MOSAIC Fall 2016 | Page 8

ST. TERESA OF CALCUTTA “YES, WE WILL INVITE HER TO DETROIT” For a long-time faculty member, memories of Mother Teresa still inspire after decades. Sr. Mary Finn, HVM W HILE MOTHER TERESA AND I PURSUED OUR LIFE VOCATIONS ON DIFFERENT PATHS AND IN DIFFERENT WORLDS, OUR MEANDERINGS BEAR A STRONG SIMILARITY TO EACH OTHER AND A BASIC PARA LLELISM. MY LIFE AS A HOME VISITOR OF MARY IN DETROIT IS DEFINED BY “JESUS, YOU ARE THE CENTER OF MY JOY.” MOTHER THERESA WRITES, “JESUS IS MY EVERYTHING.” When I was asked to commit to writing my reminiscence of Mother Teresa, I had to visit the unofficial journal written in my heart many years ago. Since those first encounters with her, I have carried these memories into my ministry in the city of Detroit and, in the spirit of a Home Visitor, into my daily Eucharistic liturgies where the memories are being relived, refashioned, and reinterpreted. Inspiration to Serve Among the persons on my dream list with whom I would have liked to visit during my lifetime, one would not have found Mother Teresa. I wanted to meet Martin Luther King, Dorothy Day, and Rosa Parks. Nonetheless, the “God of surprises” 6 brought my first experience of Mother Teresa before me in the late 1960s. I was in Canada participating in a formation weekend with the Basilian Fathers and candidates. On Canadian TV, I saw a petite woman who appeared alongside a tall and joy-filled man. It was Mother Teresa and Jean Vanier, best known for his ministry among developmentally challenged persons. As I watched and heard their words, my soul leapt with a deepening desire to follow Jesus by responding to persons in their joy and sorrow and glory. The vocation of Jean Vanier, Mother Teresa, and my Home Visitors of Mary is intensely Eucharistic. We each have the call from Jesus to “see Jesus” under the appearance of Bread and the same Jesus Sacred Heart Major Seminary | Mosaic | Fall 2016 under the appearance of each human person. Every person is “consecrated,” worthy of “adoration.” “Yes, I Am Sad” The second time Mother Teresa entered my life was also by way of television. Several Sacred Heart faculty members had gathered in the faculty lounge to view a local daytime TV interview with Mother Teresa. She was asked by the interviewer, “Mother, are you ever sad?” Her response was baffling, “Yes, I am sad.” Years later, Bishop Bernard Harrington asked the same question of me. “Of course I am sad. I am Irish,” was my reply. That question touched upon my own Marian spirituality. I was moved to ask the same question of Mary, the mother of Jesus. My own devotion, prayer, and conversation with Mary began to deepen at that point as I often pondered what Mary’s response to that question might be. “I am Jewish. Of course I am sad. When I wrapped his tiny newborn body in swaddling birth clothes . . . and when I wrapped his same grown up dead body in burial clothes—I wept and my soul was sad.