In her biography of Dr. Paul Brand, Dorothy Wilson tells the story of one night in Brand’s life when his fear nearly became reality:
Dr. Paul W. Brand, the noted leprosy expert who was chief of the rehabilitation branch of the Leprosarium in Carville, Lousiana, had a frightening experience one night when he thought he had contracted leprosy. Dr. Brand arrived in London one night after an exhausting transatlantic ocean trip and long train ride from the English coast. He was getting ready for bed, had taken off his shoes, and as he pulled off a sock, discovered there was no feeling in his heel. To most anyone else this discovery would have meant very little, a momentary numbness. But Dr. Brand was world famous for his restorative surgery on lepers in India. He had convinced himself and his staff at the leprosarium that there was no danger of infection from leprosy after it reached a certain stage. The numbness in his heel terrified him.
He rose mechanically, found a pin, sat down again, and pricked the small area below his ankle. He felt no pain. He thrust the pin deeper, until a speck of blood showed. Still he felt nothing…He supposed, like other workers with leprosy, he had always half expected it…In the beginning probably not a day had gone by without the automatic searching of his body for the telltale patch, the numbed area of skin. All that night the great orthopedic surgeon tried to imagine his new life as a leper, an outcast, his medical staff’s confidence in their immunity shattered by his disaster. And the forced separation from his family. As night receded, he yielded to hope and in the morning, with clinical objectivity, with steady fingers he bared the skin below his ankle, jabbed in the point-and yelled. Blessed was the sensation of pain! He realized that during the long train ride, sitting immobile, he had numbed a nerve. From then on, whenever Dr. Brand cut his finger, turned an ankle, even when he suffered from “agonizing nausea as his whole body reacted in violent self-protection from mushroom poisoning, he was to respond with fervent gratitude, “Thank God for pain!”
David’s life was filled with trouble, yet he always saw a reason to praise the Lord. Do yourself a favor and study this Psalm. God has a purpose in pain. Regardless of the nature of the pain you are suffering there can be some benefit from it and, even if you never see exactly what it is, knowing God can use it for some blessed benefit gives you a good reason to praise Him. Now you decide–how will you start your day? You can wallow in self pity or you can praise the Lord. It should be easy to figure out what course of action is the best. But, it’s your choice. Think about it!
