Book review by Genevieve S. Kineke
Copyright © 2006
Anyone
who has surfed the television channels in the last ten years
has passed over a grandmotherly woman in full religious habit
- either laughing in a down-home way, speaking earnestly about
the love of Jesus, or peddling piles of religious articles.
The name of Mother Angelica is known to a wide swath of the
American population, which is no mean feat for someone without
an agent to keep a glossy visage strategically positioned in
the magazine racks.
Now whether you love her, hate her, or are in different would
be based on your view of the Jesus Christ and His Church -
the love of which together form the backbone of her worldview,
the reason for her work, and the object of her total fealty
since 1945. Those who believe that the true Church was founded
on the apostles, that the Pope is the Vicar of Christ, and
that the Magisterium is a vibrant and infallible guide to truth
usually see Mother's mission in a straightforward way. They
interpret her struggles as roadblocks allowed by God but stirred
up by the Fallen One, her victories as God's sign of approval,
and her personal suffering as her own Way of the Cross - a
sign of privilege uniting her more deeply to her Spouse. On
the other hand, those with another definition of "church" balk
at the idea of a cloistered nun without visible oversight meddling
in communications, catechesis, and the realm of the clergy.
Who does she think she is? To whom is she accountable? Why
can't she do things "by the book"?
Raymond Arroyo, well-known to the viewers of the Eternal Word
Television Network paints a thorough and unflinching portrait
of this woman, born Rita Rizzo in Canton, Ohio in 1923. Although
the reader may begin by being distracted by the author's own
remarkable personality and relationship to the story, his gift
of storytelling quickly allows him to recede into the background
and for the captivating tale to unfold. There was nothing romantic
about her childhood, with its backdrop of poverty, abandonment
by her father, her chronic illness, and her dingy Italian ghetto.
Her remaining parent was her mother, Mae - fragile, depressed,
suicidal, and utterly dependent on Rita for so many things.
Arroyo allows the poignant saga to breathe forth - through
ordinary life, struggles, insults, brokenness, and shards of
god-light at every turn. There are two distinct treasures that
flow from these pages. First, one is privy to the enormous
transformation in this woman that took place over the decades;
and secondly, one can see how God can work miracles with any
willing instrument. To look at the former, one must consider
the steady, consistent steps taken over the months, the years,
and the decades. The Rizzo's were not a believing pair - yet
they found deep faith. They never had a traditional home, yet
Mother became one of the most visible advocates of Pope John
Paul II's writings on the family. Mother joined a convent and
was convinced for years that it needed innovations to add relevance,
yet decades later she would reject those very notions and reintroduce
the most time-honoured traditions as a source of theological
stability.
To look at the second angle, the magnificence of God in this
story, one is brought to Our Lady's Magnificat: "The Almighty
has done great things for me ... He has cast down the mighty
from their thrones and has lifted up the lowly." Young
Rita - already infirm in her youth - suffers more physical
setbacks over the course of her life. Deprived of a father's
love, maternal affection, and any semblance of good health,
God nourishes her soul with Divine Love while allowing her
physical capacity to come and go. She experiences miracles
of healing, of meeting exorbitant financial needs, and of allowing
souls to be touched through her apostolate. For her part, she
placed no limits on God, repeatedly seeing just what He could
do - especially in the creation of EWTN despite her tremendous
inadequacies.
The reader is winded just following the afflictions, the injuries,
the physical deterioration, and the personal attacks, and yet
amidst them witnesses the growth of Mother's little apostolate
into the worldwide communications network, defying both business
protocols and human logic. Most painful is the bitter acrimony
between the fiery nun - in love with Christ and dedicated to
spreading the Gospel - and her own bishops who could not fathom
such audacity and "narrowness."
One easily calls to mind the greatest of saints - Catherine
of Siena and Teresa of Avila - who stepped outside the normal
confines of their vocation to be the prophets God called at
critical historical junctures, and it is in this term "prophet" that
the disparate definitions of the Church (offered at the outset)
must be weighed. Surely she was without oversight, surely she
spoke her mind - wryly, but even recklessly at times, and surely
she undertook a mission directed by a Voice reserved for her
alone. Whatever legitimate concerns the bishops may have had
were belied by a rancor and vindictiveness, which makes it
nearly impossible for the reader to imagine an authentic desire
on their part to share her endeavor. Additionally, according
to this well-documented account, her own shepherds revealed
a remarkable insipidness towards guarding the deposit of faith,
ultimately perceiving the network as more of a threat than
a gift. Frustrated, wounded, and even heartsick at times, Mother
Angelica remained faithful to her mission and filled a gaping
spiritual void with EWTN's solid programming and access to
the Universal Church.
As we idly flip the remote, past the network built on faith,
determination, and miracles, it is so easy to take it for granted.
With hundreds of stations, why shouldn't there be one dedicated
sharing to the Catholic faith? How big a deal is it, really?
Now we know the price Mother Angelica paid for that spot -
it was only every ounce of strength since she took her vows,
a total oblation of one saucy bride for the Bridegroom she
cherished, and Who accepted the gift of both EWTN and Rita
Rizzo on the altar of sacrifice.
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