I have previously reflected on the following experience, but not
having ready access to that story among far too many files, and far too
little time, I feel inclined to reflect on it again.
A few years
ago I decided to trim my neighbor’s tree. Generally, I would not have
been quite so altruistic, but the limbs of the tree hung over my
driveway, and as spring approached each year a healthy supply of oak
pollen showered my car, and the pavement upon which it was parked.
And since there was a basketball post just beneath the offending tree,
it seemed good to me to prop my straight ladder against it, and having
done so, I set about the task at hand.
Did I mention round posts and straight ladders are altogether incompatible? (Well, they are).
Suddenly, the ladder accomplished a task for which it was never
intended. It became mobile. And I became its unintended pilot. Given the
choice to ride the thing to the ground, or jump, I chose the latter.
And as I “winged my way to worlds unknown” I chose to land upright, (or
something approximating it) and twisted my body just enough in my
failed flight to the concrete to land on my right foot.
I knew. I just knew
My ankle was broken
After lying there a moment, and using my car for leverage, I stood upon
my left foot, hop-scotched to my front door, opened it, and made my
wife aware of my injury.
Fast forward several weeks, and I found
myself in a prep room at Tampa General Hospital preparing to have my
ankle reconstructed; since it was not only broken, but it was badly
shattered.
Just prior to being wheeled into the operating room a
nurse administered an injection to my right thigh, and explained that
shortly thereafter my leg would develop a state of paralysis, and that
when I awoke I would experience this condition for several hours prior
to the restoration of feeling.
As she predicted, when I came to I was provided an entre into a state of being to which I had never before been privy.
For a full 65 years I had enjoyed complete use of all four limbs.
Suddenly, I was short one. Initially, my paralytic experience was
nothing more, nothing less than interesting. The natural scheme of
things in which we move, and live and have our being had been
interrupted. Perhaps if I expended a little more thought, a little more
will power I could lift my leg an inch off the bed. (Well,… no). Perhaps
if I focused all my energies on my little toe, I could wiggle that tiny
digit. (Nice try).
Nothing. Nada. Zero. Zilch
By this time I had gone from being an interested observer to a concerned participant.
I imagined the worst. I mean, I could just see myself being discharged
in this condition, and having to use a cane the last third of my life;
while all the while dragging a useless limb behind me.
Alarmed, I spoke,
“Nurse, uh, you’re probably aware that my leg is paralyzed. Uhmm, does
this sorta thing ever go wrong? Is there any chance I’m stuck with this
dead leg for the duration?”
“Nurse Simms” assured me that the
paralysis would abate, and that I’d regain complete sensation and
mobility in the limb within a few hours.”
And true to her word, that is exactly how things fell together.
My nephew, his name was “Wade,” was born with a malady referred to as
“Spina Bifida.” While he had some use of his arms and hands, his legs
and feet were paralyzed from birth, and he was dependent on a wheelchair
throughout his all too brief life. And though Wade endured countless
surgeries, and a significant amount of pain and humiliation, he never
seemed to complain, and it was if the angels had loaned him a permanent
smile.
During the two decades Providence allowed Wade to grace this
planet, I sympathized for and with him. However, it was only after his
death, and my subsequent injury, surgery and (temporary) paralysis that I
could truly empathize; since it was only after my own experience that I
had any real hope of understanding what ‘til then was beyond my
understanding.
I think this is a major reason Jesus came to the
earth. In the eons which preceded God assuming human form, and adding
the three letter suffix, “man” to His title, He had never been subject
to flesh, frailty, fatigue or the limits of time and space. Suddenly,
having purposely limited Himself, He was given personal access to the
human condition; in a manner not heretofore possible.
Having
experienced momentary paralysis I can empathize with the disabled in a
way that I could have never hoped to do before the event.
Having
taken on flesh and having lived among us, I am confident that our Lord
Jesus Christ was afforded the wherewithal to empathize with mankind in a
manner in which He had never before been able.
My favorite passage
of scripture speaks to this concept, and my personal experience which I
have just recounted causes it to be that much more precious to me.
“We have not a High Priest who cannot be touched with the feelings of
our infirmities, but He was in all points tempted as we are; yet without
sin.
Let us come boldly to the throne of grace that we may
receive mercy for our failures, and grace to help in the time of need.”
(Hebrews 4:15-16)
By William McDonald, PhD. From (Mc)Donald's Daily Diary. Vol. 28. Copyright pending
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