Chrysostom
Beloved
Outward diseases of the body, such as this trouble of the lungs and breath, surely call us to prayer, and the Good Physician who made both soul and body is able to heal all inflammation and cleanse every infection. No one should doubt His power, for He healed the daughter of the Canaanite woman after her long and persistent entreaty, and He hears the cry of a mother now as then.
Yet consider this: when the body suffers dropsy or fever, we know that worse than the ailment is refusing the physician’s counsel. So too with the soul. Often we flee to God for bodily relief, but pay little regard to the hidden fevers of pride, careless living, or love of comfort which can be a more grievous inflammation. Not that the body’s pain is small, it is real and heavy, but the Physician desires to make us whole in both parts, quenching the burning fever within as well as easing the panting breath.
Therefore, persist in prayer for your son, and with that prayer ask also that his soul and yours alike be delivered from every swelling of arrogance or forgetfulness of God, so that, like the blind and maimed made whole, you both may walk in brightness and thanksgiving. Just as a tree that withstands ten strokes may suddenly fall at the eleventh, so too continued prayer, offered with humility, brings down the blessing in due season. Trust the timing of the Lord, and seek not only that the breath come easily in this heat, but that the Spirit’s refreshing well spring up unto eternal life in you both.
Yet consider this: when the body suffers dropsy or fever, we know that worse than the ailment is refusing the physician’s counsel. So too with the soul. Often we flee to God for bodily relief, but pay little regard to the hidden fevers of pride, careless living, or love of comfort which can be a more grievous inflammation. Not that the body’s pain is small, it is real and heavy, but the Physician desires to make us whole in both parts, quenching the burning fever within as well as easing the panting breath.
Therefore, persist in prayer for your son, and with that prayer ask also that his soul and yours alike be delivered from every swelling of arrogance or forgetfulness of God, so that, like the blind and maimed made whole, you both may walk in brightness and thanksgiving. Just as a tree that withstands ten strokes may suddenly fall at the eleventh, so too continued prayer, offered with humility, brings down the blessing in due season. Trust the timing of the Lord, and seek not only that the breath come easily in this heat, but that the Spirit’s refreshing well spring up unto eternal life in you both.
