I wrote this nearly 18 years ago. The lesson remains timeless.
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From the moment our 15 year-old son walked into the house after a weekend missions trip to Mexico, he rambled about his experience with an enthusiasm I thought he reserved only for computer programming. His excitement continued through dinner as he painted vivid word-pictures of homes he and other church members built for two impoverished families, the children they met, the food they ate, the bugs they chased. Then, as we left the dinner table, he added, “Oh, by the way, I cut my leg two days ago.” He pulled at his pants leg to give me a look. “What do you think?”
I’d been a nurse a long time, but had never seen
such a mass of angry, reddish-blue pustules like those covering his shin. It
was hard to know where infection stopped and healthy skin began. A thin, yellow
fluid seeped from an inch-wide blister and traced down into his sock. I bent
closer and caught a faint whiff of foul odor.
“Put on your coat. We’re going to the emergency
room.”
Shortly after we arrived, a physician examined
Nathan’s leg. He prodded, poked and murmured an occasional, “that’s
interesting” to no one in particular. Then he looked at us and announced the
bad news. Nathan needed intravenous antibiotic therapy to prevent the infection
from spreading to his bone or his blood. If it spread, he would require
hospitalization. Nathan’s “by-the-way” nonchalance suddenly transformed to an
“uh-oh” anxiety.
After the IV therapy, we drove home with a two-week
supply of antibiotics and other medications to help his leg heal. The physician
told me to keep him home from school for a few days.
When Nathan went to bed, I sat at my computer to
unwind from the day’s events. As I
stared at the blank screen, I thought about the incident beginning with
Nathan’s, “Oh, by the way.” I relived my gnawing fear as the doctor probed,
prodded and attended to his infection. Under different circumstances, Nathan’s
“Oh, by the way” could have ended in disaster.
It’s been many years since that evening, and I
still wonder how Nathan could have been so casual about something so serious.
Maybe it’s because he is so much like me -- and the rest of humankind. We often
deny reality, hoping, for example, the chest pain is indigestion and not a
heart attack, the persistent lump in our throat is phlegm, and not cancer,
or that weeping sores will get better by morning.
Yet, in an eerily similar way, how many of us also
deny our spiritual wounds with a similar nonchalant: “It’s not that bad”?
When I share my faith in Christ with others, their oft
common refrain, “I’m not that bad” makes me wonder if denial is subliminally
scripted into our subconscious. What people most often mean by that is, “When I
die, God will weigh my good deeds against my bad. I think I’ll do okay.”
Coming
from the lips of men and women whose spiritual wounds sometimes defy
description, I shake my head in bewilderment.
In the face of overwhelming spiritual injuries like life-wrenching substance
abuse, murderous tempers, sexual addictions and perversions, lost hopes, shattered families, broken dreams, dark depression, recurring
suicidal thoughts, and on and on . . . .
why do we persist in choosing to declare we need nothing more than a
bandage?
Perhaps because we hear the message “God loves us” so often, the words lose their significance. But it’s His love that prompts His warning, “Get to the Emergency Room (Calvary).” And there, when the Great Physician prods, pokes and tells us, “You need a new heart; you need to be born again” -- some still wonder, “What’s the big deal? It’s only a little sin.”
Nathan’s physical injury was a big deal. Skin infections such as his can invade the blood and become systemic infections overnight. Untreated, it could have killed him. And spiritual injuries are also a big deal. Untreated, they will spread through every hidden and not-so-hidden crevice of our lives – and will eventually separate us forever from God.
Perhaps because we hear the message “God loves us” so often, the words lose their significance. But it’s His love that prompts His warning, “Get to the Emergency Room (Calvary).” And there, when the Great Physician prods, pokes and tells us, “You need a new heart; you need to be born again” -- some still wonder, “What’s the big deal? It’s only a little sin.”
Nathan’s physical injury was a big deal. Skin infections such as his can invade the blood and become systemic infections overnight. Untreated, it could have killed him. And spiritual injuries are also a big deal. Untreated, they will spread through every hidden and not-so-hidden crevice of our lives – and will eventually separate us forever from God.
Nathan didn’t have a choice the evening he showed
me his leg and said, “Oh, by the way.” If he had refused to come to the
hospital I’d have dragged him there. But you and I have a choice about going to
Calvary. God won’t drag us to the Cross. We can bring our wounds to the Great
Physician or shrug our shoulders and, with “by the way” nonchalance, tell Him,
“I’m okay.”
I'm here
to tell you, “I’m okay" is a very bad choice. That’s why Scripture urges
us, “Now is the time of God's favor, now is the day of salvation” (2
Corinthians 6:2).
Waiting overnight might be too late.
Waiting overnight might be too late.
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