Healing: Wounded Healer Are We
Nearly a year in the making, here is the last installment of my healing series. And my last point is this - sometimes...often times... the Lord uses people to heal people.
I remember well the night a deep wound was reversed for me. I was on the phone with a good friend and we were having a conflict. Several years ago, a guy I was dating accused me of dishonesty while he was breaking up with me because I had not brought a problem up earlier. He was operating out of his own wounded space, but those words cut me. To know my intention to be patient, kind, and long-suffering had been misconstrued as a mask, a sign of artificiality deeply hurt me. I felt that label burn into me like a brand, but that was years ago and I had buried it so deep I didn't know I still bore that scar. Until this moment, on the phone with this friend.
We were talking through our conflict. He was being gracious, assuming my best intentions, not my worst. And as we were talking, I asked a vulnerable question. Did he think I was being fake by not addressing the problem earlier? Had I hurt or upset him in that? And he responded, kindly and gently, "No, no, I think you were trying to show me grace." I didn't know the question was so tender until I heard his answer, but I felt that old wound burst to the surface and bloom into healing. It was a beautiful moment where I saw the Lord lean down to remind me that while people can be the source of our hurts, they can also miraculously be the conduit for our healing as well.
Years ago in my counselor's office, we talked about attachments styles. There are 4 types of attachments, 3 of which are unhealthy and the last of which is a Secure attachment style. There's a lot of clinical language and concepts behind that, but the Cliff Notes version is that vast majority of people have developed an unhealthy attachment style, and it affects all their relationships. Yet despite all that brokenness, anyone can learn how to develop a secure attachment style. And the way to do that? To have a secure attachment with someone. That someone can be a flesh-and-bone person in your life or it can even be the Lord. In my own life I can pin-point a specific friend that was one of my first secure attachments. It wasn't always that way, my own insecurities played in, especially when I was in low places, but looking at it now, I can see how the Lord used her to heal things deep in me surrounding friendship and my own insecurities, and she did all of that by just being herself, being a steadfast friend, and operating in the fullness of how the Lord made her. I owe quite a bit to the ways the Lord used that.
Another way we can be an agent of healing is allowing our wounds to minister to someone else. Empathy and compassion are rarely birthed without a past suffering. When we find someone enduring a valley we have already walked through, is it not loving to grab their hand and say "I'll stick with you, I know the way"? We can't pull them out of the valley, but we can offer the comfort of knowing it's been surmounted before, as well as the comforting presence of companionship in the darkness. We may be tempted to hide our wounds -- after all, it is deeply vulnerable to reveal our scars. But is this not what Jesus did? In response to Thomas's doubt, Jesus offered his wounded hands, invited Thomas to place his hand in Jesus' open side. In this act of grace, we see Thomas healed of doubt. How kind and human is our Divine King?
I almost left this piece out. It can be all too easy to look to people as the source of our healing, security, or safety, and I don't want to arbitrate that mistake. However, I think we can also err the other way when we run from allowing the Lord to use us or others out of a fear of relying on people. We were made for community, and part of the mystery of that is that the very Spirit in them is the same one that reanimates life after death. It is not people on their own, but the Christ in them that is the source of that healing, but it is not for nothing that we are called the Hands and Feet. One of the ways the Gospel is displayed is through healing. What a joy that we get to partner with God in the work He does to make people whole again.
Carl Jung coined the term "wounded healer" to describe the idea that the wounds that we endured allow us to offer empathy, care, and space for others as a means of facilitating healing. As a secular psychologist, he didn't know he was tapping into a divine truth, but he was. This truth would encourage the priest Henri Nouwen to write a whole book based on that idea, and he summed it up best when he said "Jesus is God’s wounded healer: through his wounds we are healed." When we allow our wounds to be exposed to allow healing to come to others, we imitate Jesus and operate as a co-heir and co laborer in bringing the Kingdom to fruition here on earth.
Healing is a life-long path and there are many detours on the way. One day when the Lamb returns, we will experience full and complete healing. In the meantime, we can be sure that the Lord does desires our healing and is working for it in us. It takes the time it takes. It happens little by little. It happens in community. And it happens in letting Jesus into our tenderest spaces to place His wounds over ours. Hallelujah.
This series has hardly been comprehensive, but I hope it has offered a little candle to light the way forward if you find yourself in the darkness. Let this be your reminder to be kind to yourself. Be kind to others. And remember, you do not walk alone.