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A Word for Invalids
From Timeless Grace Gems
Hetty Bowman, 1867
"I am poor and needy; yet the Lord thinks upon me." Psalm 40:17From Timeless Grace Gems
Hetty Bowman, 1867
"I am poor and needy." Just the right words for you, are they not, dear friend? You cannot take in much, for you often feel as if your mind had lost its power of grasp; but this sense of utter want and weakness is too constantly, too oppressively present to be forgotten. Every moment it is there, whenever you try to move or to think. Pleasant things bring it, as well as painful things.
A friend calls to see you, perhaps, and for a little while you are cheered by the new face, and the new thoughts coming fresh from the vigorous world of health and work, and given in kindly exchange for the worn-out dreams - thoughts you cannot call them - that have grown so faded and dim from their silent brooding in your one quiet room. But in a few moments, you begin to grow weary. Even the hearing of so much busy stir and strife bewilders you. Once you would have rejoiced to mingle in it, but now you only long for rest. The new argument confuses you. Once you could have followed it, oh, how keenly, how eagerly! but not now. You are thankful enough if, with many a struggle, you can just manage to keep your hold of what has long been proved and tried. Even the unaccustomed voice sets every nerve thrilling. You strive not to betray impatience or pain, and, by the help of a silent prayer, you succeed in keeping down any token of them.
But when your visitor leaves (telling you, most likely, that you are looking very well, because excitement has made your eyes bright, and brought a flush of color to your cheeks), you can do nothing but lie back on your sofa, strength and voice utterly gone, and the throbbing beat in your head sounding almost like the steady tramp of a troop of horse.
Or you take up a book, and, for a page or two, all goes smoothly. It is so pleasant to be borne in thought away from your own dusky and narrow surroundings to another time and land, where you can breathe a freer air, and hear a nobler speech. Better still to feel for a moment, a breath from the everlasting hills, to hear the sweet speech of that better country where 'the inhabitant shall no more say, I am sick.' But very soon your eyes grow heavy, and your brain becomes confused. The letters are mere letters, nothing more. You gaze at them without in the least understanding what they mean, and at last you are gladly to lay the book aside, with a wistful wonder whether the day will ever come when you shall be able to do anything more than watch the mazy dance of those idle buzzing flies.
Even in prayer the same difficulties beset you; nay, it is then more than at any other time that this feeling of entire incapacity comes over you. You have no words and no thoughts; even worse, you seem often to have no desires. No warm, buoyant feeling, and not much care about the lack of it; but only earthliness, and indifference, and torpor.
People who do not understand illness, often say to you, by way of comfort, as they think, 'Well, you are laid aside from active service for God; but you can pray. You have so much time for it. We look to you to sustain us in our work, to hold up your hands in the mount while we are down in the battle. The weak ones have their own ministry - they are to be God's remembrancers.'
Alas! how your heart sinks at the words! Time! yes, you have plenty of time for prayer; but you do not know how to use it. For often, if you begin a petition, before you reach the end it seems to have gone from you; passed, perhaps, even from memory, for you cannot recollect what you were going to ask for; and, in the effort to recall it, you get wearied, or some unaccountable thrill of pain leaves you nothing but the consciousness of suffering. And thus the prayer, as you think, is lost; it cannot have reached your Father's heart; it is only melted into air.
'Poor.' Yes, you are poor enough, so far as any power of mental or physical efforts is concerned. 'And needy' sometimes, indeed, you do not realize this, more than you realize anything, beyond discomfort and unrest. But very often the sense of it almost crushes you. You need so much - patience, and submission, and calmness, and strength, and more, far more, than words can tell; for so many things in an invalid's life are entirely inexplicable. You cannot make your needs clear to even the nearest and tenderest friend. You have tried to do so, again and again; but you know that even the most carefully chosen words have conveyed a wrong impression.
You get no sympathy for the one sharp thorn which wounds you so sorely; but a great deal for imaginary thorns which you do not feel. And so at last you have ceased to seek or expect it, though you will never cease to yearn for it. Oh, if you could find one, only one, who would read what you cannot tell; who would understand your needs, and could supply them!
And One there surely is - unseen, yet ever near; soothing with tenderest love; watching with patient, unwearied care. Do not let the thought of your own helplessness, shut out the thought of his presence. Do not forget the little word with which David follows up the confession of his weakness: 'I am poor and needy; yet the Lord thinks upon me.' The former part of the verse is your peculiar portion; do not allow yourself to doubt that the latter is no less so.
'Poor and needy.' Ah! yes - and with deeper poverty than any we have touched on yet; with nothing you can offer to God but sin; no health of heart or spirit, any more than of body.
'Yet the Lord thinks upon me;' or, as the margin gives it, 'Carries me on his heart.' And his thoughts towards you are 'thoughts of peace, and not of evil.' For He thinks of you as 'accepted in the Beloved;' clothed in the fair white robe of his righteousness, and sealed by his Spirit 'unto the day of redemption.' And thus you are still his own, not the less loved because you are chastened. Surely a father must think upon his child! "Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you!" Isaiah 49:15
He thinks upon you! You are tempted sometimes to imagine that no one else does. It is a morbid feeling, and you strive with it as such; but it will have its own way now and then, and it costs you some tears, which are not the less bitter because you are ashamed of them. Life is such a busy thing for the healthy and strong, that you cannot wonder if, in the midst of its plans and cares, there should be small thought of one who can take no part in either.
'It is very natural,' you say, and your lips will quiver while you try to smile, 'I cannot expect it to be otherwise. They are all very kind, they often come and talk to me, and look at me with wistful, pitying eyes; but I know that the hush of my sick-room is only a wearisome restraint; I know they draw a long breath of relief when they leave it, and dismiss the remembrance for a time, with the thought, "poor thing."'
Very likely all this is nothing more than your own gloomy imagination; but I will not reason with you about it. I will only ask you to try and believe that, even if it were true, you are still not left desolate or lonely.
'The Lord thinks upon you.' Is not that enough? You may weary others - but you cannot weary Him. Day after day, and year after year, glides slowly along, with little change, except perhaps from pain to pain; but through them all, He is near. One by one, those who soothed and watched you, pass from your side, some borne away by death, and some by life. But He, the Comforter, 'abides with you forever.' In the long, quiet night, which brings you such strange thoughts and fears, that you have learned to dread its gathering shade, 'He neither slumbers nor sleeps.'