Henri Nouwen relates a hospital...
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Henri Nouwen relates a hospital incident in which a chaplain in making his rounds came upon a 48-year-old farmer about to have surgery. The chaplain asked the man if anyone would be waiting for him when he returned home from the hospital. The man answered, "Nothing and nobody. Just hard work."
Nouwen in commenting upon this conversation provides an alternate way the chaplain might have responded to the forlorn farmer. "Look at me, and try to say that again ... I am here, and I am waiting for you." Nouwen goes on to comment, "No man can stay alive when nobody is waiting for him ... A man can keep his sanity and stay alive as long as there is at least one person waiting for him."
The writer of the Letter to the Hebrews affirms that there is always someone waiting for us, someone who is not just a temporary visitor but a permanent friend and intercessor, "... a priest forever, according to the order of Melchizedek." -- Hasler
Nouwen in commenting upon this conversation provides an alternate way the chaplain might have responded to the forlorn farmer. "Look at me, and try to say that again ... I am here, and I am waiting for you." Nouwen goes on to comment, "No man can stay alive when nobody is waiting for him ... A man can keep his sanity and stay alive as long as there is at least one person waiting for him."
The writer of the Letter to the Hebrews affirms that there is always someone waiting for us, someone who is not just a temporary visitor but a permanent friend and intercessor, "... a priest forever, according to the order of Melchizedek." -- Hasler
