Chrysostom
Beloved Servant
You pray for your son’s healing, and rightly so, for our Lord is the physician of both body and soul. Remember how He touched Peter’s mother-in-law: the fever left her at once, and she needed no long convalescence, but rose with strength restored and served them. So is His power now: able to command breath into weary lungs, to cool the inflamed passages, and to fortify the body against every assault of sickness. Do not measure His love by the speed of relief. The farmer who has applied many treatments to a stubborn tree sees little change above the soil, yet the root is being worked upon; and suddenly one day it bears fruit. Persist in prayer, then, without becoming dull or slothful in the waiting. For heaviness of soul can creep in when the answer tarries, and that heaviness is more dangerous than any fever.
Yet while you plead for healthy lungs, plead more urgently that he may breathe the pure air of the Spirit. What profit is it if his body can run freely on a cool day, but his soul lies gasping in the heat of sinful passions? The High Priest who ever lives to intercede for us is able to save to the uttermost, and this salvation extends far beyond a single bout of coughing. Seek first the health that cannot be touched by disease. Let your son, and you yourself, not fall into that spiritual dullness which comes from dwelling only on present comfort and ignoring the commandments. For if a man recovers from asthma yet remains idle in wickedness, what has he gained? You would not judge a poor man harshly for his poverty; do not judge God’s delays harshly, but rather examine your own life, that you may be found worthy of the gift you ask. Continue in prayer, therefore, not as one who bargains with the Almighty, but as one who trusts that He who commands the winds and the sea can also still the rattling in a narrow chest, and will do so when it serves the soul’s eternal welfare. Be diligent, not anxious; hopeful, not despondent; and while you wait, busy yourself with the medicine of almsgiving, fasting, and the remembrance of His word. For as bodily diseases often arise from neglect, so spiritual health is cultivated by daily care. Commit him wholly to the Lord, and do not cease your supplication, confident that whether in this life or in the age to come, Christ makes all things well.
Yet while you plead for healthy lungs, plead more urgently that he may breathe the pure air of the Spirit. What profit is it if his body can run freely on a cool day, but his soul lies gasping in the heat of sinful passions? The High Priest who ever lives to intercede for us is able to save to the uttermost, and this salvation extends far beyond a single bout of coughing. Seek first the health that cannot be touched by disease. Let your son, and you yourself, not fall into that spiritual dullness which comes from dwelling only on present comfort and ignoring the commandments. For if a man recovers from asthma yet remains idle in wickedness, what has he gained? You would not judge a poor man harshly for his poverty; do not judge God’s delays harshly, but rather examine your own life, that you may be found worthy of the gift you ask. Continue in prayer, therefore, not as one who bargains with the Almighty, but as one who trusts that He who commands the winds and the sea can also still the rattling in a narrow chest, and will do so when it serves the soul’s eternal welfare. Be diligent, not anxious; hopeful, not despondent; and while you wait, busy yourself with the medicine of almsgiving, fasting, and the remembrance of His word. For as bodily diseases often arise from neglect, so spiritual health is cultivated by daily care. Commit him wholly to the Lord, and do not cease your supplication, confident that whether in this life or in the age to come, Christ makes all things well.
