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The E.Newspaper By Dr. Howdy, Ph.D. A.P.E., N.U.T.
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Thursday
Patient's Hand On The Doorknob
The "doorknob phenomenon" is an occurrence many physicians know well. Doctors can proceed meticulously through complete examinations and medical histories with their patients, but it is often in the last thirty seconds of the appointment that the most helpful information is revealed. When a patient's hand is on the doorknob, body halfway out the door, vital inquiries seem to be made; crucial information is shared almost in passing. Many have speculated as to the reasons behind the doorknob phenomenon (which is perhaps not limited to the field of medicine), though a cure seems unlikely. Until then, words uttered on the threshold remain a valuable entity to the physician.
If I were to speak on behalf of the patient (and perhaps I've been a perpetrator of the phenomenon myself), I would note that the doorknob marks his last chance to be heard. Whatever the reason for not speaking up until that point-fear, discomfort, shame, or denial- he knows the criticalness of that moment. In thirty seconds, he will no longer be in the presence of one who offers healing. At the threshold between doctor's office and daily life, the right words are imperative; time is of essence.
I wonder if there is such a threshold as we stand before the Great Physician. There are times in prayer where it might feel as if we are moving down the sterile list of conditions and information. Work. Finances. Mom. Jack. Future. And where bringing God in prayer our laundry list of concerns with repeated perseverance is both necessary and helpful, perhaps there are times when we have silenced the greater diagnosis with the words we have chosen to leave unspoken. Can a physician heal wounds we will not show, symptoms we will not mention?
Thankfully, God can and does heal wounds we can't even articulate. But choosing to leave out of our prayers the toxic symptoms of worry and anxiousness hardly shows our prayer sincere for God's will to be done. How can He begin the work that needs to be done in our heart when we refuse to come near the operating table? Is there a cure for those who don't seek it? "Is there no balm in Gilead?" the prophet Jeremiah once cried. "Is there no physician there? No healing for the wound of my people?" Jeremiah lived during one of the most trouble some periods of Hebrew history. And he stood on the threshold between a people sick with rebellion and the great Physician to whom they refused to cry out in honesty.
"I have listened attentively," the LORD declared, "but they do not say what is right. No one repents of his wickedness, saying, 'What have I done?' Each pursues his own course like a horse charging into battle" (Jeremiah 8:6). His words are weighted with behavior I recognize. A patient who complains of a cough while a fatal wound is bleeding will neither find respite for the cough nor her unspoken pain; a good physician would not treat the cough until the bleeding has been stopped.
In Jeremiah's day as in our own, the promise of a painless remedy was not left unspoken. Of these prophets of deceit God uttered, "They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. 'Peace, peace,' they say, when there is no peace" (8:11). Their promises are easy to stand beside but crumble under the weight of us. To stand in honesty before the Great Physician is more difficult. It is to admit we need to be made well, however painful the remedy or costly the cure.
The great hymn places before us a powerful resolution:
No more let sins and sorrows grow, Nor thorns infest the ground He comes to make His blessing flow Far as the curse is found, Far as the curse is found.
The woundedness of humanity is serious. It cannot be bandaged as anything less than a mortal wound. Let us not wait until we've reached the threshold of life and death to address the indications of our illness. But let us in hope and honesty come into the presence of one who imparts healing. In the coming of Christ, God offers a cure that extends as far as the wound has festered. Jill Carattini
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