Henri Nouwen and The Return of the Prodigal Son. Gabrielle Earnshaw
Nouwen’s journey with the Rembrandt painting ended, another one began. In 1991, just as The Return of the Prodigal Son was entering the production stage with his publisher Doubleday, Nouwen became transfixed by another image of God. This time, it was a trapeze troupe called the Flying Rodleighs. In this group of creative people, Nouwen saw God as the catcher and us as the flyers who can take risks because of our trust that we will be caught. The full meaning of this image would take years for Nouwen to understand, but one facet of the attraction was its physicality. The trapeze-troupe image called Nouwen to consider his body and the physical aspect of the spiritual journey. It appears that the next leg of Nouwen’s journey was to be a physical one. He was being called to enter into his body more fully. This is an important turn in Nouwen’s life and one we will return to later in greater depth.
Henri Nouwen collapsed in front of the prodigal son poster in 1983. A number of factors, including his nature as a spiritual quester, led to that moment. When The Return of the Prodigal Son ends, we have witnessed a metamorphosis. A central event on the way was forgiving his father. He shifts his focus from the father he doesn’t have to the father he does; and he finds freedom. He courageously lets go of the privilege of sonship and claims the gift of spiritual fatherhood. Nouwen senses the freedom of being a child of God without the prison of resentment or self-occupation. Blessing others becomes important.
As readers, we recognize this story because it shares elements of a hero’s journey. Nouwen goes through trials and emerges on the other side a changed man. He lives his struggles differently in light of his newfound wisdom.
John O’Donohue, in his book Anam Cara, suggests that there is a place inside every one of us that has experienced God’s unconditional love and that we spend our lives trying to get back to it. He writes, “We are capable of such love and belonging because the soul holds the echo of a primal intimacy.”24 Nouwen, through his personal story, tells this universal truth of life.
Chapter 2
Visio Divina and the Spiritual Vision
What you carry in your heart is what you see.
(Henri Nouwen)25
One might assume that the Rembrandt painting that struck Nouwen like a “lightning bolt” was a peak experience, a once-in-a-lifetime epiphany. In fact, Nouwen was on the lookout for “glimpses” of God at all times. As I noted earlier, he saw God in a trapeze troupe, for instance, and at the very time Nouwen was transfixed by “his painting,” he was captivated by yet another image. This was a reproduction of a Rublev’s Trinity icon, placed on the table in the room where he was staying in Trosly by Jean Vanier’s secretary, Barbara Swanekamp. The Trinity icon, and other icons after it, became so connected with Nouwen’s spiritual life that in 1987, five years ahead of The Return of the Prodigal Son, he would publish a book about them. That book, Behold the Beauty of the Lord: Praying with Icons, is important because it shows us how Henri Nouwen saw art and explains his capacity to enter so fully and fruitfully into the painting by Rembrandt.26
Behold the Beauty of the Lord was published in February 1987 by Ave Maria Press. It explores the power of looking at religious iconography in the Eastern Orthodox tradition and is structured around Nouwen’s meditation on four icons and the meaning he found in them. As iconographer Robert Lentz pointed out in the foreword, it is not a scholarly work (though Nouwen prepared for the manuscript by reading deeply into the subject); it is a response of his soul (Behold, 11).
For Nouwen, icons allowed for transcendence without language and thought. He suggests that when we are tired, restless, or depressed, when we can’t pray, read, or think, we “can still look at these images so intimately connected with the experience of love”27 (Behold, 20).
In addition to helping us pray when we don’t have words, Nouwen’s book teaches us that we can choose what we see. We can take conscious steps to safeguard our inner space. Nouwen recognizes that we are bombarded with images, many of which are damaging, and we must be vigilant about where we put our attention. He writes, “It is easy to become a victim to the vast array of visual stimuli surrounding us. The ‘powers and principalities’ control many of our daily images. Posters, billboards, television, videocassettes, movies and store windows continuously assault our eyes and inscribe their images upon our memories.… Still, we do not have to be passive victims of a world that wants to entertain and distract us. We can make some decisions and choices” (Behold, 21).
Nouwen suggests that we commit images of art to memory, similar to how we might memorize the Jesus Prayer or passages from the Psalms. We memorize them to bring to mind when we need them. Nouwen, for instance, memorized work by Rembrandt and Vincent van Gogh. During his “Returning” retreat, he shared, “These Dutch painters have entered my heart in a very deep way, so I have them in my mind as I speak to you. They have become my consolation and when I find I have nothing to say, when I have only tears for what is happening in my life, I look at Rembrandt or at Van Gogh. Their lives and their art heals and consoles me more than anything else” (Home Tonight, 13).
When Nouwen was a child, the Nouwen family owned an original watercolor by Marc Chagall of a vase of flowers standing in front of a window. It was purchased by Nouwen’s parents, Maria and Laurent, in Paris, shortly after their wedding and before Chagall’s international fame. It hung in the family living room while Nouwen was growing up. Nouwen says that the painting, closely associated with his mother, who loved it very much, had imprinted itself so deeply on his inner life that it appeared every time he needed comfort and consolation. “With my heart’s eye I look at the painting with the same affection as my parents did, and I feel consoled and comforted” (Behold, 19).
Visio divina, or “divine seeing,” is an ancient contemplative practice that invites the practitioner to encounter the divine through images. Sharing roots with the practice of lectio divina—the practice of reading Scripture and then holding what one has read in the heart and contemplating it from there—visio divina is an interaction with an image to create a powerful experience of the divine. Practitioners of lectio and visio divina use the imagination to become each person in the story or image, to feel what they are feeling, to think what they are thinking, and to experience what they are experiencing.28
Visio divina as explained by Nouwen is more about gazing than looking. Instead of a kind of scrutiny, judgment, or evaluation, gazing is gentle, and allows for revelation. “Gazing,” Nouwen explains, “is probably the best word to touch the core of Eastern spirituality. Whereas St. Benedict, who has set the tone for the spirituality of the West, calls us first to listen, the Byzantine fathers focus on gazing” (Behold, 22).
One day, Nouwen and his friend Sue Mosteller decided to go to the art gallery together. Nouwen was excited to show her a Vincent van Gogh painting of which he was particularly fond.29 Nouwen bounded up the gallery steps and headed straight for the painting. It was in a small frame and depicted a field, trees, and flowers. Nouwen sat down on a bench in front of the painting and Mosteller sat down beside him. Nouwen stared at the painting with a look of deep concentration. Mosteller looked at the painting, too, but after a few minutes was ready to get up and move on. Nouwen, however, continued to gaze. Mosteller tried to see whatever it was that he was seeing. She examined the details one by one, the composition, the brushstrokes, but after a few minutes, she again grew restless. “Henri!” she finally said, “What are you doing?” Nouwen turned to her in surprise and said, “I am in the painting! I am in the South of France and it is so beautiful. Aren’t you? Look at the colours! Look at the light!”30
This story allows us to speculate that Nouwen saw with a kind of spiritual vision.