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Keepers of the Flame
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Group
A Cosmic Being from out the Great Silence
Abraham
Adept
Adolf Hitler
Affirmation
Afra
Agni yoga
Ahimsa
Akasha
Akashic records
Akbar the Great
Alchemical marriage
Alexander Gaylord
Alpha and Omega
Alphas
Amaryllis, Goddess of Spring
Amen Bey
Angel
Angel Deva of the Jade Temple
Angel of Gethsemane
Angel of Listening Grace
Angel of Peace
Angel of the Agony
Angel of the Cosmic Cross of White Fire
Angel of the LORD
Angel of the Resurrection
Angel of the Revelation of John the Divine
Angel who rolled away the stone
Animal
Antahkarana
Antichrist
Apollo and Lumina
Apollo and Lumina's retreat
Arabian Retreat
Archangel
Archangel Raphael
Archangel Uzziel and his twin flame
Archangels of the five secret rays
Archeia
Arcturus and Victoria
Arcturus and Victoria's retreat
Arhat
Aries and Thor
Ascended master
Ascension
Ascension Temple and Retreat at Luxor
Aspirant
Astral
Astral ka
Astral plane
Atlantis
Aton
AUM
Aura
Avatar
Babaji
Baptism
Beelzebub
Belial
Bhajan
Bhakti yoga
Bodhisattva
Bodies of man
Body elemental
Brahma
Brahman
Brotherhood of Mount Shasta
Brotherhood of the Black Raven
Brothers and Sisters of the Golden Robe
Buddha
Buddha of the Ruby Ray
Call
Call to the Fire Breath
Cardinal Bonzano
Carnal mind
Casimir Poseidon
Cassiopea
Category:Christian saints
Category:Embodiments of ascended masters
Category:Golden ages
Cathedral of Nature
Cathedral of the Violet Flame
Causal body
Cave of Light
Cave of Symbols
Celeste
Central sun
Cha Ara
Chakra
Chamuel and Charity
Chananda
Chant
Charity, the Cosmic Being
Chart of Your Divine Self
Chela
Cherub
Chohan
Christ
Christ consciousness
Christ Self
Christopher Columbus
Château de Liberté
City Foursquare
Clara Louise
Communism
Confucius
Cosmic being
Cosmic Christ
Cosmic Christ and Planetary Buddha
Cosmic Christs from other systems of worlds
Cosmic clock
Cosmic consciousness
Cosmic Egg
Cosmic hierarchy
Cosmic law
Cosmic Mirror
Cosmic Virgin
Cosmos
Crotona
Cuzco
Cyclopea and Virginia
Cyclopea and Virginia's retreat
Daniel and Nada Rayborn
Darjeeling Council
Dark Cycle
Dark night
David Lloyd
Deathless solar body
Decree
Democracy
Deva
Dialectical materialism
Diamond heart
Dictation
Discipleship
Divine Ego
Divine Monad
Divine plan
Djwal Kul
Djwal Kul's Retreat in Tibet
Durga
Dweller-on-the-threshold
Eclipse
Eightfold Path
El Morya
El Morya's dispensation
El Morya’s Day
El Morya’s Retreat in El Capitan, Yosemite Valley
Electronic belt
Electronic Presence
Elementals
Elizabeth Clare Prophet
Elohim
Elohim of the five secret rays
Emotional body
Energy veil
English language
Enoch
Eriel
Eriel's retreat in Arizona
Ernon, Rai of Suern
Etheric
Etheric body
Etheric cities
Etheric plane
Etheric retreat
Evil
Evil One
Faith, Hope and Charity
Fallen angel
False gurus
False hierarchy
Father-Mother God
Fearlessness flame
Fiat
Five Dhyani Buddhas
Flaming Yod
Fohat
Fortuna
Four and twenty elders
Four lower bodies
Fourteen ascended masters who govern the destiny of America
Free will
Fun Wey
Gabriel and Hope
Gabriel and Hope's retreat
Garabandal
Garden of Eden
Garden of Eden (the mystery school of Lord Maitreya)
Gautama Buddha
Goal-fitting
God
God and Goddess Meru
God consciousness
God flame
God Harmony
God of Gold
God of Nature
God of the Swiss Alps
God Tabor
God-government
Goddess of Freedom
Goddess of Liberty
Goddess of Light
Goddess of Peace
Goddess of Purity
Goddess of Purity's retreat over Madagascar
Goddess of Purity's retreat over San Francisco
Godfre
Gold
Golden age
Golden age of Jesus Christ on Atlantis
Golden age of the first three root races
Great Central Sun
Great Divine Director
Great White Brotherhood
Group soul
Guru-chela relationship
Guy W. Ballard
Hail Mary
Hatha yoga
Healing thoughtform
Helena P. Blavatsky
Helios and Vesta
Hercules and Amazonia
Hercules and Amazonia's retreat
Hermes Trismegistus
Heros and Amora
Heros and Amora's retreat
Hierarchies of the Pleiades
Hierarchs of the four elements
Higher Self
Hilarion
Himalaya
Holy Communion
Holy Spirit
Human consciousness
Human ego
Human monad
I AM Lord's Prayer
I AM Presence
I AM THAT I AM
Igor
Ikhnaton and Nefertiti
Illuminati
Immaculate concept
Immortality
Indian Black Brotherhood
Initiation
Inner child
Invocation
Ishvara
Isis
Issa
Jar-El-Um
Jesus
Jesus' descent into hell
Jnana yoga
Johannes
John the Baptist
John the Beloved
John the Beloved's retreat
Jophiel and Christine
Jophiel and Christine's retreat
Justina
Justinius
K-17
Kali
Karma
Karma yoga
Karmic Board
Keeper of the Scrolls
Keeper's Daily Prayer
Keepers of the Flame Fraternity
King Arthur
Krishna
Kuan Yin
Kundalini
Kuthumi
Kuthumi's Retreat at Shigatse, Tibet
Lady Kristine
Lake of fire
Lakshmi
Lanello
Lanello's retreat on the Rhine
Lanto
Lanto's Prayer
Lao Tzu
Law of correspondence
Law of cycles
Law of forgiveness
Law of the One
Lemuria
Leonora
Leto
Lifestream
Light
Lightbearer
Lila
Lilith (unseen satellite of the earth)
Listening Angel
Lord Ling
Lord Maitreya
Lord of the World
Lost years of Jesus
Lotus
Lucifer
Ludwig van Beethoven
Macrocosm
Magda
Maha Chohan
Mahasamadhi
Mahatma
Main Page
Maitreya's Mystery School
Maitreya's retreat over Tientsin, China
Man
Manchild
Manjushri
Mantle
Mantra
Manu
Maria
Maria Montessori
Marijuana
Mark L. Prophet
Mary Baker Eddy
Mary, the mother of Jesus
Mass consciousness
Master of Paris
Master of Paris' retreats
Mater
Maximus
Maya
Melchior
Melchizedek
Mental body
Mercury (the planet)
Messenger
Meta
Meta's Healing Retreat over New England
Micah
Michael and Faith
Microcosm
Middle East
Mighty Angel Clothed with a Cloud
Mighty Blue Eagle
Mighty Cosmos
Mighty Victory
Milarepa
Misqualification (of energy)
Monad
Mother
Mother Mary's Circle of Light
Mother of the Flame
Mother of the World
Mother Teresa
Muses
Mystery school
Nada
Nephilim
Neptune and Luara
Nicholas Roerich
Occult
Omri-Tas
Omri-Tas and Saint Germain’s Day
Order of Francis and Clare
Order of the Child
Order of the Diamond Heart
Order of the Emerald Cross
Order of the Golden Lily
Order of the Good Samaritan
Original sin
Orion, the Old Man of the Hills
Orion’s retreat
Oromasis and Diana
Oromasis and Diana's retreat
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Our Lady of Knock
Padma Sambhava
Padre Pio
Palace of Light
Palace of White Marble
Pallas Athena
Parvati
Path
Paul the Venetian
Peace and Aloha
Pearls of Wisdom
Pentecost
Permanent atom of being
Persian Retreat
Phylos the Tibetan
Physical body
Portia
Portia's retreat
Power, wisdom and love
Prayer
Progressive revelation
Psychic
Purity and Astrea
Purity and Astrea's retreat
Quarterly conferences
Queen of Light
Queen of Light's retreat
Ra Mu
Raja yoga
Rakoczy Mansion
Ramakrishna
Raphael and Mother Mary's retreat
Ray-O-Light
Rays
Readings
Real Image
Real Self
Recording angel
Reincarnation
Resurrection
Resurrection flame
Resurrection Temple
Retreat of the Blue Lotus
Retreat of the Divine Mother
Rex and Nada, Bob and Pearl
Ritual of the Resurrection Flame
Rock music
Rocky Mountain retreat for teenagers
Roger Bacon
Root race
Rosary
Rose of Light
Rose Temple
Round Table
Royal Teton Retreat
Ruth Hawkins
Sacred fire
Sacred labor
Sacred Retreat of the Blue Flame
Saint Germain
Saint Joseph
Saint Patrick
Saint Paul
Samadhi
Samael
Sanat Kumara and Lady Master Venus
Sangha
Sarasvati
Satan
Satans
Satsanga
Secret chamber of the heart
Seraphim
Serapis Bey
Serpent (fallen angel)
Serpent (symbol)
Servatus
Seven holy Kumaras
Seven rays
Seventh root race
Shamballa
Shekinah
Shiva
Shrine of Glory
Silent Watcher
Sin
Snow King and Snow Queen
Socialism
Solar Logoi
Son of man
Sons and daughters of God
Soul
Soul travel
Southern Cross
Spirit
Spoken Word
Sponsors of Youth
Sri Magra
Sun behind the sun
Sunspots
Surya
Surya Day
Synthetic image
Tablets of Mem
Tabor's retreat in the Rocky Mountains
Taiwan
Tao
Template:False hierarchy
Template:Science of the spoken Word
Temple of Comfort
Temple of Faith and Protection
Temple of Good Will
Temple of Illumination
Temple of Mercy
Temple of Peace
Temple of Purification
Temple of the Crystal-Pink Flame
Temple of the Sun
Temple of the Sun of Helios and Vesta
Temple of Truth
The Focus of Illumination
The Nameless One from Out the Great Central Sun
The Spirit of Christmas
The Spirit of Selflessness
The Spirit of the Resurrection
The Summit Lighthouse
The Universal
The Unknown Master of the Himalayas
The White Goddess
Theosophia
Thomas Becket
Thomas Moore
Thomas More
Thor
Three Wise Men
Threefold flame
Thérèse of Lisieux
Transfiguration
Transfiguring Affirmations of Jesus the Christ
Traveling Protection
Tree of Life
Tube of light
Twelve solar hierarchies
Twelve tribes of Israel
Twin flame
Two Men Who Stood by in White Apparel
Unascended being
Uriel and Aurora
Uriel and Aurora's retreat
Utopia
Vaivasvata Manu
Vaivasvata Manu's retreat in the Himalayas
Vajrasattva (Dhyani Buddha)
Venus (the planet)
Vicarious atonement
Victory's Temple
Violet flame
Violet Planet
Violet-flame decrees
Violet-flame dispensations from Omri-Tas
Virgo and Pelleur
Viruses
Vishnu
Vulcan, God of Fire
Watchers
Wesak
Western Shamballa
What's new
Word
World government
World Teacher
Yoga
Zadkiel and Holy Amethyst
Zarathustra
Zarathustra's retreat
“Watch With Me” Jesus’ Vigil of the Hours
Language
aa - Afar
ab - Abkhazian
abs - Ambonese Malay
ace - Achinese
ady - Adyghe
ady-cyrl - Adyghe (Cyrillic script)
aeb - Tunisian Arabic
aeb-arab - Tunisian Arabic (Arabic script)
aeb-latn - Tunisian Arabic (Latin script)
af - Afrikaans
ak - Akan
aln - Gheg Albanian
alt - Southern Altai
am - Amharic
ami - Amis
an - Aragonese
ang - Old English
ann - Obolo
anp - Angika
ar - Arabic
arc - Aramaic
arn - Mapuche
arq - Algerian Arabic
ary - Moroccan Arabic
arz - Egyptian Arabic
as - Assamese
ase - American Sign Language
ast - Asturian
atj - Atikamekw
av - Avaric
avk - Kotava
awa - Awadhi
ay - Aymara
az - Azerbaijani
azb - South Azerbaijani
ba - Bashkir
ban - Balinese
ban-bali - ᬩᬲᬩᬮᬶ
bar - Bavarian
bbc - Batak Toba
bbc-latn - Batak Toba (Latin script)
bcc - Southern Balochi
bci - Baoulé
bcl - Central Bikol
be - Belarusian
be-tarask - Belarusian (Taraškievica orthography)
bg - Bulgarian
bgn - Western Balochi
bh - Bhojpuri
bho - Bhojpuri
bi - Bislama
bjn - Banjar
blk - Pa'O
bm - Bambara
bn - Bangla
bo - Tibetan
bpy - Bishnupriya
bqi - Bakhtiari
br - Breton
brh - Brahui
bs - Bosnian
btm - Batak Mandailing
bto - Iriga Bicolano
bug - Buginese
bxr - Russia Buriat
ca - Catalan
cbk-zam - Chavacano
cdo - Min Dong Chinese
ce - Chechen
ceb - Cebuano
ch - Chamorro
cho - Choctaw
chr - Cherokee
chy - Cheyenne
ckb - Central Kurdish
co - Corsican
cps - Capiznon
cr - Cree
crh - Crimean Tatar
crh-cyrl - Crimean Tatar (Cyrillic script)
crh-latn - Crimean Tatar (Latin script)
cs - Czech
csb - Kashubian
cu - Church Slavic
cv - Chuvash
cy - Welsh
da - Danish
dag - Dagbani
de - German
de-at - Austrian German
de-ch - Swiss High German
de-formal - German (formal address)
dga - Dagaare
din - Dinka
diq - Zazaki
dsb - Lower Sorbian
dtp - Central Dusun
dty - Doteli
dv - Divehi
dz - Dzongkha
ee - Ewe
egl - Emilian
el - Greek
eml - Emiliano-Romagnolo
en - English
en-ca - Canadian English
en-gb - British English
eo - Esperanto
es - Spanish
es-419 - Latin American Spanish
es-formal - Spanish (formal address)
et - Estonian
eu - Basque
ext - Extremaduran
fa - Persian
fat - Fanti
ff - Fula
fi - Finnish
fit - Tornedalen Finnish
fj - Fijian
fo - Faroese
fon - Fon
fr - French
frc - Cajun French
frp - Arpitan
frr - Northern Frisian
fur - Friulian
fy - Western Frisian
ga - Irish
gaa - Ga
gag - Gagauz
gan - Gan Chinese
gan-hans - Gan (Simplified)
gan-hant - Gan (Traditional)
gcr - Guianan Creole
gd - Scottish Gaelic
gl - Galician
gld - Nanai
glk - Gilaki
gn - Guarani
gom - Goan Konkani
gom-deva - Goan Konkani (Devanagari script)
gom-latn - Goan Konkani (Latin script)
gor - Gorontalo
got - Gothic
gpe - Ghanaian Pidgin
grc - Ancient Greek
gsw - Swiss German
gu - Gujarati
guc - Wayuu
gur - Frafra
guw - Gun
gv - Manx
ha - Hausa
hak - Hakka Chinese
haw - Hawaiian
he - Hebrew
hi - Hindi
hif - Fiji Hindi
hif-latn - Fiji Hindi (Latin script)
hil - Hiligaynon
ho - Hiri Motu
hr - Croatian
hrx - Hunsrik
hsb - Upper Sorbian
hsn - Xiang Chinese
ht - Haitian Creole
hu - Hungarian
hu-formal - Hungarian (formal address)
hy - Armenian
hyw - Western Armenian
hz - Herero
ia - Interlingua
id - Indonesian
ie - Interlingue
ig - Igbo
igl - Igala
ii - Sichuan Yi
ik - Inupiaq
ike-cans - Eastern Canadian (Aboriginal syllabics)
ike-latn - Eastern Canadian (Latin script)
ilo - Iloko
inh - Ingush
io - Ido
is - Icelandic
it - Italian
iu - Inuktitut
ja - Japanese
jam - Jamaican Creole English
jbo - Lojban
jut - Jutish
jv - Javanese
ka - Georgian
kaa - Kara-Kalpak
kab - Kabyle
kbd - Kabardian
kbd-cyrl - Kabardian (Cyrillic script)
kbp - Kabiye
kcg - Tyap
kea - Kabuverdianu
kg - Kongo
khw - Khowar
ki - Kikuyu
kiu - Kirmanjki
kj - Kuanyama
kjh - Khakas
kjp - Eastern Pwo
kk - Kazakh
kk-arab - Kazakh (Arabic script)
kk-cn - Kazakh (China)
kk-cyrl - Kazakh (Cyrillic script)
kk-kz - Kazakh (Kazakhstan)
kk-latn - Kazakh (Latin script)
kk-tr - Kazakh (Turkey)
kl - Kalaallisut
km - Khmer
kn - Kannada
ko - Korean
ko-kp - Korean (North Korea)
koi - Komi-Permyak
kr - Kanuri
krc - Karachay-Balkar
kri - Krio
krj - Kinaray-a
krl - Karelian
ks - Kashmiri
ks-arab - Kashmiri (Arabic script)
ks-deva - Kashmiri (Devanagari script)
ksh - Colognian
ksw - S'gaw Karen
ku - Kurdish
ku-arab - Kurdish (Arabic script)
ku-latn - Kurdish (Latin script)
kum - Kumyk
kus - Kʋsaal
kv - Komi
kw - Cornish
ky - Kyrgyz
la - Latin
lad - Ladino
lb - Luxembourgish
lbe - Lak
lez - Lezghian
lfn - Lingua Franca Nova
lg - Ganda
li - Limburgish
lij - Ligurian
liv - Livonian
lki - Laki
lld - Ladin
lmo - Lombard
ln - Lingala
lo - Lao
loz - Lozi
lrc - Northern Luri
lt - Lithuanian
ltg - Latgalian
lus - Mizo
luz - Southern Luri
lv - Latvian
lzh - Literary Chinese
lzz - Laz
mad - Madurese
mag - Magahi
mai - Maithili
map-bms - Basa Banyumasan
mdf - Moksha
mg - Malagasy
mh - Marshallese
mhr - Eastern Mari
mi - Māori
min - Minangkabau
mk - Macedonian
ml - Malayalam
mn - Mongolian
mni - Manipuri
mnw - Mon
mo - Moldovan
mos - Mossi
mr - Marathi
mrh - Mara
mrj - Western Mari
ms - Malay
ms-arab - Malay (Jawi script)
mt - Maltese
mus - Muscogee
mwl - Mirandese
my - Burmese
myv - Erzya
mzn - Mazanderani
na - Nauru
nah - Nāhuatl
nan - Min Nan Chinese
nap - Neapolitan
nb - Norwegian Bokmål
nds - Low German
nds-nl - Low Saxon
ne - Nepali
new - Newari
ng - Ndonga
nia - Nias
niu - Niuean
nl - Dutch
nl-informal - Dutch (informal address)
nmz - Nawdm
nn - Norwegian Nynorsk
no - Norwegian
nod - Northern Thai
nog - Nogai
nov - Novial
nqo - N’Ko
nrm - Norman
nso - Northern Sotho
nv - Navajo
ny - Nyanja
nyn - Nyankole
nys - Nyungar
oc - Occitan
ojb - Northwestern Ojibwe
olo - Livvi-Karelian
om - Oromo
or - Odia
os - Ossetic
pa - Punjabi
pag - Pangasinan
pam - Pampanga
pap - Papiamento
pcd - Picard
pcm - Nigerian Pidgin
pdc - Pennsylvania German
pdt - Plautdietsch
pfl - Palatine German
pi - Pali
pih - Norfuk / Pitkern
pl - Polish
pms - Piedmontese
pnb - Western Punjabi
pnt - Pontic
prg - Prussian
ps - Pashto
pt - Portuguese
pt-br - Brazilian Portuguese
pwn - Paiwan
qqq - Message documentation
qu - Quechua
qug - Chimborazo Highland Quichua
rgn - Romagnol
rif - Riffian
rki - Arakanese
rm - Romansh
rmc - Carpathian Romani
rmy - Vlax Romani
rn - Rundi
ro - Romanian
roa-tara - Tarantino
rsk - Pannonian Rusyn
ru - Russian
rue - Rusyn
rup - Aromanian
ruq - Megleno-Romanian
ruq-cyrl - Megleno-Romanian (Cyrillic script)
ruq-latn - Megleno-Romanian (Latin script)
rw - Kinyarwanda
ryu - Okinawan
sa - Sanskrit
sah - Yakut
sat - Santali
sc - Sardinian
scn - Sicilian
sco - Scots
sd - Sindhi
sdc - Sassarese Sardinian
sdh - Southern Kurdish
se - Northern Sami
se-fi - davvisámegiella (Suoma bealde)
se-no - davvisámegiella (Norgga bealde)
se-se - davvisámegiella (Ruoŧa bealde)
sei - Seri
ses - Koyraboro Senni
sg - Sango
sgs - Samogitian
sh - Serbo-Croatian
sh-cyrl - српскохрватски (ћирилица)
sh-latn - srpskohrvatski (latinica)
shi - Tachelhit
shi-latn - Tachelhit (Latin script)
shi-tfng - Tachelhit (Tifinagh script)
shn - Shan
shy - Shawiya
shy-latn - Shawiya (Latin script)
si - Sinhala
simple - Simple English
sjd - Kildin Sami
sje - Pite Sami
sk - Slovak
skr - Saraiki
skr-arab - Saraiki (Arabic script)
sl - Slovenian
sli - Lower Silesian
sm - Samoan
sma - Southern Sami
smn - Inari Sami
sms - Skolt Sami
sn - Shona
so - Somali
sq - Albanian
sr - Serbian
sr-ec - Serbian (Cyrillic script)
sr-el - Serbian (Latin script)
srn - Sranan Tongo
sro - Campidanese Sardinian
ss - Swati
st - Southern Sotho
stq - Saterland Frisian
sty - Siberian Tatar
su - Sundanese
sv - Swedish
sw - Swahili
syl - Sylheti
szl - Silesian
szy - Sakizaya
ta - Tamil
tay - Tayal
tcy - Tulu
tdd - Tai Nuea
te - Telugu
tet - Tetum
tg - Tajik
tg-cyrl - Tajik (Cyrillic script)
tg-latn - Tajik (Latin script)
th - Thai
ti - Tigrinya
tk - Turkmen
tl - Tagalog
tly - Talysh
tly-cyrl - толыши
tn - Tswana
to - Tongan
tok - Toki Pona
tpi - Tok Pisin
tr - Turkish
tru - Turoyo
trv - Taroko
ts - Tsonga
tt - Tatar
tt-cyrl - Tatar (Cyrillic script)
tt-latn - Tatar (Latin script)
tum - Tumbuka
tw - Twi
ty - Tahitian
tyv - Tuvinian
tzm - Central Atlas Tamazight
udm - Udmurt
ug - Uyghur
ug-arab - Uyghur (Arabic script)
ug-latn - Uyghur (Latin script)
uk - Ukrainian
ur - Urdu
uz - Uzbek
uz-cyrl - Uzbek (Cyrillic script)
uz-latn - Uzbek (Latin script)
ve - Venda
vec - Venetian
vep - Veps
vi - Vietnamese
vls - West Flemish
vmf - Main-Franconian
vmw - Makhuwa
vo - Volapük
vot - Votic
vro - Võro
wa - Walloon
wal - Wolaytta
war - Waray
wls - Wallisian
wo - Wolof
wuu - Wu Chinese
xal - Kalmyk
xh - Xhosa
xmf - Mingrelian
xsy - Saisiyat
yi - Yiddish
yo - Yoruba
yrl - Nheengatu
yue - Cantonese
za - Zhuang
zea - Zeelandic
zgh - Standard Moroccan Tamazight
zh - Chinese
zh-cn - Chinese (China)
zh-hans - Simplified Chinese
zh-hant - Traditional Chinese
zh-hk - Chinese (Hong Kong)
zh-mo - Chinese (Macau)
zh-my - Chinese (Malaysia)
zh-sg - Chinese (Singapore)
zh-tw - Chinese (Taiwan)
zu - Zulu
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<languages /> [[File:Mutter Teresa von Kalkutta.jpg|thumb|<span lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">Mother Teresa (December 1985)</span>]] <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Mother Teresa was the founder of the Order of the Missionaries of Charity, a Roman Catholic order of nuns dedicated to serving the poor, especially in India. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> == Her calling == </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> As a young girl in Albania, Teresa knew that God was in pain and she wanted to walk in the way of the Good Physician to alleviate that pain where God’s hurt was greatest. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> The Catholic nun and missionary who became known as the saint of the gutters did not begin her mission in the streets. She served for a time at the Loreto convent school in Calcutta, teaching the well-to-do young. Teaching was rewarding work, but it was not her ultimate mission. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Her real call came when she was on a train to Darjeeling in 1946. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Father Edward Le Joly, her spiritual director for two decades, recounts the story of how she heard God’s call: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>“It was,” Mother Teresa told me, “on the tenth of September 1946, in the train that took me to Darjeeling, the hill station in the Himalayas, that I heard the call of God.” In quiet, intimate prayer with her Lord, she heard distinctly what she says was for her, “a call within a call.” “The message was quite clear: I was to leave the convent and help the poor whilst living among them. It was an order. I knew where I belonged.”<ref>E. Le Joly, ''Servant of Love'' (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1977), p. 17.</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> So she answered [[El Morya]]’s call to serve the poorest of the poor in Calcutta. Malcolm Muggeridge explains in his book, ''Something Beautiful for God'': </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>This was the end of her biography and the beginning of her life; in abolishing herself she found herself, by virtue of that unique Christian transformation, manifested in the Crucifixion and the Resurrection, whereby we die in order to live.<ref>Malcolm Muggeridge, ''Something Beautiful for God'' (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1971), p. 16.</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Muggeridge, who lived a European lifestyle in Calcutta as a newspaperman in the thirties, found life there barely tolerable. When he learned of Mother Teresa’s move, he was deeply affected. He writes: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>To ''choose'', as Mother Teresa did, to live in the slums of Calcutta, amidst all the dirt and disease and misery, signified a spirit so indomitable, a faith so intractable, a love so abounding, that I felt abashed.<ref>Ibid., p. 21.</ref></blockquote> </div> [[File:MLP ECP Mother Theresa.jpg|thumb|<span lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">Mark and Elizabeth Prophet with Mother Teresa (April 1970)</span>]] <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> == Her mission == </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> After she made the decision to serve the poor, she patiently waited two years to be released from her vows, and with but a few rupees in her pocket she began her ministry. Now her Missionaries of Charity order runs orphanages, homes for the poor, AIDS hospices and other charity centers around the world. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> When she was first starting her mission, she was very much alone. She wrote in her diary: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>Today I learned a good lesson. The poverty of the poor must be so hard for them. While looking for a home (for a center), I walked and walked till my arms and legs ached. I thought how much they must ache in body and soul, looking for a home, food and health. Then the comfort of Loreto came to tempt me. But of free choice, my God, and out of love for You, I desire to remain and do whatever be Your holy will in my regard. Give me courage now, this moment.</blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Starting with nothing, she cheerfully went to serve those with less than nothing. Teresa counsels, “Make sure that you let God’s grace work in your souls by accepting whatever he gives you, and by giving him whatever he takes from you. True holiness consists in doing God’s will with a smile.<ref>Ibid., p. 67.</ref> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> In a 1974 interview she said: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>I see God in every human being. When I wash the leper’s wounds, I feel I am nursing the Lord himself. Is it not a beautiful experience?</blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Muggeridge commented on criticism of Mother Teresa: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote> Criticism of Mother Teresa is often directed at the insignificant scale of the work she and the Sisters undertake by comparison with the need.... But Christianity is not a statistical view of life. That there should be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over all the hosts of the just, is an anti-statistical proposition. Likewise with the work of [Mother Teresa’s] Missionaries of Charity. Mother Teresa is fond of saying that welfare is for a purpose—an admirable and a necessary one—whereas Christian love is for a person. The one is about numbers, the other about a man who was also God.<ref>Ibid., p. 28.</ref> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> What the poor need, Mother Teresa was fond of saying, even more than food and clothing and shelter (though they need these, too, desperately), is to be wanted. It is the outcast state their poverty imposes upon them that is the most agonizing.<ref>Ibid., pp. 22, 23.</ref> </blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> == Inner life == </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> To Mother Teresa, every act was one of surrender to God’s will. She said: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>Every day you have to say yes. Total surrender—to be where he wants you to be. If he puts you in the street, if everything is taken from you, to accept to be in the street at that moment. Not for you to put yourself in the street, but to accept to be put there. This is quite different. To accept if God wants you to be in the palace, as long as you are not choosing to be in the palace. This is what makes the difference in total surrender: to accept to be cut to pieces and yet for every piece to belong to him. This is the surrender.<ref>''Mother Teresa'', a film by Ann Petrie (Petrie Productions, 1986).</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> For Mother Teresa and her sisters, their holy work went hand in hand with prayer. Desmond Doig, the first journalist ever to write about Mother Teresa, said: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>To Mother Teresa, whose life is a living prayer, the need to withdraw, to be alone with God, is as important as her work.<ref>Desmond Doig, ''Mother Teresa: Her People and Her Work'' (New York: Harper & Row, 1976), p. 155.</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Sister Agnes, Teresa’s first postulant, once spoke of the importance of balancing their missionary work with prayer: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>Every day we have mass, half an hour of meditation, morning prayer, afternoon prayer, and in the evening we have a full hour of Adoration. It would not be possible to work otherwise. There must be a spiritual motive.<ref>Ibid., p. 156.</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Malcolm Muggeridge wrote: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>For Mother Teresa,... the mass [is] the spiritual food which sustains her, without which she could not get through one single day or hour of the life of dedication she has chosen.<ref>Muggeridge, ''Something Beautiful for God'', p. 53.</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Mother Teresa was love in action. As one of her Sisters of Charity said: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote>Mother ... wishes to die on her feet. And that is what she is doing—giving herself to the last drop.<ref>''Mother Teresa'', a film by Ann Petrie.</ref></blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> == Passing == </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> In ''Messages from Heaven'', a soul newly arrived in the retreats of the [[Brotherhood]] offered these comments following Mother Teresa’s passing: </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> <blockquote> Mother Teresa was in every way a saint. She received her calling from the masters at inner levels, and she fulfilled it beyond expectations. Some writers with little discernment and great ego have insinuated that Mother Teresa should have changed political policies for the poor, or that she was wrong to have brought in the money she did for her missions. God is not pleased with these comments, as they come from people attempting to sit in judgment where they have no place and no mantle. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Each person’s calling is unique. Mother Teresa was to serve the poorest of the poor. She did this with such profound love and awareness of the dignity of each soul that she actually bought extra time for this planet. She saw Christ in everyone. Her very presence helped others to want to do better, to give more and to serve more. Her presence was a healing force in and of itself. Her work was spiritually practical, but it also had great spiritual depth. She did not just talk the talk; she walked the walk. She lived the teachings of Christ. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Mother Teresa Teresa never sought any of the fame that came to her. In fact, it caused her spiritual angst and physical pain. The fame was truly Christ’s and not hers. She understood this, but those covering her story could not fully comprehend it. Abundance came to the missions, but this is the way of spiritual alchemy. She was God’s vessel. As she once said, “I am just a pencil in the Lord’s hand.” God provides abundance when it is necessary to the work of a saint. She was free of greed, hatred, covetoudness and other earthly foibles. Her desire was to save souls and save the poor. This she did magnificently. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Though she was a Catholic through and through, Mother Teresa honored the ways of all that she met. She condemned no one for his or her spiritual persuasion, and she served all who were sent her way. There are great lessons in this. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> There is a reason that Mother Teresa’s home was in India. She represented the Mother flame and India came to honor her as the Mother. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Heaven was waiting for her arrival. Her life was a cause for celebration in the etheric realm. Indeed, the words “well done” echoed through our halls, and we all felt joy in her accomplishments. This daughter of God understood joy as few have known it. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> It is important to note that her calling did not come easily or simply at first; very few do. Mother Teresa prayed without ceasing and studied to internalize the deepest meaning of Christ’s teaching. She was guided throughout her mission because of the purity of her intent and her dedication to the will of God. Her evolution to saint, however, was a path and a process. The greatest pity will be if others do not realize that this path is open to all who seek it with the fervor and commitment that she modeled.<ref>{{MFH}}, pp. 212–13.</ref> </blockquote> </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> == Sources == </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Elizabeth Clare Prophet, January 2, 1993. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Elizabeth Clare Prophet, October 13, 1997. </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> Elizabeth Clare Prophet, {{POWref|40|34|, October 1, 1997}} </div> <div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr"> [[Category:Christian saints]]{{DEFAULTSORT:Teresa}} </div> <references />