Chris
McDonnell, UK
chris@mcdonnell83.freeserve.co.uk
Previous articles by Chris Comments
welcome here
May
10, 2017
With
open hands
Sometimes
people you have never met face to face have an influence in your life that
is hard to measure.
It
might be a family member, maybe a great Grandma, who died before you were
born but whose name and life has run bright as oral DNA through the thread
of your family tree, always talked about, respected and held in high
regard, especially as an example to young ones. Their influence pervades
our lives even though our times are very different. Pointers and patterns
remain.
It
might be a political figure who through their commitment to the public
life of a nation has greatly influenced our own lives. We haven’t met
them, but their very presence and activity has shaped our own immediate
world.
You
can, I am sure, think of many other examples from within your own
experience.
One
such person for me was the Dutch priest, Henri Nouwen, who died twenty one
years ago, in September 1996. Nouwen
was ordained for the Archdiocese of Utrecht on July 21, 1957 but spent
most of his life in
North America
, working in the field of clinical psychology, where he taught in both
Yale and Harvard. A charismatic teacher, he was to become famous for his
many books and it was in the printed pages of his work that I met and
valued him. One such book, dating originally from 1971 involved Nouwen’s
sharing with a group of students the experience of prayer. It was
reprinted in 1994 with a beautiful balance of black and white images
accompanying the words- “With Open
Hands.”
“With gentle
simplicity and challenging insight Henri Nouwen invites us
to embark on a prayerful journey, to release our tightly clenched
fists and open our hands to God”
We exchanged a number of letters and I shared with him a few
of my own words, when out of the blue, a signed copy of ‘With
Open Hands’ arrived in my letter box from his home inToronto
. Now a treasured, well-thumbed book, it is greatly valued. There is no
space here to go through the many publications that carry his name. No
matter. If you are unfamiliar with his writing but see his name in a
bookshop, buy the book and be surprised by the joys, honesty and at times
painful journey of a fellow pilgrim.
The metaphor of the open-hands, clenched-fist is very
pertinent to our present times. A few days back we saw pictures of Francis
at Al Azhar mosque in
Cairo
where he embraced the mosque’s Grand Imam, Ahmad al-Tayeb, who urged the
West not to hold an entire religion “accountable
for the crimes of any small group of followers.” That image of
greeting between a Christian and a Muslim runs counter to our populist
press view of castigation of a whole people through the actions of a few.
In his opening words Francis said “We
have an obligation to denounce violations of human dignity and human
rights, to expose attempts to justify every form of hatred in the name of
religion, and to condemn these attempts as idolatrous caricatures of
God.” Only days after the Palm Sunday bombing of Coptic Christians,
it was with open hands rather than clenched fists that the two men
embraced each other.
So much of the Gospel narrative is about helping the
stranger, of offering a hand when help is needed. The generosity we show
to each other is a reflection of the overwhelming generosity that the Lord
shows to each one of us.
Open
hands are needed when a gift is accepted, a closed fist means that nothing
can be received. When in time of prayer we seek the gift of God’s
presence, our open hands are essential. We share that gift with others
through our presence, our openness to their need.
There
is a tension in a clenched fist that transmits both anger and frustration,
where closed fingers are wrapped so tightly that no gentle or caring
action is possible. When hands are held, fingers are intertwined and
forming a fist is not possible. But
each hand holding the other is both supportive and comforting, a
gentleness is exchanged
Let’s
finish with words from Nouwen again.
“Deep silence leads us to realize
that prayer is, above all, acceptance. When we pray we are standing with
our hands open to the world. We know that God will become known to us in
nature around us, in people we meet, in situations we run into.”
It
is too much to expect that we can understand if we do not listen, too
difficult to give if our hands are not open to receiving. Prayer is a way
of life which allows you to find a stillness in the midst of a troubled
world.
END
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