Henri Nouwen presents in his book "The Living Reminder" a
vital source of a minister and his ministry's vitality. This source is the
dynamism between spirituality and ministry. Ministry is defined as the service
in the name of the Lord. Spirituality is attention to the life of the spirit in
us. These two aspects of a minister's life go hand in hand. There is no
dichotomy between ministry and spirituality. They form a single being. That is
the minister! Thus, praying is as essential as preaching and doing apostolate. One
cannot claim that he is a preacher at one moment, and on moment a pray-er
alone. One prays as he preaches, and he preaches as he prays. These two cannot
be separated.
Nouwen describes the minister as a healing reminder, sustaining
reminder, and a guiding reminder. The task of healing, sustaining and guiding
others in his ministry prospers if the minister himself is healed, sustained,
and guided (or even if he is in the process of). For one cannot impart that
which he does not have, or never experience. It is essential, therefore, that
he is healed from his wounds; he is sustained by God and the richness of their
encounters, and he is guided by the lessons he learned in his life. We are not
aspiring for a perfect minister here on earth. After all, as the cliché goes,
we are but wounded healers. And if I may add, we have sustained sustainers and
guided guides. We are on the road to perfection, but that road begins in our
admission of our very own imperfections. Our open declaration of our brokenness
and fragility set us towards wholeness and holiness. The first step is the admission (for one's need of healing,
sustenance, and guidance). Through acceptance, one comes a long way towards
becoming God’s living reminder.