A Word With You
#5572 - Shock Therapy
1 Chronicles 11 : 16
 
Hanna lives in coal country so she's been around miners a lot.  Being in 
youth ministry for years I've been around miners a lot too. Oh wait, 
that's a different kind - spelled differently. But Hanna and a friend of 
mine were talking recently about the mines and the miners and a surprising 
fact came out.  Hanna said the most common cause of death among those coal 
miners was electrocution.  They live in a real remote area and the mining 
operation there is pretty old and relatively primitive.  So there are 
sometimes problems with the wiring in the mine, and miners actually get 
electrocuted.  What compounds the problems is that the nearest doctor is 
many miles away, which led Hanna to ask the doctor one time if there was 
anything the local folks could do to help while they're waiting for the 
doctor to arrive.  She was surprised by the doctor's answer.  "Well," he 
said, "there is one thing, hug the injured miner."  Well, obviously Hanna 
wanted to know why.  He said, "When people are about to go into shock, I 
think there is something about a hug, about human touch - about human 
tenderness. 

Not all shocks are electrical are they? People around us are getting 
shocked every day by bad news they've just received, by bad treatment, by 
unexpected developments, by a death, or a failure, or by pain in a 
relationship.  And not all hugs are two arms around a person - although 
that kind of hug is great.  But a hug can be a word of encouragement, or 
an offer to help, a gift, a compliment, a place to rest and recover.  It's 
practical love when someone has really been hit hard.

David never forgot the men who "hugged" him, so to speak, when he was 
battling shock.  The king that David had served loyally turned on him out 
of jealousy and he wanted him dead.  And the king is in hot pursuit of 
David; he is ready to kill him when he finds him.  This was way before 
electricity, but it must have been a shock to David.  Our word for today 
from the Word of God comes out of that incident: I Chronicles 11:16. It 
says this, "At that time David was in the stronghold and the Philistine 
garrison was at Bethlehem.  David longed for water and said, 'Oh, that 
someone would get me a drink of water from the well near the gate of 
Bethlehem.'" 

That's his home town, he's nostalgic for it. He's hurting because of the 
pressure he's under. The Philistines, his enemy, they're in charge of 
things there. But the Bible says, "So the three broke through the 
Philistine lines, drew water from the well near the gate of Bethlehem and 
carried it back to David."  They knew his language of love at a time when 
he was really needing encouragement.  It was behind enemy lines, but still 
they sacrificed and risked to bring David a gift that would let him know 
that he was cared about.  Years later when David is king, these men are 
some of his main men.  He never forgot that "hug" he got from them during 
his shock time.

Sometimes we are so preoccupied with our own business and our own burdens 
we don't even notice the shock victims around us.  But your hug might be 
just the margin for someone who's been really hit hard.  And it isn't that 
difficult, it usually involves a simple step like a note, or a card, or a 
good deed, or allowing someone to use your car, or your getaway spot.  It 
can mean just an offer to baby sit, or grocery shop, or maybe cook a meal. 
 Years ago when my wife was bedridden with hepatitis for months, people 
from our church hugged our family over and over again with some home 
cooked dinners.  You never forget things like that!  Neither does Jesus. 

In Matthew 10:42 He said, "If anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one 
of these little ones because he is my disciple he will certainly not lose 
his reward."  Jesus notices when we stop to administer shock therapy. When 
we find a way to show practical love to someone, like even a drink of cold 
water, He'll turn those hugs, those cups of water, into eternal reward 
someday.  So open your eyes, open your heart to see the shock victim near 
you and find a way to hug them.  And when you do, you'll be acting so very 
much like Jesus.
 
Copyright (c) 2008 by Ron Hutchcraft.

 

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