The New Wine Press November 2018 | Page 6

Father Thomas Albers, c . pp . s . May 4, 1940 – September 30, 2018 Funeral Homily, October 4, 2018 by Fr. Joe Nassal, c.pp.s., Provincial Director Servant Leadership In 1970, Robert Greenleaf published an essay called, “The Servant as Leader.” It was not a new concept— Jesus taught his disciples about servant leadership often in the gospels and modeled it clearly on the night before he died when he washed the feet of his disciples—but Greenleaf introduced the idea into the corporate world because he believed that “large institutions were not doing a good job of serving individuals or the larger society.” In his essay, which later became a series of books, he proposed “that the best leaders were servants first” who through their gifts of listening, intuition, and persuasion, focus “primarily on the growth and well-being of people and the communities to which they belong.” The test of a good servant leader, Greenleaf said, is to ask, “Do those served grow as persons? Do they become healthier, wiser, freer, and more likely themselves to become servants?” By this measure, I would propose that Fr. Tom Albers was a great servant leader. Fr. Tom had what Greenleaf describes as “the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first.” One of my first memories of Tom’s gifts for servant leadership, and especially his ability to listen and his persuasive personality, was when he invited me to lunch a couple of months after he was elected provincial. He asked me to consider becoming director of formation for the province. At the time, I was very happy in Sedalia and wanted to resist the invitation. But Tom listened intently as we shared a vision for the future of our formation of members and expanding the circle of our belonging that included what has become our Companions movement—and it was difficult to say no. As provincial, Fr. Tom was collaborative, compassionate, and creative—the very definition of the servant leader who, in Greenleaf ’s words, “shares power, puts the needs of others first,” and helps people grow in their potential to be servant leaders. He certainly helped me those eight years I worked with 4 • The New Wine Press • November 2018 him on the council. Though we didn’t always agree, Tom listened and all of us on the council felt heard. A Listening Heart The qualities of servant leadership that Fr. Tom embraced in his life are reflected in the familiar gospel of Jesus encountering the two distraught disciples on the road to Emmaus. Notice how Jesus “drew near and walked with them, but their eyes were prevented from recognizing him.” As he accompanies them, Jesus asks them what they are discussing, and the disciples stop in their tracks. They are startled that he had not heard the news. One of them says, “Are you the only person in Jerusalem who does not know of the things that took place in Jerusalem?” I can imagine the other saying, “Where have you been—in a cave all weekend?” And Jesus replying, “Well, as a matter of fact, that’s exactly where I’ve been.” But Jesus listened to their pain, their confusion, their doubts, and their fears. And then, he breaks open for them the stories that shaped their lives of faith. Something begins to stir within them and as they reach their destination, they urge Jesus, “Stay with us, for it is nearly evening and the day is almost over.” This story captures a spirituality of accompaniment that is so essential for servant leaders. Fr. Tom attuned the ear of his heart in his many years as a hospital chaplain in Chicago. He listened to the anxieties and fears of patients facing life-threatening health issues, and the sighs and cries of relatives and friends whose loved ones’ lives hung in the balance. He ministered