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A Letter of Consolation [Paperback]

Henri J. M. Nouwen (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0060663146 978-0060663148 December 15, 1989

Finding Faith in a Time of Sorrow

Beloved author Henri Nouwen reflects on the spiritual significance of death and life in this moving meditation dedicated to "all those who suffer the pain that death can bring and who search for new life."


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“An essay in the form of a long letter to [Nouwen’s] father after the death of his mother. One might well pass it on to anyone who is going through a period of grief after loss.” (Christian Century )

“Recognized for the depth and warmth of his spiritual communication, Father Nouwen grapples with death, a particular death--his mother’s...An intelligent, loving letter to a Christian facing a powerful enemy, death.” (Lutheran Libraries )

“On the long road it’s good to have Nouwen and his diving rod. Deftly he bends toward the drop of spiritual wisdom caked in the most ordinary things.” (Sister Helen Prejean, C.S.J., author of Dead Man Walking )

From the Back Cover

Finding Faith in a Time of Sorrow

Beloved author Henri Nouwen reflects on the spiritual significance of death and life in this moving meditation dedicated to "all those who suffer the pain that death can bring and who search for new life."


Product Details

  • Paperback: 96 pages
  • Publisher: HarperOne (December 15, 1989)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060663146
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060663148
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.3 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #384,338 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Henri Nouwen was born in Holland in 1932 and ordained a Catholic priest in 1957. He obtained his doctorandus in psychology from Nijmegen University in the Netherlands and taught at Notre Dame, Yale, and Harvard. He experienced the monastic life with Trappist monks at the Abbey of the Genesee, lived among the poor in Latin America with the Maryknoll missioners, and was interested and active in numerous causes related to social justice. After a lifetime of seeking, Henri Nouwen finally found his home in Canada, as pastor of L'Arche Daybreak - where people with intellectual disabilities and their caregivers live together in community.

Henri Nouwen wrote over 40 books on spirituality and the spiritual life that have sold millions of copies and been translated into dozens of languages. His vision of spirituality was broad and inclusive, and his compassion embraced all of humankind.

He died in 1996. His work and his spirit live on.

Henri Nouwen pronounced his name "Henry Now-en." For more information on his life and work, please visit www.henrinouwen.org .

 

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars new life, May 6, 2001
This review is from: A Letter of Consolation (Paperback)
I received valuable spiritual insight from Fr Henri J. M. Nouwen's (1932-96) "Letter of Consolation". There have been several deaths in my family this year. Thanks to this book by Fr Nouwen, Phd, I had something to offer my relatives which might be a source of spiritual comfort. This book was written in and around the week between Palm and Easter Sundays. Fr Nouwen writes to his father as he celebrates this holiday while reflecting on the recent death of his mother. A thought from this book which strengthened my spiritual understanding is the idea of a new life offered to us from death. Fr Nouwen writes that "death changed our experience of time" and that a "'normal' experience became for us a new experience." "The first Christmas without mother, the first New Year without mother...the first Easter without mother." Throughout, Fr Nouwen carries the themes that "Love is stronger than death" and "Death is absurd". These would be empty phrases if not that Fr Nouwen is writing from the painful experience of his own mother's death. I did learn more about facing death, particularly my own. I also learned about the role of my spiritual relationship in befriending death as a way of living more fully. If you or someone close to you is wrestling with grief from the loss of a loved one, this book will be interesting to you.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Lessons of Death, March 19, 2001
This review is from: A Letter of Consolation (Paperback)
Everybody is going to die. In fact, sixty years from now it is a good bet that the majority of the people we know and love will be dead. Death is one of the few truly universal things about life. If you live then you'll die. In his book, "A Letter of Consolation," Henri Nouwen confronts the subject of death head on.

In October of 1978 Henri Nouwen's mother died following a prolonged battle with Cancer. Six months later, partly while on a monastic retreat, Henri Nouwen wrote a lengthy letter to his grieving father. Several years later, hoping that its message might help others coping with loss, Henri's father encouraged him to publish the letter in book form. In this way, "A Letter of Consolation" came to be published.

The book is a keenly insightful look into a subject that few people ever think of before life's circumstances force them to. At a length of only ninety-six pages, "A Letter of Consolation" contains a staggering amount of thoughts worth pondering.

The early chapters of the book center on the grief unique to Henri and his father. Henri reflects on the loss of his mother as well as his father's loss of a life-long companion in his wife. Henri discusses how for he and his father living without Henri's mother made them find that "Every 'normal' experience became for us like a new experience." Henri then goes on to write about the lessons that death brings. He writes of how loss increases love. He reflects on how their love for his mother now has the added dimension of missing her.

As the book progresses, Nouwen begins to reflect more on the meaning of death itself. He reflects on what a crisis death is in the life of human beings. He writes of how lessons are to be learned from death. He speaks of how we must learn these lessons in order to be whole. He states: "Still, hidden in us there are levels of not-knowing, not-understanding and not-feeling that can only be revealed to us in our moments of great crisis"

"A Letter of Consolation" is a book about such much more than death in its simple everyday disguise. It is also a book that discusses death in the light of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Nouwen first introduces this subject by saying that death causes us to give up any illusions that immortality can be achieved by our own strength and power. He argues that death is the clearest case available for demonstrating why we need to become utterly dependent upon God. Nouwen ends the discussion by talking about Christ Himself. Writing his father on Easter Sunday, Nouwen concludes:

"I write this to you not to upset you but to console you in your grief. The lord who died, died for us--for you, for me, for mother, and for all people. He died not because of any death or darkness in him, but only to free us from the death and darkness in us. If the God who revealed life to us, and whose only desire is to bring us to life, loved us so much that he wanted to experience with us the total absurdity of death, then--yes, then there must be hope; then there must be something more than death; then there must be a promise that is not fulfilled in our short existence in this world; then leaving behind the ones you love, the flowers and the trees, the mountains and the oceans, the beauty of art and music, and all the exuberant gifts of life cannot be just the destruction and cruel end of all things; then indeed we have to wait for the third day."

My final judgment on this book is that it is absolutely worthwhile reading for anyone. It is for those who have experienced or are experiencing grief. It is especially for those who have not yet.

By looking through the window of the Nouwen family's grief, all readers stand to gain insight into what the meaning of death and grief really is-- All of us who are temporarily confined to these perishable, mortal frames may turn to God (even in the darkest night) and rest with assurance in the knowledge that the dawn of the third is for us, still coming.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A gift from the heart, March 21, 2003
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J. Brennan (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Letter of Consolation (Paperback)
My mother gave me this book when I had several close friends die in a short time. It moved me in many ways, and helped me touch the foundation of my spirituality and faith. I now send it to friends when they lose a parent. It provides a link to the human experience and how faith helps us move forward.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Next Monday it will be half a year since mother died. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
joyful waiting, befriend death
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Floris Bakels, Jesus Christ, United States, Good Friday, Holy Thursday, Son of God, Holy Saturday
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