I agree with this wholeheartedly: “There is no dichotomy between the sacred and the secular.”
]]>I regard I am extremely blessed and privileged as a physician to meet so many people with all kinds of racial, cultural, religious background and all kinds of social status for more than 30 years. Many of them really appreciate my care that lasted more than 20 years, but I also learned many things from them for which I am really grateful to them.
]]>Thank you for sharing, Joshua Yoon. These are excellent quotes and remind me of Henri Nouwen:
“Supporting people with exceptional needs has been a tremendous blessing to me, because they are teaching me invaluable lessons about life. Because of them, I feel my life as a Christian is becoming more balanced. Before encountering these people, my relationships were limited and not quite healthy. When I interacted only with university students, I developed a kind of elitism that is uncharacteristic of Jesus Christ. Jesus reached out to people of all kinds. Even though he raised disciples, he did not limit the scope of his social interaction only to those we might consider to be good discipleship material. Jesus also mingled with the less fortunate and disadvantaged and regarded them as having immense value.”
“One thing I know is that our Lord Jesus Christ loved me so much that he gave up his life for me on the cross. It is my heart’s desire to learn how to love someone genuinely with the love of Christ, whether that person is a university student or a person with developmental disabilities or even my own child.”
]]>Thanks for this article. It is a blessing to be able to just spend time with people with developmental disabilities. So much to learn about people and about yourself as well.
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