Success is not all it’s cracked up to be. Just ask America’s
minuscule-but-mouthy atheist minority.
After decades of victorious campaigns against Christmas carols and manger
scenes, perennially aggrieved non-believers now find themselves bereft of
outlets for their anti-God ire. Casting about for signs of theocracy in an
increasingly secular society, they frequently must rage against a
less-than-ideal target.
Like a postage stamp.
Don’t worry, the earnest non-believers at the Freedom From Religion
Foundation
are not offended by the frivolity of the U.S. Postal Service’s plans to
issue a
stamp this year honoring Sunday comics staple Beetle Bailey. Nor did they
mind
last year’s stamp immortalizing animated anti-hero Homer Simpson. And the
Postal Service’s plan to give atheist actress Katharine Hepburn her own
stamp
suits them just fine.
But a stamp featuring Mother Teresa? Now that’s outrageous.
The Albanian-born nun and world-renowned humanitarian does not deserve the
tribute, they say, because she was a religious figure who promoted "Roman
Catholic dogma, especially its anti-abortion ideology." In its call for a
letter-writing campaign against Mother Teresa’s stamp, the foundation cited
postal regulations that say stamps should not "honor religious institutions
or
individuals whose principal achievements are associated with religious
undertakings or beliefs."
The campaign, and the regrettably narrow wording of the Postal Service’s own
regulations, have put the Postal Service in the awkward position of arguing
against the influence of Mother Teresa’s faith on her humanitarian work.
Spokesman Roy Betts told Fox News, "This has nothing to do with religion or
faith... Mother Teresa is not being honored because of her religion, she’s
being honored for her work with the poor and her acts of humanitarian
relief."
While Betts’ second contention is undoubtedly true, Mother Teresa surely
would
reject the first. Her lifelong service to the poorest of the poor had
everything do to with her love for God and her conviction that every human
person — no matter how broke, how sick or how small — bears God’s image.
In her 87 years, Mother Teresa racked up an impressive list of worldly
accolades, many of them from admiring Americans. She won the Nobel Peace
Prize,
the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Congressional Gold Medal and honorary
U.S. citizenship — a distinction enjoyed by only five others in our nation’s
history. A 1999 Gallup poll found that Mother Teresa was the most admired
person of the century, outranking the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., John
F.
Kennedy, Albert Einstein and Helen Keller, all of whom have their own
stamps.
The reason we admired Mother Teresa is that she did not live for our
admiration. She bathed lepers, nursed AIDS patients and cradled orphans not
to
win awards or push a political agenda. She did so because she believed that
in
touching them, she was touching Jesus himself.
"We are not social workers," she said, when explaining the work of her
Missionaries of Charity to America’s political elites at the 1994 National
Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C. "We may be doing social work in the
eyes
of some people, but we must be contemplatives in the heart of the world."
It’s easy to dismiss the campaign against Mother Teresa as another silly
publicity stunt from atheist activists with too much time on their hands.
Indeed, that’s how most Americans — including some fellow atheists — have
reacted.
Yet it’s worth pondering where we are headed as a nation when a woman of
such
manifest goodness, who served others regardless of their beliefs, cannot
merit
even a postage stamp without controversy and disclaimers from her defenders
about the irrelevance of her faith. A culture with such a squeamish,
privatized
view of religion is unlikely to produce another Mother Teresa or Martin
Luther
King Jr., rising up to remind us that genuine love of God always has social
consequences.
Mother Teresa probably will get her stamp. Atheist activists have overshot
on
this one and made themselves look silly in the process. But the climate of
fear
and defensiveness that their decades-long campaign against religion has
fostered in America — a nation founded on religious freedom — is no laughing
matter.
Colleen Carroll Campbell is an author, television and radio host and St.
Louis-based fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Her website is
www.colleen-campbell.com.