PLANTED BY
THE WATERSIDE
What makes for a
good doctor, or a good anyone? The doctor who knows the clinical answer to
every disease will, no doubt, do a good job. But if they only rely on book
knowledge, there will be something missing. That ‘something’ is the space
between the doctor as a person and the patient. The book knowledge is necessary
and may well provide a cure for many ailments. But it is not enough.
I have mentioned
before in this column the etching I once saw in a house in Ireland where a
child lay on a bed dying. The mother has her head buried in despair in the
bedclothes, the father standing lost in the background and the doctor sitting
by the bed deep in thought. He is straining every inch of his knowledge and his
intuition to find a remedy.
Scientists today
are humbler than their forbears. There was a time, in the hubris of the
Enlightenment, when they boasted they would, in time, find the answer to all
nature’s secrets. Few would claim that today. The more science advances, the
more scientists know their limits – and the more some of the gospel sayings
show their wisdom; “When you have done all you
were told to do, say, 'We are unworthy servants; we have only done our
duty'” (Lk 17:10).
But still, scientists, like doctors, explore beyond
known boundaries and follow their intuitions. They leave aside rule books,
manuals and maps and search for solutions that may never have been tried
before. They will not go wrong if they remember another scripture saying, this
time from Jeremiah; ‘Blessed is the one who trusts in Yahweh ... They are like
a tree by the waterside ... which never stops bearing fruit’ (17:7).
I take this to mean, when a person is rooted in God,
they can try all sorts of things. They will never go far wrong. Am I saying
anything profound? No! We know that no soldier can be trained for every
eventuality in war and no player can prepare for every twist of a football
game. True, but we are not soldiers or footballers – most of us. The point
surely is; we are all called to be explorers, all called to announce the
kingdom of God wherever we are planted.
The tree has no choice, but we have. We can choose to
be planted by the waterside and ‘thrust our roots to the stream’ (Jer 17
again). There we draw water that gives us energy and imagination to engage in
the struggles of today. Alone, we can do nothing. But rooted by the water’s
edge we can make a difference – beyond the rules. 16
Feb 2025. Sunday 6 C. Jer 17:5-8. 1 Cor 15:12... 20. Lk 6: 17... 26
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