Peter Boogaart, Creation Care Coordinator 

Judi likes to say, “There’s a song for every situation.” It’s a stream-of-consciousness kind of thing. The kids used to roll their eyes or, worse yet, slink away in embarrassment if this happened in a public place. “Oh Mom!” Time to shop for groceries— “Yes we have no bananas….”  The end of a trip— “Six days on the road and I’m gonna make it home tonight…”   Out to get the mail? —You get the idea. Fill in the blanks. 

Now me?  I tend to think there’s a Bible story for every situation. Lately I’ve been thinking of 2 Kings 5. Maybe you, too, remember the story of this Syrian general. Naaman is a hotshot cultural elite, and he’s got all the bells and whistles to prove it. Late-model chariot with the super-feature eight-hoof powertrain. Shiny sword and lots of parade field bling. And people. People everywhere. Usually saying things like, “Yes sir. Right away sir.” Oh, excuse me, I should have said staff. You know, those bright young men working their way up. 

There’s just one chink in his armor. One flaw in the self-promoting narrative of esteem and greatness. He’s sick. He’s got leprosy. This is bad, and it’s going to get worse. He’s up against an invisible enemy, one that can’t be bullied, intimidated, or impaled. Life has thrown him a curve and there’s no way out. 

Or, maybe there is.  A servant girl uses a back channel to slip him a message, “Back in my country… you remember my country, right? You know. The one you invaded. The one you looted. The one where you killed my parents and stole me away. Where was I? Oh yes. Well, back in my country there’s a prophet who can heal leprosy. You should check it out.” 

All the physicians of Damascus had been worthless. And that hydroxychloroquine was a shill. So why not? What have you got to lose? Off to meet Elisha he goes. Desperate times call for desperate measures. 

Naaman shows up at Elisha’s door—presumably in a nice, quiet suburban neighborhood. The remote satellite news vans have been alerted and everything is set for prime time. Big man. Big day. Big event. There’s just one problem: Elisha doesn’t come out. Instead, he sends a junior administrative assistant. “Go wash in the Jordan River,” he says. “That’ll take care of everything. Have a nice day.” 

Naaman does what big men do when they feel slighted. He blows a gasket and stomps off. “I thought that for me he would come out himself and really fuss over me,” he says. “He should have been prepared with lots of special effects. Greatest healing ever! Something like that.”  

Evidently vanity and political clout are no match for a bacterium-induced disease. Game over?  Reenter the servants. “Hey hotshot, if he had asked you to do something hard—like a quest maybe—you would have done it,” they say. “So, what’s your problem with easy? “

And then an amazing thing happens. The story pivots and Naaman makes the transition from great man to wise man.  He goes to the Jordan. Washes. And is healed. In the end, restoration had nothing to do with Elisha. That was the point! It had to do with Elisha’s God. The God who is known as the Creator. Wellness and restoration are found when one lets go of pretense and enters into the stream of God’s flowing wholeness.  

I said that I was thinking of 2 Kings 5—a story of ambition, disease, and restoration. The story speaks to me of our current situation of lockdown and death counts. I’ve listened to the reports of how COVID-19 virus jumped from animals to humans; how the destruction of habitat forces animals into closer contact with humans; and of how great, pretentious men couldn’t do anything to stop it.  

I’ve been following the reports of climate change too. We’ve built the greatest civilization in the history of the world. We’re prime time! Reenter the servant girl. “You remember my creation, right? The resources you looted? The ecosystem you killed and the life you stole away? This is bad, and it’s going to get worse. There is in my country a prophet who can heal….”

Our issue is to determine whether or not we will transition from great to wise. That’s possible.  Scripture points the way.  “… If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land (2 Chronicles 7:14).

It’s time to wash in the Jordan.