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                Is
                          God Present in Illness?  
  By Mary C. Earle 
  author of Broken Body, Healing Spirit 
                  The
                      phone rings and the doctor says to you, "I am sorry
                      to tell you that the biopsy shows a malignancy." Or, "The
                      blood work indicates that a chronic condition is present." Or
                      perhaps a life that was rocking in daily rhythm is suddenly
                      shocked by heart attack or stroke or any of the possible
                      acute incidents of illness that happen to us. 
           
  Quickly you discover there is no lack of interpretations of why illness has
  come to inhabit your life. These range from kindly suggestion to hurtful opinion.
  In my own case, having been side-swiped by acute pancreatitis, I was told by
  one person that God gave me the illness because he wanted me to be a saint
  (not said in jest). Another person told me that it must have happened because
  I didn't have enough sweetness in my life (presumably because the pancreas
  manufactures insulin, which regulates blood sugar). Most of these interpretations
  were distressing. Some of them were plain bad, both as expressions of faith
  and as descriptions of my experience. At a point when I was the most vulnerable,
  both physically and spiritually, I found myself inundated with opinion, conjecture
  and interpretation--most of which did not fit my own sense of how faith comes
  to bear on illness, suffering, disruption, and loss. 
           
  So in the long months of recovery, I began to search for a way to read my illness
  and my body on my own. I wanted to allow myself--and other people like me--the
  chance to study the narrative, or the story, of what had happened, and to bring
  that into prayer and reflection. The quick and ready interpretations that are
  so often handed to someone who is ill overlook the specific reality of each
  person, and the particular experience of being sick and weakened.  
           
  Each person, each illness is a particular story--a story told through a particular
  person in his own context, in her own time and place. Each story is full of
  sacred meaning. Discerning the meaning, listening for intimations of divine
  presence in the midst of confusion, disorientation and pain requires what the
  Benedictine tradition calls "listening with the ear of the heart." 
           
  I am a poet as well as an Episcopal priest. One of the things that reading
  and writing poetry has taught me is that there are multiple layers of meaning
  in a poem, a good book, a movie, a life. When I began life with pancreatitis,
  I started looking for a structure that would bring together poetic sensibilities,
  my prayer life, and living with the long term effects of my illness. I started
  applying a process called lectio divina, or holy reading, to the experience
  of being ill. Lectio divina is a centuries-old way of looking at scripture.
  It has several steps, and it invites us to listen to our own lives in a way
  that is attentive and creative. As with any process, lectio divina is but one
  way of trying to discern meaning and faith in the midst of living with illness.
  It's not the only way; it is a way that has been beneficial for me and for
  others. 
           
  Applying this process to the experience of living with illness invites you
  to reflect on different aspects and dimensions of being sick. First, you simply
  let yourself know what you have been through--whether the onset of the illness
  came through a sudden and unexpected eruption or through a surprise discovery
  in a regular check up. You allow yourself the opportunity to register what
  you have been through. Then you reflect and pray about what you recall and
  discover. Lastly you create a specific prayer in word or some means of creative
  expression--painting, drawing, movement, clay--whatever allows you to embody
  the prayer and is also consistent with the limitations of your illness. 
           
  Living with illness raises the most basic questions of the faith journey: who
  am I? Who is God? How is my identity changed by these limitations and sufferings?
  Is there any meaning to be found in the midst of pain? The process of lectio
  divina--regular practice of reflecting on the illness, meditating on moments
  in that ongoing experience of living with illness, and creating prayer from
  our meditation-- allows us to be in conversation with God about our bodies,
  our deepest feelings, our fears and our hopes. It allows us to bring all of
  our embodied life in illness to the merciful and gentle presence of God.  
           
  Illness is without a doubt disconcerting, disturbing, perhaps cause for despair.
  Illness can also serve as a means to awareness. Reflection on the ability of
  the body to heal, to keep going in the face chronic ailments, to repair after
  chemotherapy and radiation, may lead us to become aware that this body truly
  is a gift of God.  
                  An
                        example of listening with the ear of your heart from Broken
                        Body, Healing Spirit by Mary Earle. 
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