"A Chinese Christian", evidently a doctor, reflects on his insightful meditation after a hard day's work, physically, mentally and spiritually tired. It was an uplifting experience which we can share, personally experience and benefit from, provided one makes the time and effort.
Meditating on the words of Jesus
'
ONE Sunday evening I visited
a patient in the Sepoy Lines Maternity Hospital and as I arrived
there before time, I waited outside the compound which is a part
of an old cemetery.
While looking around I saw various magnificent buildings - King
Edward VII College of Medicine, the General Hospital, behind which
is the Prison; just in front of me, I saw the Cathedral with its
spires towering high in the sky, and dimly in the distance, I
saw the wharves crowded with coolies who were still loading a
steamer with coal. With such a magnificent view and cool surroundings,
I lost myself in a dream (or imagination!)
I saw my Lord Jesus Christ coming towards me and going down to
those graves while the words He told Martha at the loss of her
brother Lazarus flashed through my mind. "I am the resurrection
and the life; He that believes in Me, though he were dead, yet
shall he live!"
I recalled those words, "O grave where is thy victory? O
death where is thy sting?" Then I saw Him entering the Maternity
Hospital and laying His hand on those newly born babies saying,
"Suffer the little children to come unto me; forbid them
not for of such is the Kingdom of God" and also "Whosoever
shall receive one of such little children in My name, receiveth
Me." Following Him, I went into the Hospital where He blessed
the sick and comforted them saying, "Come unto me for I will
make thee whole." To the doctors and nurses He said, "Well
done, for inasmuch as ye do this unto the least of them ye are
doing it unto Me."
Coming out He went towards the Medical College and blessed the
professors and students who spent their time and energy in studying
and finding the cause of diseases and their cure. It reminded
me of the occasion when He saw a child born blind and was asked
by His disciples, "Who did sin, this man or his parents,
that he was born blind?" Jesus answered, "Neither hath
this man sinned, nor his parents; but that the works of God should
be made manifest in him." Then He went to the Prison where
men and women were confined within its walls - some due to their
moral weakness and others to their ignorance of the law. He comforted
them saying, "I judge you not, for I come not to judge the
world, but to save for the world." "Come unto Me, though
your sins be red as blood, I will wash them white as snow."
Leaving that vicinity He walked towards the Cathedral where He
commanded the priests saying, "Feed my lambs, if thou lovest
Me!" To the coolies, when He was near them, He invited them,"Come
unto Me all ye that are heavy burdened and wearied for I will
give you rest." Knowing that they were denied the Sabbath
rest in their struggle for their daily bread, these words of life,
which He frequently said, flashed through my mind. "I am
the bread of life; he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and
he that believeth on me shall never thirst."
Suddenly I was awakened by the chirping of birds and with fresh
memory the real meaning of life dawned upon me. What is life when
one views it in an insipid way. Born into this world one has to
labour and if underfed one will be physically sick; if morally
weak, one may be landed into prison and yet even so the goal is
but the grave.
To those who view life in the Christian
way it is beneficial to know that in this world of ours, there
are many who have spent years of their precious life in learning
the deeper meaning of His love and in some cases have risked their
lives in conveying to us the invaluable knowledge they have acquired
in their studies. They are the people who possess the unselfish
spirit of placing service before self.
Christ himself has taught us to turn our sufferings into joy and
from this may we not learn to lend a helping hand wherever needed!
Life is made of sorrow and joy, failure and success, trial and
triumph. It is from our sufferings that we understand the sufferings
of others. -- MM, Aug 1935, p.13.
Earnest Lau, the Associate Editor of Methodist Message, is also the Archivist of The Methodist Church in Singapore.