Chrysostom
Beloved
Your suffering is great, and it is right to pour out your heart before the Lord and His Church. But be watchful, for a wounded spirit often gives place to a fire that consumes itself, and anger, even when it seems just, can become a weapon that the enemy uses against your own soul. The physicians prescribed a remedy for your body, but their healing was incomplete; yet the greater sickness is a heart that broods over wrongs. Do not let this bitterness take root and become a second hernia, crushing the breath of the Spirit within you.
The door is opening for your surgery, a door of hope through the research you have prepared. Do not be anxious that the surgeon may not have read your brief. The Lord, who opened Paul's way in Troas, can open this man's understanding. Yet even Paul, when a door stood open, found no relief for his spirit while his brother was absent. So you too may have to endure a little further delay, but do not interpret that as abandonment. The Great Physician sometimes allows a longer wait so that our faith may be perfected, and that we may learn to rely not on earthly medicine alone, but on Him who made the body.
As for your jaw and the hidden hernias, what the doctors overlooked, the Lord has now brought to light. Even if the discovery came through mechanical means, remember that God can speak through any instrument, as He once used a donkey. But do not place your ultimate trust in these things; rather, with the boldness of that Canaanite woman who would not be silenced, keep asking, keep seeking, keep knocking. She was called a dog, yet she persisted, and her daughter was healed. You must do the same.
Concerning the birthday: it is no sin to care for the body. When the Lord heard that Lazarus was sick, He did not rush at once, but waited, teaching us that our times are in His hands. If you go to this gathering in your present state, you will not honor your nephew but will only add to your affliction, and perhaps even provoke resentment in your heart. Stay home without guilt. Tend to your pain. He who made families understands that sometimes the greatest love is shown by resting, not by appearing. Do not hide your condition out of false shame; this too is a kind of pride. Your body is a temple, even in its weakness, and you dishonor it by pressing it beyond its strength for the sake of human opinion.
Pray for your surgeons, for those who delayed your care, and even for the makers of that drug which brought you harm. Forgive them, as you hope to be forgiven. Yes, the world's systems are often unjust, and money too often governs medicine. But do not let your anger block your own healing. The true surgery you need is not only of the body but of the soul. Here in the church you have a spiritual clinic; bring these wounds to the altar as well. Confess your rage, your despair, your fear that you will never be well. Then leave them there.
We will pray as you ask: for speed, for skill, for mercy on your kidneys and gallbladder. But more than that, we will pray that the peace of Christ, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your heart and mind. The Lord Jesus knows what it is to suffer in the flesh, to be misunderstood, to wait for relief that seems long delayed. He will not abandon you. Only do not abandon the fortress of patience.
Now go, and use this time of waiting to draw near to Him. The pain is real, but it can become a teacher of wisdom if you let it. Tomorrow's manna will come tomorrow; today's strength is enough for today.
The door is opening for your surgery, a door of hope through the research you have prepared. Do not be anxious that the surgeon may not have read your brief. The Lord, who opened Paul's way in Troas, can open this man's understanding. Yet even Paul, when a door stood open, found no relief for his spirit while his brother was absent. So you too may have to endure a little further delay, but do not interpret that as abandonment. The Great Physician sometimes allows a longer wait so that our faith may be perfected, and that we may learn to rely not on earthly medicine alone, but on Him who made the body.
As for your jaw and the hidden hernias, what the doctors overlooked, the Lord has now brought to light. Even if the discovery came through mechanical means, remember that God can speak through any instrument, as He once used a donkey. But do not place your ultimate trust in these things; rather, with the boldness of that Canaanite woman who would not be silenced, keep asking, keep seeking, keep knocking. She was called a dog, yet she persisted, and her daughter was healed. You must do the same.
Concerning the birthday: it is no sin to care for the body. When the Lord heard that Lazarus was sick, He did not rush at once, but waited, teaching us that our times are in His hands. If you go to this gathering in your present state, you will not honor your nephew but will only add to your affliction, and perhaps even provoke resentment in your heart. Stay home without guilt. Tend to your pain. He who made families understands that sometimes the greatest love is shown by resting, not by appearing. Do not hide your condition out of false shame; this too is a kind of pride. Your body is a temple, even in its weakness, and you dishonor it by pressing it beyond its strength for the sake of human opinion.
Pray for your surgeons, for those who delayed your care, and even for the makers of that drug which brought you harm. Forgive them, as you hope to be forgiven. Yes, the world's systems are often unjust, and money too often governs medicine. But do not let your anger block your own healing. The true surgery you need is not only of the body but of the soul. Here in the church you have a spiritual clinic; bring these wounds to the altar as well. Confess your rage, your despair, your fear that you will never be well. Then leave them there.
We will pray as you ask: for speed, for skill, for mercy on your kidneys and gallbladder. But more than that, we will pray that the peace of Christ, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your heart and mind. The Lord Jesus knows what it is to suffer in the flesh, to be misunderstood, to wait for relief that seems long delayed. He will not abandon you. Only do not abandon the fortress of patience.
Now go, and use this time of waiting to draw near to Him. The pain is real, but it can become a teacher of wisdom if you let it. Tomorrow's manna will come tomorrow; today's strength is enough for today.
