Sunday, August 25, 2024

Radical servanthood (Henri Nouwen)

    Radical servanthood does not make sense unless we introduce a new level of understanding and see it as the way to encounter God. To be humble and persecuted cannot be desired unless we can find God in humility and persecution. When we begin to see God, the source of all our comfort and consolation, in the center of servanthood, compassion becomes much more than doing good for unfortunate people. 

   Radical servanthood, as the encounter with the compassionate God, takes us beyond the distinctions between wealth and poverty, success and failure, fortune and bad luck. Radical servanthood is not an enterprise in which we try to surround ourselves with as much misery as possible, but a joyful way of life in which our eyes are opened to the vision of the true God who chose to be revealed in servanthood. The poor are called blessed not because poverty is good, but because theirs is the kingdom of heaven; the mourners are called blessed not because mourning is good, but because they shall be comforted. 

    Here we are touching the profound spiritual truth that service is an expression of the search for God and not just of the desire to bring about individual or social change. 

--Henri Nouwen 

Image source: Mary Cassatt, The Child’s Bath (1893), https://one-hand-clapping.blogspot.com/2012/04/art-in-lent-washing-of-feet.html
Quotation source

No comments:

Post a Comment