Some of us by nature are caregivers; it is in our blood, in
the very fibre, muscle and bone of our being.
It is not just that there are those who need our care. We ourselves need to care, to mend and heal,
to rescue and restore. I suspect that
trait in one degree of another is found in most people. Natural care givers often hold suspect those
who have no apparent need to give care, and recognize as pathological those who
instead of giving care, victimize those who either need care or give care. That proclivity is not just pathological, it
is wicked.
There is only One who is a bottomless well. Through the Christ flows the water of the
Spirit, the gift of the Father’s love. All
the rest of us lesser caregivers fall into one of two major categories; the
shallow well that taps ground water, and the well spring that has tapped a
source deeper than itself.
The caregiver that functions as a shallow well is soon
drained of inner resources and only slowly filled by fresh rain water seeping
through the soil. The shallow well,
giving of its own fleshly strength and human power, gladly gives all it has but
then sits depleted, empty and tired, very tired of caring. Some shallow wells are slowly repleted,
others, once depleted, sit as dry holes for times upon times; their care giving
days are over.
The caregiver that functions as a wellspring has tapped into
the deeper artesian spring of God’s love and presence and even if depleted is
quickly filled. Contrasting the earthly
and heavenly well there is One who said, “Everyone who drinks of this water
will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him
will never be thirsty forever. The water
that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal
life” (John 4:13,14).
There are some limits to caregiving that must be
recognized. Even Christ the Caregiver is
limited by the freedom of will that is an intrinsic right of those for whom He
cares. He allows us to say “No!” We ourselves are bound by the same reality in
our offers to care for others. On
another level there is no comparison of His ability as a caregiver with our
lesser ability. It is not for nothing
that He is called the Redeemer, and we the redeemed. His caregiving becomes incarnate in our
caregiving but subject to our humanity and limitations; but by the grace of God
we are what we are and His grace in us is not in vain. Caregivers give care only by virtue of their
connection with the Christ in the power of the Spirit.
Being filled with this amazing water of the Holy Spirit
requires both inflow and outflow.
Without the inflow that comes through worship, praise, prayer and
reflection on God’s word the well soon dries up. It is necessary to drink daily and drink
deeply. Without outflow, without giving
care the water becomes stagnant and the well itself becomes dank and
drear. The one who actively leans upon
Him is like a tree planted the water that sends out its roots by the
stream. The one who drinks deeply of His
Presence is like a deep well of water springing forth and giving life to those
who need care.
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