BH
Veteran Member
Just so you all know the news wires are saying the Catholics just declared Mother Teresa a saint.
For all her faults, she did offer some degree of help to those that very few in India would have even considered worthy of the effort, lepers, untouchables, people who probably would have just died in the gutter with no one to even pretend to care.
Of course she's a catholic saint. They revere their best worshipers of death and suffering.
Of course she's a catholic saint. They revere their best worshipers of death and suffering.
I suppose that if you are really into this stuff you know that The RC Church can't 'make' saints - merely recognise them. Given the way it has developed under the Papacy, the Church will recognise some very dodgy candidates.
The key point about 'charity' is to make sure you have the poor always with you, rather than abolishing that state, which would be perfectly easy nowadays.
For all her faults, she did offer some degree of help to those that very few in India would have even considered worthy of the effort, lepers, untouchables, people who probably would have just died in the gutter with no one to even pretend to care.
Hmm... no. Her "help" crowded out other forms of help.
Hmm... no. Her "help" crowded out other forms of help.
How so? The reports I've seen suggest that she filled a gap. Taking in those who would otherwise have been left in the gutter.
How so? The reports I've seen suggest that she filled a gap. Taking in those who would otherwise have been left in the gutter.
Stuff like this is extremely hard to measure. But I maintain that her missions might have kept people willing to donate, but thinking Mother Theresa was on it, so they didn't have to.
Stuff like this is extremely hard to measure. But I maintain that her missions might have kept people willing to donate, but thinking Mother Theresa was on it, so they didn't have to.
Probably. On the other hand, I heard that she inspired others to do similar work. Of course, at the time it was not generally known how she actually ran her clinic, her attitude toward suffering, etc.
Overall? Perhaps a bit more good done than harm? More harm than good? Who knows.
I suppose that if you are really into this stuff you know that The RC Church can't 'make' saints - merely recognise them. Given the way it has developed under the Papacy, the Church will recognise some very dodgy candidates.
The key point about 'charity' is to make sure you have the poor always with you, rather than abolishing that state, which would be perfectly easy nowadays.
It takes a laundry list of items for the Catholic church to 'recognize' them, so it seems to me, they DO 'make' saints.
Did they make her the patron saint of misers?
Stuff like this is extremely hard to measure. But I maintain that her missions might have kept people willing to donate, but thinking Mother Theresa was on it, so they didn't have to.
Probably. On the other hand, I heard that she inspired others to do similar work. Of course, at the time it was not generally known how she actually ran her clinic, her attitude toward suffering, etc.
Overall? Perhaps a bit more good done than harm? More harm than good? Who knows.
Hmm... no. Her "help" crowded out other forms of help.
How so? The reports I've seen suggest that she filled a gap. Taking in those who would otherwise have been left in the gutter.