Implementation of Jesus’ example for managing human suffering. Honest reflections on my years as a Family Physician.
written by Dr. David K. Webb
We are now living during this, the “church age,” the “end times,” the earth-focused “Kingdom of God,” the time of the fullness of God’s revelation, or the time of the powerful outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Men and women are called to be Christ’s Body here on earth, living simultaneously in the world but also in theKingdomofGod. As redeemed people, we are to live in community, bounded together in self-sacrificing love; we are to seek to influence each other away from sin and its pervasive destructive effect on our person and toward wholeness, healing, life and total well being (Shalom). Within this community of faith, for the purpose of addressing human suffering, individuals are separated out to be “vessels” filled and equipped with Jesus’ heart, wisdom and (yes) even His authority and power. They are to be conduits of His love and “willingness” to make broken mankind whole and “clean” again. Society has, without realizing it, cooperated with this plan: physicians and other health care professionals are trained and given permission to uniquely connect with people of all types in all stages of “dis-ease” and ill health. As a Christian who is a physician I learned early in my career the awesome privilege and responsibility I was given to be Christ to the people who sought my care.
The critical point, and the foundational process in this ministry of healing, is to seek and employ in the examination room the “heart” of Jesus, specifically the fruits of the Holy Spirit. We are to love the “fellow leper” with Jesus’ love; we are to reflect to them Jesus’ patience, kindness, gentleness, goodness, and self control; we are to seek to lead them into His peace and contagiously transmit His joy. We are to show all people the respect He gave that diseased leper inGalilee, and to communicate understanding and empathy for the circumstances of their dis-ease.
In my experience, the key to being able to join Christ in this ministry, and the source of all that is needed to be useful, is prayer and the study of His Word. In prayer, I share my burdens and personal weaknesses, my fears and my fragility; I am daily fortified and empowered to be obedient and serve Him on behalf of those He will bring into my medical office. In His Word I get to know Him and learn how I can and should be part of His functioning body in my practice; in His Word I hear Him.
In my daily walk with Him, as a physician, going from one patient to another, Jesus shares His wisdom with me. In each individual person’s situation, with their unique needs for healing, He adds His perspectives, insights, priorities and revelations. This wisdom is the seasoning to the medical knowledge I hold; this is the proper bases for my medical decision making. The combination of His wisdom added to the knowledge that He permits His creation to possess, directs the Christian physician toward the high goal of healing as Jesus did.
Just as Jesus, I seek to see my patients wholistically. They are fallen beings struggling spiritually and loaded down (in varying degrees) with poor choices, disrupted relationships, destructive thoughts, imprisoning habits, and painful memories. They live in a fallen world where all creation functions out of synchronization with God’s intention, causing harm and destruction from within and from without. They know physical pain and disability; they struggle with dying and death; they confront their fears of mortality and the loneliness of isolation; they suffer the pain of a rebellious adolescent and an unfaithful spouse. They live as dying lepers; they need the “reach” and “touch” of Jesus.
I pray with some; I pray for some. I speak of Jesus when the Spirit gives me liberty. I smile when it seems helpful and I touch when it is appropriate. I listen when they need to talk. Yet I am well aware, and am daily reminded, that this is only Jesus, ministering through His Body (us), and not me the fellow fallen leper.
I believe we are only “scratching the surface” of His available power and authority over all sickness and the forces that produce it. In this regard I feel like a novice who knows it is true but know not how to bring it to full fruition. It is in this area I continue to seek the fullness of the Jesus who makes a leper clean with a word from His mouth.
