During the Whitsuntide vacation in...
Illustration
During the Whitsuntide vacation in 1896 a young university student awakens at his home in Gunsbach in the tiny region of Alsace-Lorraine smack on the border between Germany and France. He remains in bed for a while, contemplating how good he has it. That is refreshing. In fact, the big question the grateful student ponders is this: "Why am I so happy?
The young man is Albert Schweitzer. In his autobiography he explains his plight. " There came to me, as I awoke, the thought that I must not accept this happiness as a matter of course, but must give something in return for it.
What prompted him to raise the question in the first place was a biblical text he had been wrestling with for some time, namely Mark 8:35: "For whoever would save his life will lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel`s will save it.
Schweitzer came to see that Jesus` words were not a contradiction but actually a paradox. Once capturing the meaning of the text, he decided on a course of action as follows: "I settled with myself before I got up, that I would consider myself in living till I was thirty for science and art in order to devote myself from that time forward to the direct service of humanity. And he did just that.
- Hasler
The young man is Albert Schweitzer. In his autobiography he explains his plight. " There came to me, as I awoke, the thought that I must not accept this happiness as a matter of course, but must give something in return for it.
What prompted him to raise the question in the first place was a biblical text he had been wrestling with for some time, namely Mark 8:35: "For whoever would save his life will lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel`s will save it.
Schweitzer came to see that Jesus` words were not a contradiction but actually a paradox. Once capturing the meaning of the text, he decided on a course of action as follows: "I settled with myself before I got up, that I would consider myself in living till I was thirty for science and art in order to devote myself from that time forward to the direct service of humanity. And he did just that.
- Hasler
