In Reaching Out , author and theologian Henri Nouwen describes three "movements"--movements in the sense of psychological growth: the first movement is from loneliness to solitude, the second is from hostility to hospitality, and the third is from illusion (the illusion that we are masters of our fate) to prayer. The author uses this movement paradigm to illustrate certain paradoxes that happen in our social life, our communal life and our spiritual life (all of which of course overlap): in order to be open you first have to be closed, in order to genuinely share yourself you have to have enough solitude--even loneliness--to know yourself. And in order to navigate modernity, you have to set aside any illusions, delusions or arrogances you might have about it, or yourself. There are interesting parallels here between this work and the Life of Saint Columba , who had to make his own rather difficult journey from "hostility to hospitality" over the course of his life....
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