"When we think about the people who have given us hope and have increased the  strength of our soul, we might discover that they were not the advice givers,  warners or moralists, but the few who were able to articulate in words and  actions the human condition in which we participate and who encouraged us to  face the realities of life.  Preachers who reduce mysteries to problems and  offer Band-Aid-type solutions are depressing because they avoid the  compassionate solidarity out of which healing comes forth.  But Tolstoy's  description of the complex emotions of Anna Karenina, driving her to suicide,  and Graham Greene's presentation of the burned out case of the Belgian architect  Querry, whose search for meaning leads him to his death in the African jungle,  can give us a new sense of hope.  Not because of any solution they offered  but because of the courage to enter so deeply into human suffering and speak  from there.  Neither Kierkegaard nor Satre nor Camus nor Hammarskjold nor  Solzhenitsyn has offered solutions, but many who read their words find new  strength to pursue their own personal search.  Those who do not run away from  our pains but touch them with compassion bring healing and new strength.  The  paradox indeed is that the beginning of healing is in the solidarity with the  pain." (emphasis mine)
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I'm loving this quote this morning. Thanks, Luke.
ReplyDelete"the beginning of healing is in the solidarity with the pain"
ReplyDeleteabsolutely.
Sweet quote! After I finish reading Kelly's "A Testament of Devotion," I will have to read one one Nouwen's books.
ReplyDelete-Blake Osborn
*of
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