Whether Flu or Cold or Strep Throat, Have All to the Glory of God
by Bryan C. McWhite
On the front of our church is a plaque that bears the words,
“So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of
God” (1 Cor 10:31). The beauty of this verse is that its great power lies in
its smallest word: the Greek word ti, which means “anything.” Thus,
the verse literally reads, “So, whether you eat or drink or do anything,
do all things to the glory of God.” I don’t think anything is
excluded from “anything.” This means that our calling—indeed our joy—as
Christians is to plot and scheme to contrive of ways to bend everything we
do toward the glory of God. Going about our business with integrity, doing
our taxes honestly, eating breakfast gratefully, studying the Scriptures
deeply, choosing forms of entertainment wisely, making love to our spouses
passionately, remaining abstinent steadfastly if we’re unmarried,
etc.—properly pursued, these are all means to glorify God. Even sickness is
meant to provide us with a new and uncommon means with which to glorify our
Father.
When my wife Leslie and I returned home after Christmas
break, I was laid low with a nasty case of the flu. It was by far the most
all-inclusive sickness I have experienced since high school, complete with a
103º fever, a headache that made my eyes throb, piercing cold chills
followed immediately by sweltering waves of heat, a painful cough and
scorched throat, etc. But as I languished in bed, crying (quite literally)
for my wife, 1 Corinthians 10:31 was brought to my mind and I was given a
moment of pause to remind myself that even in sickness, God means for me to
delight myself in him by glorifying him. I cannot say that the next days of
sickness were entirely pleasant, but I did have the unspeakable pleasure of
experiencing the goodness and grace of God in a new and unexpected way. So,
let me offer a few suggestions from personal experience that might help you,
during this cold and flu season, to magnify the worth and beauty of God—even
in illness.
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Reflect on our utter frailty. Sickness is a powerful way
to remind ourselves that we are not so strong and self-sufficient as we
think we are. But God is all-sufficient and tenderly cares for us
in our weakness so that his strength might be magnified (2 Cor
12:10).
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Reflect on the reality of hell. Jonathan Edwards once
resolved, “when I feel pain, to think of the pains of martyrdom and
hell.” Hell is where people suffer unbearably, with no healing
available, and with no gracious, forgiving and merciful God to whom they
can pray. Let the thought of hell drive us toward brokenhearted
repentance.
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Reflect on the kindness of God in providing people to
care for us. As Leslie was applying a cold compress to my forehead, it
occurred to me that I have never in my life had to deal with a
particularly nasty illness without my mother or my wife by my side. Both
of them have been God’s grace embodied in loving helpers when I have
hurt.
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Reflect on the wonder of the human body and God’s
marvelous construction of it. Most of the symptoms we experience in
sickness are actually outward evidences of the mechanisms of our complex
immune systems fighting off disease, which happens without any thought
or intention on our part!
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Above all, see sickness, insofar as it prevents us from
doing many of our typical daily tasks, as an opportunity to spend
extended time in prayer and meditation. I so often forget how wonderful
it can be simply to lie on my back, thinking about and conversing with
my beloved Father.
For the glory
of God in all things!CBHD
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Copyright 2005 by The Center for Bioethics and Human
Dignity
This article also appears in The Vision, the newsletter of
Crossroads Church,
Grayslake, Illinois.
The contents of this article do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
CBHD, its staff, board or supporters. Permission to reprint granted as long as The Center for Bioethics and
Human Dignity and the web address for this article is referenced.
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