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The E.Newspaper By Dr. Howdy, Ph.D. A.P.E., N.U.T.
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Friday
On The Other Side
I recently heard about the death of a young medical student from a rare form of cancer. He spent the last year of his life alternating between spending weeks in the hospital as a patient undergoing radiation and spending weeks in the hospital doing his clinical rotations. The rare health professional knows what it is like to be in the hospital bed, not just the one filling out the charts.
It is extremely difficult to imagine how vulnerable and dependent you feel when you put your life and dignity in another's hands, unless you or someone you love has had to do it. Doctors who have been patients have a unique ability to empathize with those whose treatment they oversee.
As I was thinking about this student's story, I began to see some parallels for our calling to spread the Gospel. I recognize that the doctor/patient relationship is not a very good metaphor for our relationship to those who need to hear the Gospel of Truth. If anything, we are less like the doctor and more like one who urges the sick person to receive medical care. However, just as doctors need to know or imagine what it feels like to be a patient, we need to remember what it feels like to be without God. If we forget what it is like to be sick, we will not be very compelling when we invite others to receive healing.
According to Scripture, before we were born anew in Christ, we were worse than sick; we were dead. The apostle Paul writes, "All of us also lived among them at one time, gratifying the cravings of our sinful nature and following its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature objects of wrath. But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions-it is by grace you have been saved" (Ephesians 2:3-5).
When we forget how far we have come-or rather, how far we have been brought-we become arrogant, callous healers. The temptation arises to practice a sledgehammer apologetic that obliterates your ideo- logical enemies rather than wins them over. We must not give in to this temptation; we must speak the truth in love. Love for other sinners flows out of the awareness that on your own you are no better off than they are.
Hospitals become cold, cruel places when patients are treated as mere bodies rather than souls. We make an even graver mistake when we treat people as mere minds without hearts, as intellects without emotions, as numbers rather than as those created in the image of God. Remember what it is like to be on the other side of the veil, to walk in darkness. May the memory stir you to compassion as you introduce others to the one who came not for the healthy ones, but for the sick. Betsy Childs
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