From Doug Hood's upcoming book,
Nurture Faith: Five Minute Meditations to Strengthen Your Walk With Christ, Vol. 2
2 Kings 20:2, 7 (Common English Bible)
Theodore Roosevelt, our nation’s
26th president, was born a frail, sickly child with debilitating
asthma. At seventeen, Roosevelt was as tall as he would grow, five feet eight
inches, and was just shy of 125 pounds. His health, a continual concern of his
parents, prompted Theodore Senior to decide that the time had come to “present
a major challenge to his son.”i At the
age of twelve, Theodore – nicknamed, Teedie – was told by his father that he
had a great mind, but not the body. Without the help of the body, the mind
could not go as far as it should. “You must make your body. It is hard drudgery
to make one’s body, but I know you will do it.”ii Teedie made the
commitment to his father that he would do so. The promise was adhered to with
bulldog tenacity. The young Theodore Roosevelt took personal responsibility for
his physical health and development.
Hezekiah, king of Judah, became a
very sick man during his leadership. He had a wound that had become so serious
that his spiritual counselor, a prophet named Isaiah, informed him that he
should put his affairs in order because he was dying. That diagnosis came like
a bolt of lightning to Hezekiah. In desperation, Hezekiah “turned his face to
the wall and prayed to the Lord.” He pled with the Lord to reward his
faithfulness as a man of God and to spare his life. Then, the scriptures tell
us, Hezekiah cried and cried. Before Isaiah had left the courtyard of the
king’s residence, God sent him back to Hezekiah with another and more hopeful
message: “I have heard your prayers and have seen your tears. So now I’m going
to heal you. I will add fifteen years to your life.”iii Then follows
something that is most curious: Isaiah orders a bandage made of figs be placed
on the swelling. Hezekiah prayed and Isaiah prepared a bandage: prayer and
responsibility.
With powerful clarity, this
passage of scripture teaches us that two things were responsible for Hezekiah’s
rapid recovery: prayer and a bandage, faith and personal responsibility. If the
king was to recover his health, both were required. The Bible refuses to
indicate which of the two was the more important. We cannot know which was the
most effectual. The message is that without either of them Hezekiah would have
died in the prime of his life and at a time when his country most needed his
leadership. The power of the Assyian king, and his armies, threaten the peace
Judah. The death of Hezekiah would have made Judah most vulnerable to their
enemies. With his health restored, Hezekiah was able to defend his nation from
the Assyian threat. This story provides an important lesson for God’s people:
While prayer is essential it must never be made a substitute for personal
responsibility.
There are people who make the
mistake of choosing between the two, prayer and responsibility. We have seen in
the news recently where parents of a particular Christian sect refused medical
treatment for their young son because they chose the avenue of prayer alone. A
choice between faith and medicine is simply not supported by this Bible lesson.
Each is a gift of God and each has its own power. Faith and medicine are both
means of healing. They belong together. Both are agents of a compassionate God.
Prayer and personal responsibility cooperate closely in effecting the highest
well-being of those who struggle with illness. This story from 2 Kings reminds
us not to neglect either. The second century French physician, Paré, reminds us
of this truth when he wrote, “I dressed the wound and God healed it.”
Joy,
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