Journal of Sacred Work

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Today's meditation was written by Cathy Self, Senior Vice-President for the Baptist Healing Trust.

     Compassion Henri Nouwen, internationally renowned priest and author, consciously worked out what he called a theology of the heart and a spirituality borne of solitude, community, and compassion. Much like Thomas Merton, Nouwen stressed the importance of relationship when speaking about pain, suffering, and those things that weigh on our hearts.

     In the collection of his writings titled The Inner Voice of Love, Nouwen suggested pain is always connected to specific circumstances; we suffer because of hurt that has occurred in a specific time and in a specific place. Feelings of rejection, abandonment, or even uselessness are rooted in concrete events. Each experience of pain is indeed unique. Nouwen challenged the notion, however, that uniqueness means separateness. He wrote: "as long as you keep pointing to the specifics, you will miss the full meaning of your pain. You will deceive yourself into believing that if the people, circumstances, and events had been different, your pain would not exist. This might be partly true, but the deeper truth is that the situation which brought about your pain was simply the form in which you came in touch with the human condition of suffering. Your pain is the concrete way in which you participate in the pain of humanity."

     The paradox of shared pain is that healing, according to Nouwen, means moving from your pain to the pain. Focusing on the specific circumstances creates the opportunity for anger, resentment, and even regenge-seeking (although sometimes it seems we thinly disguise that motive as rational justice or fairness). Real healing comes from realizing personal pain is simply a share of humanity's pain and opens the possibility of compassionate living.

     Nouwen's hope was that we would find the way to live in solidarity with each other, including the hungry, the homeless, the prisoner, the refugee, the sick, and the dying letting our personal pain become part of what is shared among us all. When we can see our pain not as unique but shared, suffering is also shared, and the burden becomes lighter for us all. In that shared place we find solace and healing. In the eyes of other we see ourselves. Sound familiar? Sounds like Love to me.

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2 responses to “Day 120 – Shared Pain”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    Funny, I have a universal conception of Love but I’ve not consciously thought of pain in this way. When I am in the throws of pain I feel so alone and isolated because it seems no one else is experiencing my feelings, hence how could they understand? Yet, this suggested shift in perception is extremely helpful. Perhaps, others are not experiencing my circumstance but as human beings, we all experience the pain of loss.
    I feel as though I’ve been given the gift of an epiphany this morning and I could not hold on to something so beautiful without sharing with friends.
    Thank You!

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  2. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    For me, I had to understand that I was beloved to see every one else as beloved. Love is the source of our being. This understanding of love is how I was able to see other’s pain as my own. In other words, it opened me up to shared pain and compassionate living. Nouwen’s writings have been very meaningful to me over the years. Thank you Cathy for continuing to bring him (and your thoughts) to the Journal.

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