The global legacy of Mother Angelica
From her monastery she reached into the farthest corners of the Catholic world.
She has a way.
Using the present tense for the nun who has passed into eternal life seems only fitting. Because she’s present on decades of air waves that continue to broadcast her shows in daily programming on the television and radio network she founded, she’s in booklets she wrote, long scattered across the world and now in the hands of people ‘in the desert, on mountains, in valleys’, as she once described her desire to reach people, ‘ to give courage, hope, strength’. And her voice is always resonating with the simple message at the center of everything she taught and said before rendered silent by debilitating strokes, and afterward in the witness of her constant suffering: ‘Jesus. Loves. You.’
Mother Angelica founded a monastery in the deep South decades ago out of great concern and reparation for the injustices carried out there through slavery, then segregation, discrimination and racial inequality, all of which she followed intently from her home in Ohio. It was the fulfillment of a promise to God for healing of an impairment, and both happened. From its very small and humble beginnings, the place was destined for big things, because the nun who ran it was a force of nature who wouldn’t be stopped from telling people in the world ‘Jesus. Loves. You.’ When network television aired a religiously themed program that corrupted the truth of the gospel, Mother Angelica decided to start her own. Construction workers building a garage for the nuns were tasked with turning it into a makeshift studio, get and set up some cameras and broadcast equipment, and beam a signal to carry the Eternal Word Television Network to whomever it would reach.
It reached me many years later, as I’ve shared here. As a woman broadcaster, I’m thankful to have watched and listened to her for so many years, seeing a woman of faith and conviction go live on the air with the ease of talking with the person in front of her about life and it’s ups and downs, faith fully authentic and alive and shared with what she never thought was courage because it came so naturally and from a deep place in her heart. She was truly Mother.
And she captivated people who knew nothing of the Catholic Church and probably didn’t want to, who happened onto her show by switching channels or tuning the dial, and something caught their attention there. That happened to people who were addicted to alcohol, porn, drugs, destructive behaviors, who stayed with Mother Angelica for the duration, and found healing. People who were lonely and abandoned, suicidal, happened upon her at just the right time to save their lives, and heal their hearts.
She talked about Jesus all the time, but in compelling and endlessly varied ways. The New York Times noted that Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput said “she succeeded at a task the nation’s bishops themselves couldn’t achieve.” It cited a Time Magazine profile calling her “arguably the most influential Roman Catholic woman in America.” Fr. Mitch Pacwa, one of the longest running hosts of programming on EWTN and the one who took over Mother’s show when a debilitating stroke finally ended her ability to speak, called herA Strong Woman in Love with Jesus.
The network has long aired the classic Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen series Life is Worth Living, as relevant now as ever. Bishop Robert Barron, whom many consider to be the ‘modern day Fulton Sheen’, founder of Word On Fire ministry and the host of the magnificent Catholicism series, simply and eloquently said this:
Against all odds and expectations, she created an evangelical vehicle without equal in the history of the Catholic Church. Starting from, quite literally, a garage in Alabama, EWTN now reaches 230 million homes in over 140 countries around the world. With the possible exception of John Paul II himself, she was the most watched and most effective Catholic evangelizer of the last fifty years.
But he acknowledged as well her scruffy ways, for which she was well known.
Mother Angelica wasn’t perfect—and she would be the first to admit it. Due to her lack of polish and advanced theological education, she sometimes said things that were insufficiently nuanced and balanced. And her hot temper, which gave fire to her evangelization, also at times led her to indulge in ad hominem attacks and unfair characterizations of her opponents’ positions. But these are quibbles.
Bishop Barron focused on
her instinct for the supernatural dimension of Christianity. Now I realize that such an instinct might seem rather obvious, but in the immediately post-conciliar years there was indeed a tendency to naturalize the supernatural, to reduce Christianity to the works of social justice and the cultivation of psychological well-being. Mother knew that a de-supernaturalized Christianity would in short order lose its soul and, paradoxically, its relevance to the world.
Tributes and memorials will continue to pour in from around the world, as Mother Angelica reached into the living rooms, on the dials and online in homes in the farthest flung places on the global Catholic network in many languages. She is laid to rest at the monastery she founded, this Friday. But she remains, with her way of challenging and encouraging modern culture to recognize the truth of human dignity, and the ever present love of God. Because she found a way to grow the EWTN media empire in the news world and geographical world, her voice will remain as long as signals will be broadcast, to do what Pope Francis so often encourages, to go out to the existential peripheries and create a culture of encounter.
I know. You are sick and tired of hearing about Donald Trump. But the man is like a freight train bearing down upon the lady tied to the railway line -- he simply can't be ignored. Today, however, we have a completely new angle on Trump: how much he has in common with Bernie Sanders, and what that says about America and, perforce, the world in general.
Adam Seagrave's thesis is not optimistic but it makes good sense to me: what the two politicians from opposite ends of the political spectrum demonstrate is the reduction of politics to economics. Americans, he says, have lost "a common framework within which to discuss and appreciate ... non-material political goods" such as natural rights, republicanism, virtue and the common good, so we have sunk into materialism.
The negative effects of modern philosophy and science have finally made their indelible mark on American society, making us disillusioned and individualistic comfort-seekers.
Again, I think this applies well beyond the shores of America. And it is a description of political life, not necessarily true at the individual or community level. Not true, for example, of Mother Angelica, the television nun whose passing we mark today, or her millions of followers and so many others who strive to live up to high ideals. But the breakdown of social consensus about such basic things as the meaning of marriage or the sanctity of life certainly makes political life difficult. Where are the Mother Angelicas of politics, I wonder, who can lead us out of this dilemma?
Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET
Mother Angelica’s common touch Carolyn Moynihan | ABOVE | 1 April 2016 Her plain speaking struck a chord in ordinary people. Read more... |
What Trump and Sanders teach us about America S. Adam Seagrave | FEATURES | 1 April 2016 A possible American political apocalypse. Read more... |
The global legacy of Mother Angelica Sheila Liaugminas | SHEILA REPORTS | 1 April 2016 From her monastery she reached into the farthest corners of the Catholic world. Read more... |
Income splitting: Trudeau dumps Canada’s new policy Ada Slivinski | FAMILY EDGE | 1 April 2016 The new Prime Minister doesn't 'get' the idea of family income. Read more... |
To be ‘A Speaker of Words and a Doer of Deeds’: literature and leadership Drew Faust | FEATURES | 1 April 2016 Defending the humanities at West Point. Read more... |
Women are more religiously devout than men Marcus Roberts | DEMOGRAPHY IS DESTINY | 1 April 2016 But why? Read more... |
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