Body aches, pains, and injuries
I hurt my wrist at the beginning of June this year. The injury happened during my first time at Top Golf, which is basically a gamified driving range. Rather than just teeing off and see how far you can hit the golf ball, Top Golf has targets set up at various distances where you get points for how close you get to each one. Now, I haven’t swung a golf club in twenty-some years…and whatever I did on that first swing – my grip, not keeping my wrists straight, whatever – I did it wrong. I felt an immediate pain in my right wrist that shot halfway up my forearm.
I was a little sore over the next few days, so I decided to treat it like a sprain and take it easy. Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevate…repeat. Over several weeks, it didn’t get any better and was becoming increasingly more painful, so I made the appointment with an orthopaedic doctor. His exam and subsequent MRI revealed a partial tear in the scapholunate ligament. Fortunately, the tear is in a location that doesn’t cause any structural issues or impact to the wrist’s function. As such, there isn’t an expectation that surgery will be needed.
Honestly, I didn’t even know this ligament was there. If it was mentioned in any of my high school or college science courses, I don’t recall. The SL ligament thickness ranges between 1mm to 3mm. It doesn’t take up much space, but its job is incredibly important – to provide stabilization and help control rotational motion in the wrist bones caused by the wrist’s movements.
I’m not fishing for your sympathies…I bring this up because what’s really struck me throughout this whole situation is how much impact the injury to this little ligament has caused. Without NSAIDs and Tylenol, the spot just burns – to the point of mental distraction and frustration. Because of the pain, I don’t have much pushing strength in that arm, and even when I keep my wrist straight, it fatigues quickly when trying to carry anything.
All because of a small, partial tear on a little tiny ligament.
In multiple letters to various churches, the Apostle Paul referred to believers as “the body of Christ”. To the churches in Rome and Corinth, he pointed out that there are different parts of our physical bodies that have different – and each important – jobs. So too, Paul said, within the body of Christ – we each have different gifts and abilities, so it’s best for the various parts of the body to do what they are made to do in order to have a healthy, active church.
However, in his letter to the believers in Corinth, he also addressed what happens when a part of the body isn’t functioning properly:
1 Corinthians 12:24-26
God has put the body together…that the members would have the same concern for each other. So if one member suffers, all the members suffer with it; if one member is honored, all the members rejoice with it.
Just like the injury to my wrist, when someone in God’s family struggles, the impact is much greater than just that one person. When we’re unable to do what God has made us to do – due to physical, emotional, or mental suffering – then the church as a whole is impacted. The pain isn’t localized, it can radiate and affect other parts of the body and how they function.
When one portion of our physical body is injured, the other parts compensate until healing can occur. Sometimes the injury can heal on its own, with some time and rest. Other times, the injury needs more specialized attention. The same should happen in the body of Christ. Those around the struggling member need to come along side and provide support while the healing occurs. When we come across a fellow believer who is suffering, we can’t ignore them and their pain. We need to recognize that if one member suffers, all the members suffer with it and it’s in everyone’s best interest to do the work to restore our suffering family member.
This principle is true, no matter what your role in the body of Christ is. You don’t have to lead worship or preach on Sunday mornings in order to qualify for assistance. We are to have the same concern for each other, regardless of how we serve. Yes, an injury to one of our eyes is impactful, but an injury to a supporting ligament in a wrist can be just as debilitating. Just as there are no unimportant parts of our physical body, there are no unimportant parts of Christ’s body, the church, either.
Keep Pressing,
Ken