Every medical practitioner may through
faith in Christ have in his possession a cure of the highest
value, a remedy for the sin-sick soul. The physician who is converted
and sanctified through the truth is registered in heaven as a
laborer together with God, a follower of Jesus Christ. Through
the sanctification of the truth God gives to physicians and nurses
wisdom and skill in treating the sick, and this work is opening
the fast-closed door to many hearts. Men and women are led to
understand the truth which is needed to save the soul as well
as the body.
This is an element that gives character
to the work for this time. The medical missionary work is as
the right arm to the third angel's message which must be proclaimed
to a fallen world; and physicians, managers, and workers in any
line, in acting faithfully their part, are doing the work of
the message. Thus the sound of the truth will go forth to every
nation and kindred and tongue and people. In this work the heavenly
angels bear a part. They awaken spiritual joy and melody in the
hearts of those who have been freed from suffering, and thanksgiving
to God arises from the lips of many who have received the precious
truth.
Every physician in our ranks should
be a Christian. Only those physicians who are genuine Bible Christians
can discharge aright the high duties of their profession.
The physician who understands the responsibility
and accountability of his position will feel the necessity of
Christ's presence with him in his work for those for whom such
a sacrifice has been made. He will subordinate everything to
the higher interests which concern the life that may be saved
unto life eternal. He will do all in his power to save both the
body and the soul. He will try
to do the very work that Christ would do were He in his place.
The physician who loves Christ and the souls for whom Christ
died will seek earnestly to bring into the sickroom a leaf from
the tree of life. He will try to break the bread of life to the
sufferer. Notwithstanding the obstacles and difficulties to be
met, this is the solemn, sacred work of the medical profession.
True missionary work is that in which the
Saviour's work is best represented, His methods most closely
copied, His glory best promoted. Missionary work that falls short
of this standard is recorded in heaven as defective. It is weighed
in the balances of the sanctuary and found wanting.
Physicians should seek to direct the minds
of their patients to Christ, the Physician of soul and body.
That which physicians can only attempt to do, Christ accomplishes.
The human agent strives to prolong life. Christ is life itself.
He who passed through death to destroy him that had the power
of death is the Source of all vitality. There is balm in Gilead,
and a Physician there. Christ endured an agonizing death under
the most humiliating circumstances that we might have life. He
gave up His precious life that He might vanquish death. But He
rose from the tomb, and the myriads of angels who came to behold
Him take up the life He had laid down heard His words of triumphant
joy as He stood above Joseph's rent sepulcher proclaiming: "I
am the resurrection, and the life."
The question, "If a man die, shall
he live again?" has been answered. By bearing the penalty
of sin, by going down into the grave, Christ has brightened the
tomb for all who die in faith. God in human form has brought
life and immortality to light through the gospel. In dying, Christ
secured eternal life for all who believe in Him. In dying, He condemned the originator of sin
and disloyalty to suffer the penalty of sin--eternal death.
The possessor and giver of eternal life,
Christ was the only one who could conquer death. He is our Redeemer;
and blessed is every physician who is in a true sense of the
word a missionary, a savior of souls for whom Christ gave His
life. Such a physician learns day by day from the Great Physician
how to watch and work for the saving of the souls and bodies
of men and women. The Saviour is present in the sickroom, in
the operating room; and His power for His name's glory accomplishes
great things.
The physician can do a noble work if he
is connected with the Great Physician. To the relatives of the
sick, whose hearts are full of sympathy for the sufferer, he
may find opportunity to speak the words of life; and he can soothe
and uplift the mind of the sufferer by leading him to look to
the One who can save to the uttermost all who come to Him for
salvation.
When the Spirit of God works on the mind
of the afflicted one, leading him to inquire for truth, let the
physician work for the precious soul as Christ would work for
it. Do not urge upon him any special doctrine, but point him
to Jesus as the sin-pardoning Saviour. Angels of God will impress
the mind. Some will refuse to be illuminated by the light which
God would let shine into the chambers of the mind and into the
soul-temple; but many will respond to the light, and from these
minds deception and error in its various forms will be swept
away.
Every opportunity of working as Christ
worked should be carefully improved. The physician should talk
of the works of healing wrought by Christ, of His tenderness
and love. He should believe that Jesus is his companion,
close by his side. "We are laborers together
with God." 1 Corinthians 3:9. Never should the physician
neglect to direct the minds of his patients to Christ, the Chief
Physician. If he has the Saviour abiding in his own heart, his
thoughts will ever be directed to the Healer of soul and body.
He will lead the minds of sufferers to Him who can restore, who
when on earth restored the sick to health and healed the soul
as well as the body, saying: "Son, thy sins be forgiven
thee." Mark 2:5.
Never should familiarity with suffering
cause the physician to become careless or unsympathetic. In cases
of dangerous illness the afflicted one feels that he is at the
mercy of the physician. He looks to that physician as his only
earthly hope, and the physician should ever point the trembling
soul to One who is greater than himself, even the Son of God,
who gave His life to save him from death, who pities the sufferer,
and who by His divine power will give skill and wisdom to all
who ask Him.
When the patient knows not how his case
will turn, is the time for the physician to impress the mind.
He should not do this with a desire to distinguish himself, but
that he may point the soul to Christ as a personal Saviour. If
the life is spared, there is a soul for that physician to watch
for. The patient feels that the physician is the very life of
his life. And to what purpose should this great confidence be
employed? Always to win a soul to Christ and magnify the power
of God.
When the crisis has passed and success
is apparent, be the patient a believer or an unbeliever, let
a few moments be spent with him in prayer. Give expression to
your thankfulness for the life that has been spared. The physician
who follows such a course carries his patient to the One upon
whom he is dependent for life. Words of gratitude may flow from
the patient to the physician, for through God he has bound this
life up with his own; but let the
praise and thanksgiving be given to God as to One who is present
though invisible.
On the sickbed Christ is often accepted
and confessed; and this will be done oftener in the future than
it has been in the past, for a quick work will the Lord do in
our world. Words of wisdom are to be on the lips of the physician,
and Christ will water the seed sown, causing it to bring forth
fruit unto eternal life.
We lose the most precious opportunities
by neglecting to speak a word in season. Too often a precious
talent that ought to produce a thousandfold is left unused. If
the golden privilege is not watched for, it will pass. Something
was allowed to prevent the physician from doing his appointed
work as a minister of righteousness.
There are none too many godly physicians
to minister in their profession. There is much work to be done,
and ministers and doctors are to work in perfect union. Luke,
the writer of the Gospel that bears his name, is called "the
beloved physician," and those who do a work similar to that
which he did are living out the gospel.
Countless are the opportunities of the
physician for warning the impenitent, cheering the disconsolate
and hopeless, and prescribing for the health of mind and body.
As he thus instructs the people in the principles of true temperance,
and as a guardian of souls gives advice to those who are mentally
and physically diseased, the physician is acting his part in
the great work of making ready a people prepared for the Lord.
This is what medical missionary work is to accomplish in its
relation to the third angel's message.
Ministers and physicians are to work harmoniously
with earnestness to save souls that are becoming entangled in
Satan's snares. They are to point men and women to Jesus, their
righteousness, their strength, and the health of their countenance.
Continually they are to watch for souls.
There are those who are struggling with strong temptations, in
danger of being overcome in the fight with satanic agencies.
Will you pass these by without offering them assistance? If you
see a soul in need of help, engage in conversation with him even
though you do not know him. Pray with him. Point him to Jesus.
This work belongs just as surely to the
doctor as to the minister. By public and private effort the physician
should seek to win souls to Christ.
In all our enterprises and in all our institutions
God is to be acknowledged as the Master Worker. The physicians
are to stand as His representatives. The medical fraternity have
made many reforms, and they are still to advance. Those who hold
the lives of human beings in their hands should be educated,
refined, sanctified. Then will the Lord work through them in
mighty power to glorify His name.
Christ's work for the paralytic is an illustration
of the way we are to work. Through his friends this man had heard
of Jesus and requested to be brought into the presence of the
mighty Healer. The Saviour knew that the paralytic had been tortured
by the suggestions of the priests that because of his sins God
had cast him off. Therefore His first work was to give him peace
of mind. "Son," He said, "thy sins be forgiven
thee." This assurance filled his heart with peace and joy.
But some who were present began to murmur, saying in their hearts,
"Who can forgive sins but God only?" Then that they
might know that the Son of man had power to forgive sins, Christ
said to the sick man: "Arise, and take up thy bed, and go
thy way into thine house." This shows how the Saviour bound
together the work of preaching the truth and healing the sick.