Henri Nouwen and The Return of the Prodigal Son. Gabrielle Earnshaw

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Henri Nouwen and The Return of the Prodigal Son - Gabrielle Earnshaw

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“never been reached before” (Prodigal Son, 4). What led to this moment of collapse in front of the prodigal son poster and made Nouwen feel “like a vulnerable little child who wanted to crawl onto its mother’s lap and cry” (Prodigal Son, 4)? What made his heart “leap” when he saw it (Prodigal Son, 4)?

      From a very early age, Henri Nouwen was on a quest. What he was searching for and how he went about finding it varied and took many forms as he grew up. But, fundamentally, Nouwen was searching for intimacy. He searched for bonds of love that would satisfy his need for safety and belonging.

      By all accounts, Nouwen came from a loving, stable family, but in his words, “Somehow fear of being rejected, of being abandoned, of being disliked has been with me as long as I can remember. I kept asking my parents, friends and colleagues in many different ways: ‘Do you love me?’ And I never heard a clear Yes that I could receive. I kept doubting, wondering, searching and begging for a final clear and total Yes, but it never seemed to come.”2

      “Do you love me?” was his primal cry for love and affection. It was a reaching-out for affirmation that perplexed his parents, Maria and Laurent. This yearning for love, what he calls “special love” (Home Tonight, xvii), is one of Nouwen’s signature character traits. Many of his life decisions make sense in view of this dominant feature of his personality.

      The search for love imbued Nouwen with curiosity and a sense of adventure as well as restlessness and dissatisfaction. It led him to join the priesthood and to a lifelong love affair with God. It also led to dark nights of the soul when loneliness and depression overwhelmed him.

      His first book, Intimacy, published in 1969 when he was thirty-seven years old, explored this foundational quest. In Intimacy, the search for love is equated with the search for home. In the Introduction, Nouwen says he will address “the seldom articulated and often unrecognized desire for a real home in this world” (Intimacy, 2).

      The word home conjures up images of safety, rest, and familial bonds. Home, if we are fortunate, is often a place of unity, integration, and freedom. These are the objects of Nouwen’s quest—as a baby in the crib reaching out for his parents, in 1969 as a young scholar writing his first book, in 1983 when he sees the Rembrandt poster for the first time. Nouwen is on a quest for home. The painting hits him “like a bolt of lightning” (as he describes it in an early draft of the manuscript—the Turner accession) because here, in the magical light of Rembrandt’s painting, he finally catches a glimpse of it.

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      The Return of the Prodigal Son has many characteristics of a spiritualquest narrative. Like all hero or heroine stories, Nouwen begins with a classic opener: “One day I went to visit my friend …” He describes his state of mind: “I was exhausted from a self-exposing speaking tour.” He creates an instant rapport with his listeners by sharing his vulnerability: “I was anxious, lonely, restless, and very needy.” When describing the feeling of seeing the poster for the first time, he uses a biblical quote, “My heart leapt when I saw it,” referencing the passage in Luke when Elizabeth hears Mary’s greeting and her baby “leaped in her womb.” As in Luke’s Gospel, this detail foreshadows a spiritual event to come. It has a suggestive quality of larger mysteries to unfold. The pregnancy imagery hints at a rebirth.

      He draws us deeper into his story by describing a series of trials—his breakdown after moving to L’Arche following the dissolution of an important relationship, the accident that left him close to death, reconciliation with his father that called him to a new vocation of blessing and forgiveness.

      While Nouwen travels a far physical distance in his journey, the tale he tells in The Return of the Prodigal Son is ultimately an interior one. Like heroes or heroines in myths and fairy tales, Nouwen gains wisdom from his trials and is transformed. He moves from seeker to the one found. He has new ears to hear the answer to his lifelong search for love and it fills his soul—“You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased” (Mark 1:11). Finally, like heroes or heroines before him, he goes on to share these “pearls of great price” with us, and with the story told we are left to ponder how we will navigate our own quest.

       Search for The Father’s Love

      While Henri Nouwen’s life can be viewed through the lens of a spiritual quest, another way to see it is as a search for a father’s love—both human and divine.

      In The Return of the Prodigal Son, Nouwen mentions his father, Laurent Nouwen Sr., three times. In two instances, the mention is in passing—one is about clothing that his parents bought him, and the second is about looking in the mirror and seeing his dad in his own image. In the third instance, however, Nouwen tells us a bit more about this central relationship in his life. He describes an incident from 1989, when after being critically injured in a road accident near his Daybreak home, he told his father, who had flown from Holland with his sister Laurien to be with him, something he had never shared with him before.

      While recovering after surgery, he explicitly told his father that he loved him and was grateful to receive his love. He shared other thoughts and feelings he had never verbalized, and was surprised by how long it had taken him to do so. His father was puzzled by it all, but received his words with a smile. Nouwen experienced this encounter as a “spiritual event” that allowed him to “return from a false dependence on a human father who cannot give me all I need to a true dependence on the divine Father” (Prodigal Son, 78).

      We sense that Nouwen forgives his father for not giving him everything he needed, or perhaps that Nouwen has reached a point where he realizes that what he needs is more than any human father could provide. It becomes a pivotal moment in Nouwen’s life.

      While this event is told in a few paragraphs in The Return of the Prodigal Son, in early attempts to write the book (which we will look at in more depth in later chapters), Nouwen is more explicit about his experience of his father and male authority figures in general. He writes, “I know the desire to be independent from a father who is strong, powerful and dominating. Whether I speak of my Dad, my bishop, the dean of the school or the leader of the community—there has always been the fearful father who knows things before you have told him, understands before you have explained, answers before you have asked and decides before you have voiced your opinion.”3

      While leading a retreat on the prodigal son in 1988 for members of L’Arche, Nouwen fleshed out his experience of his father further. There, he explained that he had always longed for his father’s approval but never seemed to get it.

      “You see,” he explained to his retreatants, “my father accomplished his goals late in life by becoming a successful professor of law, and based on his background this rise to fame was quite unusual in his day. My dad was very bright and able to function well in the world of competition. I, as the older son in our family, seemed to be programmed to believe that I had to be at least as good as my dad. Thus began a lifelong competition with respect to our careers and to most other subjects as well” (Home Tonight, 69).

      As Nouwen was aware, his experience of his father was unique to him. As the eldest of four children, he would have had a different relationship with his father than would his younger siblings. Peter Naus, a social psychologist who attended seminary with Nouwen and visited the family on occasion, remembers a difficult dynamic in the family in which Laurent Nouwen Sr. was competitive with Nouwen and the youngest daughter, Laurien, but not with sons Paul and Laurent. While basically a loving father, he often responded to Nouwen’s ideas with “I could have told you that long ago!” (see Home Tonight, 69).

      Naus

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