Rescue from the mud

A Christian Science perspective: The skillful and successful rescue of a worker trapped in a tunnel at a subway construction site in New York City inspires hope for all kinds of rescues people need every day.

March 22, 2013

Wednesday in New York City over 130 people and an entire city’s resources worked unendingly with dogged determination until a construction worker trapped in mud was rescued ... alive. The New York Times report brought tears to my eyes. Failure was simply not an option. Whatever it took, the rescuers were going to save that man.

Perhaps it was more than human effort. Perhaps people were praying for strength, for guidance, for divine intervention. Perhaps human effort was underpinned by moral and spiritual qualities such as compassion, courage, ingenuity, spiritual power. A man was rescued and everyone present played an important role.

Today I’m drawing an analogy to saving our sisters and brothers from sin and sickness. We might not be in the same hole or stuck in the same mud. However, shouldn’t we all be united in working as men and women of God praying for the safety and health of humankind? Our employer is God. The tools of this trade are prayer, spiritual conviction, and compassion. Those who accept this job along with their “day job” can respond to calls for help and pray effectively and compassionately.

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We might not hear of every worker stuck in the mud or in some personal hell, but those whose calls we do hear, shouldn’t we rush to the rescue? This might mean physically, if we are on the spot, as a chaplain friend of mine was on the spot when a plane hit the Pentagon on 9/11. Or it might mean mentally, that we respond with courage, conviction, and spiritual ingenuity to pray for those in need. No one need ask us to pray. When there is an emergency, it is our human and divine obligation to affirm God’s presence, God’s power, God’s ability, to save and protect in the midst of disaster.

My grandmother was awakened in the night feeling that her son was in danger during World War II. She stayed up much of the night praying. She affirmed that God was present everywhere, wherever her son was. She prayed for his safety, that he have wisdom. She prayed until she felt at peace and felt that he was out of danger. Weeks later, she received a letter from her son briefly describing an extremely hazardous situation on that date at that time, and how he was kept safe and survived. My uncle was awarded several medals for valor as a result of his combat experiences. He believed his safety was due to God and the prayers of his mother, himself, and others.

Not only those who are prayed for can experience safety and rescue. God is always present, all-powerful in every situation. But those who pray are tuning in to the Divine and hearing the idea that will guide, heal, and save. Obeying those ideas and putting them into practice is the human action governed by the Divine. It’s the Divine shining through the human.

The Bible says, “And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him” (James 5:15).