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Sign up todaySpread Love
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Learn moreMother Teresa's heartfelt wisdom--collected here into an inspirational 365-day devotional--offers you comfort, peace, and love amid the noise, busyness, and confusion around you.
Spread Love includes:
- 365 daily inspirational readings
- short and powerful meditations
- simple everyday prayers
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With so much happening in the world, are you looking for goodness and guidance? This year-long devotional contains a collection of encouraging quotes, stories, prayers, and teachings from the beloved Mother Teresa. Her daily guidance continues to reach the needs and circumstances of those who are thirsty for inspiration and spiritual nourishment in entries that are easy to understand and absorb.
Let Mother Teresa's words of wisdom help you live a fuller and happier life, closer to the Lord and able to serve your community more effectively. Each of the 365 entries offers you the opportunity to begin any time of the year and find nourishment for a whole year.
Born in Macedonia on August 26, 1910, Mary Teresa Bojaxhiu was fascinated by the lives of missionaries from a young age. At age 18, she left home to join the Sisters of Loreto in Ireland. In 1929, she began her novitiate in Darjeeling, India. Her first religious vows took place on May 24, 1931, and she chose the name โTeresaโ after St. Therese of Lisieux, who is the patron saint of missionaries. She continued to serve as a teacher with the Sisters of Loreto in Calcutta, India for almost twenty years. However, the extreme poverty that existed just outside of the convent walls continually tugged at Mother Teresaโs heart, inviting her to a life of radical compassion. In 1948, she asked (and was granted) permission to begin working with the poorest of the poor in the Calcutta slums.
Mother Teresa received basic medical training to provide care for those who lived in the slums. She founded a school and shortly after, in 1950, founded the Missionaries of Charity, a new religious community seeking to love and care for โthe poorest of the poorโ and those whom no one was willing to care for. In 1952 she opened her first hospice to help people die with dignity. In a country with multiple religious identitiesโprimarily Hindu, Muslim, and Catholicโshe worked to ensure each person died with dignity according to his or her own faith. She also opened a hospice for those suffering from leprosy and in 1955 opened a home for orphans and homeless children. By the 1960s, word of Mother Teresaโs work had spread, inspiring an increase in volunteers, religious sisters, and donations that allowed this great mission to expand across India. Her messageโto radically love and serve all peopleโwas welcomed and spread around the world.
In 1979 Mother Teresa received the Nobel Peace Prize for her work. She refused the ceremonial banquet and instead asked that the $192,000 cost be given to the poor in India. Despite her personal humility she attracted international attention and praise for her work. After experiencing a heart attack in 1983, Mother Teresa continued to face various medical complications. She resigned as the head of the Missionaries of Charity on March 13, 1997, and died on September 5 of that year. She was mourned by both religious and non-religious communities alike. She was canonized by the Catholic Church on September 4, 2016.