal deception. "I
spoke as if my very heart was in love with God — tender, personal love,"
she remarks to an adviser. "If you were [there], you would have said,
'What hypocrisy.'" Says the Rev. James Martin, an editor at the Jesuit
magazine America and the author of My Life with the Saints,
a book that dealt with far briefer reports in 2003 of Teresa's doubts:
"I've never read a saint's life where the saint has such an intense
spiritual darkness. No one knew she was that tormented." Recalls
Kolodiejchuk, Come Be My Light's
editor: "I read one letter to the Sisters [of Teresa's Missionaries of
Charity], and their mouths just dropped open. It will give a whole new
dimension to the way people understand her."
The book is hardly the work of some antireligious investigative reporter
who Dumpster-dived for Teresa's correspondence. Kolodiejchuk, a senior
Missionaries of Charity member, is her postulator, responsible for
petitioning for her sainthood and collecting the supporting materials.
(Thus far she has been beatified; the next step is canonization.) The
letters in the book were gathered as part of that process.
The church anticipates spiritually fallow periods. Indeed, the Spanish
mystic St. John of the Cross in the 16th century coined the term the
"dark night" of the soul to describe a characteristic stage in the
growth of some spiritual masters. Teresa's may be the most extensive
such case on record. (The "dark night" of the 18th century mystic St.
Paul of the Cross lasted 45 years; he ultimately recovered.) Yet
Kolodiejchuk sees it in St. John's context, as darkness within faith.
Teresa found ways, starting in the early 1960s, to live with it and
abandoned neither her belief nor her work. Kolodiejchuk produced the
book as proof of the faith-filled perseverance that he sees as her most
spiritually heroic act.
Two very different Catholics predict that the book will be a landmark.
The Rev. Matthew Lamb, chairman of the theology department at the
conservative Ave Maria University in Florida, thinks Come Be My Light will eventually rank with St. Augustine's Confessions and Thomas Merton's The Seven Storey Mountain as an autobiography of spiritual ascent. Martin of America,
a much more liberal institution, calls the book "a new ministry for
Mother Teresa, a written ministry of her interior life," and says, "It
may be remembered as just as important as her ministry to the poor. It
would be a ministry to people who had experienced some doubt, some
absence of God in their lives. And you know who that is? Everybody.
Atheists, doubters, seekers, believers, everyone."
excerpts of DAVID VAN BIEMA TIME MAGAZINE article Mother Teresa's Crisis of faith from Thursday, Aug. 23, 2007.
graphics: public domain pictures of mother Teresa of Calcutta
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