More than ever, now is the time we need significant consolation. This is because, no matter how hard we try, there are limiting situations that cannot be overcome by our strength. Among them, the flow of the ecosystem and nature present us with very limiting situations.
Really, we need consolation and hope. However, where can we
get consolation? Churches that have spontaneously offered us strength, comfort,
hope, love and salvation are emptying out day by day.
Compared to Europe, Korea is a bit better off, but more than
half of the registered Catholics here are apathetic and non-practicing. Where
are they going? Why are religious congregations and orders shrinking?
Through various renewal movements such as “Laudato si’” and
“Sinodalitas,” the Catholic Church is working hard to improve challenging limit
situations, but fundamental and existential questions are still being raised.
What do you do when you are lonely, when you are sad, when you
are afraid, when you are sick, when you are hurt, when you feel you are being
ignored, when you feel self-pity, when everything seems to go wrong, when you
are angry with yourself, when you cannot forgive yourself, when you judge
yourself, when you cannot get out of your own mind, when you are stuck in the
past, when you feel you are not getting any attention, when you are sensitive,
when everything is grey, when an unpleasant feeling does not go away, when you
feel that someone is plotting against you?
“Die kleine Trostapotheke. Weisheit fur unfreundliche Tage”
(English title: “The Little Consolation Pharmacy. Wisdom for Unkind Days”)
written by both Anselm Grun and Ansgar Stufe gives us 18 uncomfortable
difficulties and eighteen prescriptions with comforting medicines that lead us
to discover our own spiritual strength to cope with limiting situations.
Like an inspiring duet, Anselm Grun gives us the healing power
and psychological perspective of the related Bible passages, and Ansgar Stufe,
who worked for 16 years at a missionary hospital in Tanzania, shares his rich
experience as a physician and a Saint Benedictine monk.
The two authors as pharmacists hope that their stories will
touch our hearts, heal our souls, comfort us in all our pain and difficulties,
lift us up and thus find consolation.
Anselm Grun examines and embraces the psychological situations
of people, focusing on the healing power of the Bible. And Ansgar Stufe focuses
on his rich experience as a doctor and a religious monk, prescribing necessary
spiritual medicines.
Containing 18 painful hardships and 18 comforting medicines,
the book gives us spiritual prescriptions with four steps.
First, it invites us to accept and talk about the difficulties
we face psychologically and mentally, such as loneliness, sadness, anxiety,
sickness, hurt, neglect, self-pity, anger and obsession.
Second, the experiences of the two authors invite us to have a
conversation within various situations.
Third, the words of consolation and the Bible passages empower
us to cope with difficult situations.
Fourth, similar but different prescriptions for each subject
hand over the opened prescription so that we can choose our own prescription
and overcome the reality with our spiritual strength.
“Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will
give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and
humble of heart; and you will find rest for your selves.” (Matthew 11:28-29)
The Korea Times/ Thoughts of the Times/ May 8 (online), 9 (offline), 2022
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