While Mother Teresa's act of humanity is certainly to be admired - it was not free and unconditional. She wanted all the children to have the christian dogma in their thinking. By doing that she has contributed to multiple generations of people who will be willing to commit crime under the guise of "faith". Baba Amte - who probably did even larger work by rehabilitating people suffering from leprosy - did not worry about the faith of the people he was healing. His work does not carry the mental burden of dogma the individual will carry and propagate in subsequent generations. Mother Teresa's so called work in return for "surrendering to Jesus" actually eventually made her question her own faith and belief in God because she - deep in her heart - knew that her work was not unconditional and with true love.
On Jan 23, 2010 Rational wrote:
While Mother Teresa's act of humanity is certainly to be admired - it was not free and unconditional. She wanted all the children to have the christian dogma in their thinking. By doing that she has contributed to multiple generations of people who will be willing to commit crime under the guise of "faith". Baba Amte - who probably did even larger work by rehabilitating people suffering from leprosy - did not worry about the faith of the people he was healing. His work does not carry the mental burden of dogma the individual will carry and propagate in subsequent generations. Mother Teresa's so called work in return for "surrendering to Jesus" actually eventually made her question her own faith and belief in God because she - deep in her heart - knew that her work was not unconditional and with true love.