As I read this I can't help but think of Isaac who is one of these very special children of God. -- drs
A
minister began to preach by saying, "To start with, I'm just as
neurotic as everybody else," and there was an audible sigh of relief
from the entire congregation. Anxiety, depression, hypochondria,
psychosomatic aches and pains, fear of things like heights and crowds —
there's almost nobody who can't lay claim to at least a few of them.
They involve an utterly fruitless expenditure of energy. They result in
an appalling waste of time. Yet maybe there's something to be said for
them anyhow.
Neurotics don't lose their sense of reality like people who
think they're a poached egg or that somebody's going to blow poison gas
under the door while they're asleep. You might even say that they have a
heightened sense of reality. They sense everything that's really there
and then some. They don't understand why the peculiar things that are
going on inside their heads are going on, but at least they're more or
less in touch with what's going on inside their heads and realize not
only that they're peculiar themselves, but that so are lots of other
people. That's probably why neurotics are apt to be more sympathetic
than most and, unless their particular neurosis happens to be nonstop
talking or antisocial behavior, why they make such good listeners.
You wouldn't want one of them operating on your brain or
flying you across the Andes in a jet or in charge of things when there's
a red alert, but when it comes to writing poems and novels or painting
pictures or even preaching sermons, it's hard to beat them. Their
overactive imaginations, which are a curse elsewhere, are a blessing
there. Personally speaking, their oversensitivity may be their undoing,
but professionally it's one of their strongest cards. They may see and
hear and feel more than is good for them, but there's no question that,
with the exception of their immediate families, it's good for everybody
else.
"A thorn was given me in the flesh, a messenger of Satan,
to harass me, to keep me from being too elated," Saint Paul wrote to his
friends (2 Corinthians 12:7). Nobody knows just what the problem was
that he was referring to, but you don't have to read many of his Letters
to suspect that he would have been among those who sighed with relief
at the minister's opening confession. His violent swings of mood from
deep depression to exaltation. His passionate likes and dislikes. His
boasting. His dark sense of guilt. Almost certainly it was some sort of
neurosis that was bugging him. Three times he prayed to God to get rid
of it for him, he said, but God never did. Maybe it's not so hard to
guess why.
A psychological cure would no doubt have greatly enriched
Paul's own life at the time but would have greatly impoverished
generations of his readers' lives ever since. "Through his wounds we are
healed" are words to be reserved only for the most grievous Wound, the
holiest Healing (Isaiah 53:5). But maybe in some small measure they can
be applied to people like Paul too. Their very hang-ups and crotchets
and phobias and general quirkiness give their kind — and, through them,
give us — insights into the human heart that few can match. It's a high
price for them to pay for our comfort and edification, but where they
come closest to a kind of oddball holiness of their own is the feeling
they give you sometimes that even if they could get out of paying it,
they wouldn't.
- Originally published in Whistling in the Dark and later in Beyond Words
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