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Thursday, September 8, 2016

Nuns Story.

Anjeze Gonxhe Bojaxhiu isn't a sinner anymore. Mother Teresa of Kolkata was officially canonised on the fourth September 2016. As with any fashion, fame and glory. All this came with a scale of poverty, that has never been seen before. Because of its ignorance this was diverted onto the Nuns, just shunted aside by all. Leaving this to become a modern day historic tale of woe, with all of its scale and magnitude from old. As she was driven towards an impoverished India by her sheer persistence. This generosity shines true for her, as she cradled her way into history, to become one of the first modern day Saints. Book Club congratulates Pope Francis decision. As he declares Blessed Mother Teresa of Kolkata, a living saint. This was in the Vatican on Sept. 4 2016. This date had formally been announced earlier on March 15, 2016. During an "ordinary public consistory,"
This meeting of the pope, cardinals and promoters of sainthood causes that formally ends the sainthood process in beatification. Mother Teresa was widely known as a living saint as she ministered to the sick and dying in some of the poorest neighbourhoods in the world. Although some people criticized her for not also challenging the injustices that kept so many people so poor and abandoned. Her simple service touched the hearts of millions of people from all faiths.
Born to an ethnic Albanian family in Skopje, in what is now part of Macedonia, As a Sister of Loreto she trained as a young nun in Loreto Abbie 1928, Rathfarnham Dublin in Ireland. She went to India in 1929. Then became an Indian citizen in 1947. She founded the Missionaries of Charity in 1950 shortly after. She died in 1997, St. John Paul II waived the usual five-year waiting period and allowed the opening of the process to declare her sainthood. She was beatified in 2003. After her beatification, Missionary of Charity Father Brian Kolodiejchuk, the postulator of her sainthood cause, published a book of her letters, "Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light." The letters illustrated how, for decades, she experienced what is described as a "dark night of the soul" in Christian spirituality; she felt that God had abandoned her. While the letters shocked some people, others saw them as proof of her steadfast faith in God, which was not based on feelings or signs that he was with her.
In order for a candidate to become a saint, two miracles are required – one for beatification and one for the final canonization, when the person is declared a saint. The miracles should happen after the candidate saint has died, proving that they are in heaven and have the power of intercession – to put in a good word with God to help cure the sick on Earth. In Mother Teresa’s case, in 2001 an Indian woman called Monica Besra claimed that she had been cured of an abdominal tumour through Mother Teresa’s intercession in 1998, on the first anniversary of the nun’s death. The whole beatification process was then brought to conclusion in 2003, just over six years after Mother Teresa’s death. Only the beatification of John Paul II was completed in a shorter time dear God (but only by a mere two weeks). The date chosen for her canonisation is the eve of the 19th anniversary of her death and the date previously established at the Vatican. This ids for the conclusion of the Year of Mercy pilgrimage of people like her who are engaged in works of mercy. Blessed Papczynski founded the Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception in Poland in the 17th century. Today the Marians are special promoters of the Divine Mercy, devotion of St. Faustina Kowalska.

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