Read Message
bigmike
Let Christ Heal What Medicine Cannot
The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it? Jeremiah 17:9
When the renowned German surgeon, Dr. Werner Forssmann (1904-1979) was in medical school, he had an  idea. He believed that if a small tube were inserted into an artery and run into the heart, then  the diseased heart were x-rayed, it would be possible to diagnose the problem and thus save many  lives. His professors, however, were horrified and forbade him doing the experiment.
Forssmann, though, wasn’t to be deterred. He became his own guinea pig, inserting a small catheter  into his own artery, then x-rayed himself, thus proving that it could be done. This brave man paved  the way for tremendous advancements in the treatment of coronary disease, and hundreds of thousands  of people are alive today the world over because modern heart treatment has been built on the  shoulders of this man’s discovery.
Like what? In 1959—not that many years ago—Dr. F. Mason Sones, Jr., an American cardiologist,  performed the first angiogram whereby dye is inserted into an artery and the heart is x-rayed, thus  determining the amount of blockage which a clogged artery has sustained.
Your arteries carry oxygen to your heart, so when they get clogged up—much like a drain when roots  from a tree and sediment build up over the years and obstruct the flow of water—your heart cannot  function.
For several decades, opening up the chest and replacing diseased arteries with a piece of vein out  of your leg was pretty much standard procedure. Then Dr. Thomas Fogarty became convinced there had  to be a better way—a less invasive procedure; and in 1963 he introduced the first balloon catheter,  a small plastic balloon, which flattens the build up of plaque when it’s pulled through an artery.
Dr. Fogarty is a tinkerer and an inventor, always trying to find a better way to do something. When  he was awarded the distinguished Lemelson-MIT award with an accompanying prize of $500,000, he  explained, “I’ve achieved the things I’ve done by asking one question—’Can it be done better?’”
Fogarty holds 63 patents in surgical instrumentation and has achieved because he refused to believe  that improvement couldn’t be made on existing procedures and equipment.
With all of the progress which has been made in the field of medicine and technology, I am yet  amazed at the number of people, for a variety of reasons, fear being foremost among them—refuse to  take advantage of what is now readily available. I am thinking of a conversation with a friend who  told me that his cholesterol is about 300 (I quickly add that if yours is over 200, it’s high. The  figure he mentioned is very high), and his doctors had prescribed one of the new statin drugs which  has been used very successfully to lower cholesterol. But he never filled the prescription. “Why  not?” I asked. “I just don’t like to take medicine,” he replied.
While the human heart is vital to your health, it’s also interesting to notice how the Bible refers  to your heart as being the seat of your emotions, the very control center of your thoughts and  feelings. Poets talk about it; lovers sing about it, and doctors try to keep it healthy. Recently I  pondered the words of William Cowper’s old hymn which go, “There is a fountain filled with blood,  drawn from Immanuel’s veins, and sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.”  I couldn’t help thinking that just as it is difficult for some to accept the help that medical  science offers, it’s also hard for them to accept God’s remedy for what doctors can’t cure—the dark  side of human failure, the sins of the heart.
Resource reading: Colossians 2:1-11
- Date: