(Looking for that One)
I was watching a movie today about a military doctor who was
assigned a patient with severe dental and lip injuries, as the result of
an automobile accident.
This surgeon took extraordinary measures
to assist his patient, and spent multiplied hours planning the initial
and subsequent operations. Never in his surgical career had he felt such
empathy for a patient. Never in his life had he devoted such caring
effort, or taken his responsibility so much to heart.
And though the
young woman was gruesome to behold, and though her injuries were the
worst he’d ever witnessed, he painstakingly went about his task. And
throughout the months and years to come he assumed a duel role; that of
physician and prophet. For he could virtually see the finished work
before him. He could see the invisible, as though it were visible. And
this energized him during periods of his own disappointment, and his
patient’s disbelief.
The young woman often lashed out at him,
wavering between despondency, anxiety, discouragement and rage.
Sometimes his patient’s immaturity surprised the doctor, and he could
only shake his head. But nothing deterred him from his task, and over
many months and years, he performed surgery after surgery, and with each
operation his dream became increasingly tangible. And with each
operation his young client seemed increasingly confident about the
ultimate result.
The surgeon was doing the kind of breakthrough,
innovative work that had never been attempted, and his associates and
friends were often skeptical of the final outcome. More than once
someone accused the doctor of ‘playing God.’ And though their remarks
were critical by implication, the physician chose to regard them as
complimentary.
And what of the young lady, the recipient of all his
skill and labor? Her facial deformities became less obvious, less
hideous to those who beheld her. And with time the results of her
unfortunate accident were almost imperceptible; until all that remained
was a slight scar on one edge of her recreated lips.
And her joy,
and the corresponding joy of her surgeon overflowed, and seemed to fill
up the world around them. She was whole again. Her shame was vanquished.
She no longer hid her face from approaching strangers, and her newfound
smile seemed to light up the world around her.
It occurs to me that
the young lady’s surgeon had so thoroughly grasped the fictional ‘Jane
Eyre’s’ message in the novel by the same title, and rendered it
prophetic.
“Your wounds are sad to behold, but you are not your wounds.”
Ultimately, the woman determined to give back something of what she had
received, and she began to impact one here, and bless one there. And,
readers, I may have neglected to tell you, before her injury our little
heroine had been a nurse. Thus she returned to her duties with more
vigor and more enthusiasm than she’d ever felt. For having once been a
patient, she could empathize far beyond anything theoretical. Dream had
taken on reality. Fog had taken on flesh.
I’ve been thinking a lot
about that ‘playing God’ allusion, and at first glance, it’s a repugnant
characterization, since there’s One God, (and I’m not Him). But that
old adage, “Some people have to have a God with flesh on” rings true.
Why, just today, I received a call from an anxious client, an individual
who has left her childhood faith behind, and who disavows any further
use for God. Nevertheless, I ministered to her. And I like to think that
she was comforted, and sensed a bit of God in me.
We have been
given a rare opportunity; an opportunity to, as it were, play both
prophet and God, and I say this will all due respect, and submission to
the only One and True God.
There are those in our midst who will
never excel, nor attempt to do so. There are those in our company who
will be content to squander their God-given hopes and dreams. There are
those who will make the cemetery richer; for the local cemetery is among
the richest pieces of ground on earth. Since it is filled with all the
unexplored, un-attempted and unfulfilled dreams of thousands of God’s
creations; lying dormant. Never to find fruition.
My message to you
is to look for that one; that one person among many who displays the
kind of unexplored, just under the surface potential to be singular, to
be great, to be used of our Lord. Look for that man or woman who can be
shaped, molded, impacted. Look for that one who, though sick, or sad or
selfish has a pliable and contrite spirit, and who is marginally, and
increasingly ready to assume their God-given place on the earth.
Inscribed on the Statue of Liberty is a verse:
“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe
free, the wretched refuse of your teaming short. Send these, the
homeless tempest tossed to me. I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”
(Emma Lazarus)
Our mission is to people like this. The tired, the
poor, the huddled masses, the wretched refuse, the homeless. And we have
a lamp to light their pathways. And we offer them a golden door; a door
which leads to freedom.
But many will refuse our comfort, and many
will drift away. But if we can touch just one at a time. If we can make a
difference in one life at a time. We may not be able to change the
world, but we may be able to change the world of one person.
Pour your efforts into all; everyone who seeks help, who pleads for deliverance. Do this. Do this.
But look for that one; that one who seems to provoke you to do a little
more. That one who not only needs a bit more attention, but who, by
words or action, places themselves in your hands, and bids you mold them
into something lovely. Look for that one. Give your best efforts to
that one.
For you are both a physician and a prophet. So reminiscent
of that doctor who bestowed his best labor on the little lady; to whom I
have previously alluded. God bids you pour healing suave in their
wounds. He will give you dreams in the night on their behalf, and
provoke you to see the invisible and impossible. You are truly both a
physician and a prophet.
Someone, a very dear someone, once looked
intently at me and said, “You must have seen something in me.” To which I
responded, “Indeed, I did!” Another precious someone once mused, “You
almost sent me away,” and I responded, “I’m so glad I didn’t.”
Who
can know how God may choose to multiply our efforts through these
precious souls who wait for us to touch, impact, impress and invest in
them?
Look for that One, that One who seems to provoke you to do a
little more. That One who not only needs a little more attention, but
who, by words or action, places themselves in your hands and begs you to
mold them into something beautiful.
Look for that One.
(to be continued)
By William McDonald, PhD. From (Mc)Donald's Daily Diary. Vol.40. Copyright pending
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