Mother Teresa: Sainthood and the Almighty Dollar

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on December 20, 2015

Last week, the Vatican announced that Mother Teresa will be made a saint sometime in May 2016.

The Macedonian nun founded the Order of the Missionaries of Charity, a religious order whose mission is to help the poor. When the sainthood announcement was made, critics denounced the decision, citing the fact that she sought health care in the US (while saying the poor “accept their suffering“), her alleged misappropriation of money, and the nun’s close relationships with violent dictators.

And then there’s the whole miracle thing, which I always find a bit dubious, especially in the Internet age. But this is all irrelevant when it comes to making her a saint.

Why? Because the sainthood of Mother Teresa has nothing to do with holiness, her work in India, miracles (dubious or not), or the betterment of mankind and the Catholic faithful. It boils down to MONEY.

Let’s face it: Mother Teresa is a cash cow. Making Mother Teresa a saint will do the exact same thing that making JPII a saint accomplished: Billions of dollars in donations. Billions.

And these donations will not only be coming from developed nations—they will be coming from the poorest areas of Catholicism, because the poor were the focus of her work. The money won’t stop there.

Soon, we will be seeing her face on merchandise (Vatican sanctioned or not), Catholic appeal brochures, church bulletins, and cathedral banners. Her name and legacy will be invoked in homilies, used to encourage “sacrifice,” and publicized to widen the appeal of her and Catholicism as a whole.

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