I recently watched the film Mother Teresa: No Greater Love written and directed by David Naglieri of the Knights of Columbus. Just when I thought I knew Mother Teresa, I once again discovered her embodiment of the two greatest commandments, “’You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind…. You shall love your neighbor as yourself’” (Mt 22:37,39). As we celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of her death, the message of her entire life comes into focus. Mother Teresa saw Jesus in everyone, especially the poorest of the poor. She treated every human being with the same dignity and respect, from the most powerful stateman to the old woman dying in the gutter. She was imbued with Christ and fully lived what Saint Paul says is the call of every disciple of Jesus, “It is no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me” (Gal 2:20). The Christ in her saw the Christ in everyone. This beautifully crafted film makes that abundantly clear. Her life was Christ.
Mother Teresa’s radical love touched even the hardest of hearts, as Jim Wahlberg attests in the film. Producer, recovering addict, and executive director of the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation, Jim shares how he grew up starving for love and attention and how he went in search for it on the streets. Consumed with drugs and alcohol and multiple misdemeanors, Wahlberg became a ward of the state by age twelve. During one of his stints in prison, Mother Teresa visited and gave a talk to the inmates. Her words, he says, changed his life. Now a devout Catholic and witness to the power of God’s merciful love, Jim lives what Mother Teresa communicated, “We can turn hate into love.”
Mother Teresa, as the film expresses, loved everyone including peoples of all faith traditions. She would say that she sees Jesus in them. She would share her faith without imposition simply by being a lover of Christ and of humanity. Today as people tout Jesus’ command to “love one another” (Jn 13:34) as a political axiom for their radical agendas, Mother Teresa stands as an authentic example of love. Her 1979 speech at receiving the Nobel Peace Prize minces no words, “The greatest destroyer of peace is abortion.” And she continues, “the poorest nation is the one that legalizes abortion.” In a post-Roe world where pro-lifers are being attacked, arrested, and detained, we need Saint Teresa of Calcutta’s intercession more than ever. Only by love is hate destroyed. Love alone wins.
Her message of love can be lived in every time and every circumstance, even outside of the city ghettos. If we all live her message, what a very different world this would be! When we see each human being as Christ, our hardness melts away and compassion takes over. We see the other less as an enemy and more as a fellow human being thirsting for acceptance and love. Mother Teresa says that each of us can be Christ for one another. When we share love, “together we are doing something beautiful for God.”
This film is a meditation on the Christian command to love. St Teresa of Calcutta’s life was a radical witness of love. She did not need to preach Jesus through words, which she did sometimes even on the world stage, but her example communicated volumes. As St Paul VI said in Evangelii Nuntiandi, “Modern man readily listens to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers it is because they are witnesses” (41). Mother Teresa was a modern era witness that became not only a shining candlelight but a powerful lighthouse beam that directs humanity to its purpose, meaning, and final end—Christ!
Mother Teresa: No Greater Love is in theaters on November 2nd through Fathom events.
Photos: © 2022 Knights of Columbus. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Sr. Nancy is the Director of the Pauline Center for Media Studies and a Media Literacy Education Specialist. She has degrees in Communications Arts and a Masters in Theology and the Arts from Fuller Theological Seminary. She has extensive experience in the creative aspects of social media, print media, radio and video production as well as in marketing, advertising, retail management and administration.
Sr. Nancy has given numerous media mindfulness workshops, presentations and film retreats around the country to youth, young adults, catechists, seminarians, teachers and media professionals helping to create that dialogue between faith and media. She is a member of NAMLE (National Association of Media Literacy Educators), SIGNIS (World Catholic Association for Communicators) and THEOCOM (Theology and Communications in Dialogue) and board member of CIMA (Catholics in Media Associates). She is the author of a theology of popular culture called, A Sacred Look: Becoming Cultural Mystics from Wipf & Stock Publishing. Sr. Nancy is a theologian, national speaker, blogger and film reviewer.