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thank you for posting this. :)
i printed out the first one, and it's now on my desk.
congrats on the engagement-many blessing, michelle.





i've been meaning to quote some excerpts from this amazing book, recommended to me by Cathy Pino (thanks!). i also recently completed One Land, a song that reverberates with the thoughts expressed in the second quotation below. Enjoy!


Henri Nouwen, et al., Compassion
Jesus' compassion is characterized by a downward pull. That is what disturbs us. We cannot even think of ourselves in terms other than those of an upward pull, an upward mobility in which we strive for better lives, higher salaries, and more prestigious positions. Thus, we are deeply disturbed by a God who embodies a downward movement. Instead of striving for a higher position, more power, and more influence, Jesus moves, as Karl Barth says, from "the heights to the depth, from victory to defeat, from riches to poverty, from triumph to suffering, from life to death." Jesus' whole life and mission involve accepting powerlessness and revealing in this powerlessness the limitlessness of God's love. Here we see what compassion means. It is not a bending toward the underprivileged from a privileged position; it is not a reaching out from on high to those who are less fortunate below; it is not a gesture of sympathy or pity for those who fail to make it in the upward pull. On the contrary, compassion means going directly to those people and places where suffering is most acute and building a home there. God's compassion is total, absolute, unconditional, without reservation. It is the compassion of the one who keeps going to the most forgotten corners of the world, and who cannot rest as long as there are still human beings with tears in their eyes. It is the compassion of a God who does not merely act as a servant, but who expresses the divinity of God through servanthood.


Henri Nouwen, et al., Compassion
In the Acts of the Apostles, we get a glimpse of this new togetherness: "The faithful all lived together and owned everything in common ... Day by day the Lord added to their community [literally: their togetherness] those destined to be saved" (Ac 2:44-47). The Christian community is not driven together but drawn together. By leaving the ordinary and proper places and responding to the call to follow Christ, people with very different backgrounds discover each other as fellow travelers brought together in common discipleship. ...

True displacement ... evokes a deep new awareness of solidarity. The criterion for any form of detachment, any form of "leaving home," is the degree to which it reveals the common ground on which we stand together.