I came across this list from J.C. Ryle some time ago. When we get sick or when someone we love gets sick what is God up to? It's hard to see sometimes. This list of nine things may help answer some of our questions.
Sickness is meant…
1. To make us think—to remind us
that we have a soul as well as a body—an immortal soul—a soul that will live
forever in happiness or in misery—and that if this soul is not saved we had
better never have been born.
2. To teach us that there is a world
beyond the grave—and that the world we now live in is only a training-place
for another dwelling, where there will be no decay, no sorrow, no tears, no
misery, and no sin.
3. To make us look at our past lives
honestly, fairly, and conscientiously. Am I ready for my great change if I
should not get better? Do I repent truly of my sins? Are my sins forgiven and
washed away in Christ’s blood? Am I prepared to meet God?
4. To make us see the emptiness of the
world and its utter inability to satisfy the highest and deepest needs of
the soul.
5. To send us to our Bibles. That
blessed Book, in the days of health, is too often left on the shelf, becomes
the safest place in which to put a bank-note, and is never opened from January
to December. But sickness often brings it down from the shelf and throws new
light on its pages.
6. To make us pray. Too many, I
fear, never pray at all, or they only rattle over a few hurried words morning
and evening without thinking what they do. But prayer often becomes a reality
when the valley of the shadow of death is in sight.
7. To make us repent and break off our
sins. If we will not hear the voice of mercies, God sometimes makes us
“hear the rod.”
8. To draw us to Christ. Naturally
we do not see the full value of that blessed Savior. We secretly imagine that
our prayers, good deeds, and sacrament-receiving will save our souls. But when
flesh begins to fail, the absolute necessity of a Redeemer, a Mediator, and an
Advocate with the Father, stands out before men’s eyes like fire, and makes
them understand those words, “Simply to Your cross I cling,” as they
never did before. Sickness has done this for many—they have found Christ in the
sick room.
9. To make us feeling and sympathizing
towards others. By nature we are all far below our blessed Master’s
example, who had not only a hand to help all, but a heart to feel for all.
None, I suspect, are so unable to sympathize as those who have never had
trouble themselves—and none are so able to feel as those who have drunk most
deeply the cup of pain and sorrow.
Summary: Beware of fretting, murmuring, complaining, and giving way to an impatient
spirit. Regard your sickness as a
blessing in disguise—a good and not an evil—a friend and not an enemy. No
doubt we should all prefer to learn spiritual lessons in the school of ease and
not under the rod. But rest assured that God knows better than we do how to
teach us. The light of the last day will show you that there was a meaning and
a “need be” in all your bodily ailments. The lessons that we learn on a
sick-bed, when we are shut out from the world, are often lessons which we
should never learn elsewhere.
~ J.C. Ryle
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