The “Atheism” of Mother Teresa
September 11th, 2007
The always deeply insightful papal retreat master, Fr. Cantalamessa, has written the best piece I’ve read on Mother Teresa’s “Dark Night of the Soul” as revealed in her newly published letters.
Here’s an excerpt, relevant to the world of Catholic letters:
The world of today knows a new category of people: the atheists in good faith, those who live painfully the situation of the silence of God, who do not believe in God but do not boast about it; rather they experience the existential anguish and the lack of meaning of everything: They too, in their own way, live in the dark night of the spirit.
Albert Camus called them “the saints without God.” The mystics exist above all for them; they are their travel and table companions. Like Jesus, they “sat down at the table of sinners and ate with them” (see Luke 15:2).
This explains the passion in which certain atheists, once converted, pore over the writings of the mystics: Claudel, Bernanos, the two Maritains, L. Bloy, the writer J.K. Huysmans and so many others over the writings of Angela of Foligno; T.S. Eliot on those of Julian of Norwich.
The article is available online at the National Catholic Register site, here.









