Because believers are moral or charitable, there are those who repeatedly argue whether religious beliefs are good or not. From the perspective of the overall situation, I think this type of discussion will completely ignore this; beliefs should be judged based on whether they are correct or wrong. (If that belief is incorrect, but if it makes people cheerful, can they say that they were deceived?) Of course, if you admit it is fake, no one will believe. Let's say that's a good thing - such advice is usually targeted to other people and not targeted to them. Beyond that, as a historical record, it is clear that religion has led people to make some very good things, and that they have led people to make things very bad. Or at least the source of interesting, potentially infinite arguments between sociologists and religious historians, but fortunately it is orthogonal to the truth or falsehood of religious claims
Nevertheless, I admit that I became interesting in the news that Mother Theresa did not believe in God during the last few years of her life. The letter she wrote was published as part of this project and they are seriously suspected
"Where is my faith?" She wrote. "Even in mind ... there is nothing but emptiness and darkness ... if there is God, please forgive me"
"Why am I working?" She asked with a letter. "There is no soul without God, Without soul, Jesus, you are not true."
I am not a person who has a strong affection for Mother Teresa, and her doubts makes her so tortuous. (Of course, these letters can completely describe reliable pictures.) And, in "what is very obvious but what must be explicitly stated because it is the Internet" It is just a case, and I will make a big conclusion. In addition to obvious facts, the motivation for altruistic behavior and charitable behavior can be very complicated. We should separate them from attempts to understand how the universe works.
Mr. Hitchens became his preacher to religious activists, especially Mother Theresa. "Missionary's position: Mother Teresa in theory and practice" (1995) "God is not great." He believes that Mother Theresa is a person who changes religious beliefs. Not a sacred charity worker, but a retrograde version of Roman Catholic. Many of his friends have a position to make you feel sick. In 1999, Clinton's assistant Mr. Higgins' friend friend Sidney Bruimentalt testified that before the grand jury he was not a harmful remark to journalists about Monica Louisky. Source, assumption of Monica Ruinsky on the president is under investigation, passing through the House of Representatives
Mother Theresa (1910-1997) is a Roman Catholic nun who devoted her life to serve the poor and the poor in the world. She spent many years in Calcutta, India, where he founded a charity missionary church, a religious organization devoted to helping people in need. In 1979, Mother Theresa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and became a symbol of charity project and selfless work. In 2016, Mother Theresa was named St. Teresa by the Roman Catholic Church. Mother Theresa was born in Skopje, the capital of the Republic of Macedonia in 1910. People do not know little about her early life, but when young, she felt she wanted to be a nun and she helped poor people through service. At the age of 18, she was allowed to join the Irish nuns group. After several months of training with Loreto's sister, she was allowed to travel to India. She accepted the official religious oath in 1931 and chose to be named after the missionary patron saint Lisieux St. Thereses.