Several years ago my dear sister in law was
badly burned in an accidental kitchen fire.
She suffered second and third degree burns over a large portion of her
body. I still remember that day. I was planting flowers in our garden all
grimy and covered in earth and Brian came running from the house with the phone
in his hand- “Heather, what do you put on a burn?” After explaining the accident and the extent
of her injury I replied quickly – “You put a hospital on it. Tell her to go now, we’ll meet them there.”
The family gathered in the waiting room. There was a mix of sullen and quiet, and
hysterical crying as we waited for the doctor’s prognosis. After being stabilized and assessed she was
transferred to the burn unit, where she spent quite an extended period of time
healing from her wounds.
We, her family and friends, divided up
practical ways to support her family.
Care for her small children, meals, preparing her home for her
return. She spent her hours and days in
much agony reeling from her pain both physical and emotional, while her care
providers helped her focus on recovery.
Recovery from a burn isn’t easy. Much care is taken to prevent infection from
setting in. From what I understand it’s a complicated and regimented process
where they bathe the wounds, peel away the dead skin, and treat the raw naked
wound with antibiotics and salve. There
is wrapping and unwrapping, and scraping and scrubbing. I think that at times, the methods that were
used to prevent infection were maybe even more painful then the fire itself.
I think that my sweet sister in law spent hours
wondering why she endured such a tragic accident. I think she spent hours vacillating between
wanting to heal and go home, and wanting to just give up and be done with the healing
process. It takes work to really
heal. It takes determination, and a
conclusive commitment to enduring even more excruciating pain to ensure that
the wounds heal completely, without a trace of impurity that can settle in,
infect and contaminate and threaten the entire body. Some of us are fighting to
heal. Some of us are fighting to avoid
the pain, deciding instead to live with wounds that left untreated could
ultimately destroy us.
Healing seems to come in waves. It starts with hope, an outlook, a prognosis
that pronounces that such pain has not been mortally wounding. It promises hope for recovery and
restoration. We decide to ride the wave. Sometimes I think as the wave crescendos into
its masterpiece we struggle with the process.
Getting thrashed around, barely able to breath, the threat of additional
pain, and then it calms. Just for a
moment, before the next wave appears. I
think that sometimes I want to live in between the waves. It’s calmer in
between… safer, there. It’s less painful
there. The problem with refusing to ride the next wave is that it means we
refuse to keep healing, keep progressing, to let the restorative nature of the healing
process actually heal us. And we
struggle, and fight, we think we might drown, might not survive the
process. So we try to save
ourselves. Just keep swimming, just keep
swimming, swimming, swimming… And we grow tired so tired. And the current goes stronger. And in our weakness… It’s there we have a
choice. A choice to surrender, or a choice
to keep fighting.
Sometimes I think that we fight to keep our
head above the water, and treading our little legs we’re able to do just that,
for a while any way. We tell ourselves
to persevere, keep on fighting, press on… but how long can you keep on barely surviving?
Certainly, there’s a time for pressing on… but
I think its possible that even in our good intentions to keep up the good
fight, we might miss the point entirely… which is to just let go. Not surrendering unto death, but surrendering
so that we might truly live. Because, we can’t really save ourselves. If we could, our Father would have never sent
His Son. After all, His strength is made perfect in our weakness. 2 Corithians 12:9
I think that maybe, when we stop fighting with
the great physician, who seeks to remove all of our impurities, when we just
surrender… to the waves healing, and to the pain, then we can really, really
start to heal. Skin that grows is
fragile. Its soft, it’s unadulterated,
it’s pure. It’s new, like just like a newborn baby.
We learn as Christians to pray for this. We have songs about the refiners fire. We have language- “let it burn, bring your
fire!” We have fire tunnels. Well, some of us do. But fire, fire is unbearably hot. It is excruciating. Sometimes I think that when we sing our
pretty songs, and pray well-intentioned prayers, we forget what we are asking
for is utterly painful.
I believe He desires that we might truly live,
that we would be rid of our impurities, the things in us that allowed to remain
would destroy us… Selfish ambition, independence, control, addictions, coping
mechanisms, I could go on and on and on.
If these things are allowed to remain they will contaminate us, mortally
wound us, and those that we care about. He cleanses us with Fire, and with
Water – “Everything that can stand the fire, you shall pass through the fire,
and it shall be clean. Nevertheless, it
shall also be purified with the water for impurity.” Numbers 31:23
“He will sit as a refiner and purifier of
silver, and he will purify the sons of Levi, and refine them like gold and
silver, and they will bring offerings in righteousness to the Lord” Malachi 3:3
I am starting to realize that God is so less
concerned with my comfort than he is with my purification, and my heart. He wants to rid my heart of it’s hard,
bitter, impurities. Impurities left
behind from thirty (plus) years of wounds.
Wounds I never really fully surrendered, and never really healed
from.
He’s honest about the fact that we, believers
will suffer trials. “These trials will
show that your faith is genuine. It is being tested as fire tests and purifies
gold, though your faith is far more precious than mere gold. So when your faith
remains strong through many trials, it will bring you much praise and glory and
honor on the day when Jesus Christ is revealed”
1 Peter 1:7
“When trouble comes your way, consider it an
opportunity for great joy. For you know
that when your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow. So let it grow! For when your endurance is
fully developed, you will be perfect, and complete” James 1:2-4
I think that I am realizing that these familiar
mountains are very revealing. And what
they are revealing is my dis-in genuine faith.
Sometimes Hannah will free fall from high
spaces. My bed, the top of the
stairs. Just fall, without hesitation,
because she knows that I will catch her.
Genuine faith knows that the Father, will catch and carry us. Through fires, and crashing waves. I think that we stop struggling to save our
selves, to fix ourselves, than we can truly be saved… and healed, and purified. We can’t live between the waves any more than
a burn victim can live in the middle of the burn treatments. The calm, and comfortable place in between is
a place of death, not of life.
I’m ready to live…. To burn, and to heal. I’m ready to surrender, to stop struggling
and be carried through the waves. I’m
ready to quit fighting, and rest under the shadow of the wing of the one who
carries me.
It’s been over seven years. You can barely see the scars from her skin
grafts. You might be tempted to think
they are evidence of her wounds. You’d
be wrong. They are evidence of her
healing…
So beautifully spoken, Heather. I was recently listening to an old sermon from Rick Warren, and he spoke about our misconceptions of healing. He said that the biggest problem is that we live in a world of instant gratification and so we want instant healing. This is so true. I am also involved in Celebrate Recovery where we are learning that healing is a life long process that begins with surrendering to God. It's a daily decision - some days easier than others. I am grateful for your transparency. God has already used this to touch my life. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much. I am so grateful that God is using these lessons that I'm learning to touch others as well. It helps to know that there are others on the journey. One foot in front of the other, doing the best that we know how. I know that God is after more.... and deeper, but I do think that in his economy that pain really does produce newness and life. Thanks for commenting.
DeleteI'm not sure you intended this, but this blog got me thinking about God as the Comforter. I think God's idea of comfort is so much different than ours. I'm still trying to understand this but I think it has to do with the physical and the spiritual. God is there to comfort our souls during suffering but we are always expecting him to comfort our physical bodies. The comfort of our bodies doesn't necessarily provide healing, however the comforting of our souls does. I think. God is such a mystery and so difficult to understand. Argh! but also in awe!
ReplyDeleteYou know what Ben, that wasn't my intention. But here's the thing the more I decided to surrender, the less struggle I'm experiencing. What I mean is, there is comfort in the letting go. He is pouring the balm of gilliad (sp?)on my soul and that is comforting, even when my external circumstances look suspiciously the same. I think you have tremendous insight my friend. Thanks for being there!
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