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ment that shocks Europe.  He is closing their borders.  No flights from India, Pakistan, or any of the countries where this thing has been seen.

    And that’s why that night you are watching a little bit of CNN before going to bed.  Your jaw hits your chest when a weeping woman is translated from a French news program into English:  “There’s a young man lying in a hospital in Paris dying of the mystery flu.”  It has come to Europe.  Panic strikes. As best they can tell, once you get it, you have it for a week and you don’t know it.  Then you have four days of unbelievable symptoms.  And then you die.

    Britain closes its borders, but it’s too late.  South Hampton, Liverpool, North Hampton, and its Tuesday morning when the President of the United States makes the following announcement:  “Due to a national security risk, all flights to and from  Europe and Asia have been canceled.  If your loved ones are overseas, I’m sorry.  They cannot come back until we find a cure for this thing.”

“How are we going to contain it?”
    Within four days our nation has been plunged into an unbelievable fear. People are selling little masks for your face.  People are talking about what if it comes to this country, and preachers on Tuesday are saying, “It’s the scourge of God.”

    It’s Wednesday night and you are at a church prayer meeting when somebody runs in from the parking lot and says, “Turn on a radio, turn on a radio.” And while the church listens to a little transistor radio with a microphone stuck up to it, the announcement is made.  “Two women are lying in a Long Island hospital dying from the mystery flu.”  Within hours it seems, this thing just sweeps across the country.  People are working around the clock trying to find an antidote.  Nothing is working.  California.  Oregon. Arizona.  Florida.  Massachusetts.  It’s as though it’s just sweeping in from the borders.

    And then, all of a sudden the news comes out.  The code has been broken.  A cure can be found.  A vaccine can be made.  It’s going to take the blood of somebody who hasn’t been infected, and so, sure enough, all through the Midwest, through all those channels of emergency broadcasting, everyone is asked to do one simple thing:  “Go to your downtown hospital and have your blood type taken.  That’s all we ask of you.  And when you hear the sirens go off in your neighborhood, please make your way quickly, quietly, and safely to the hospitals.”

    Sure enough, when you and your family get down there late on that Friday night, there is a long line, and they’ve got nurses and doctors coming out and pricking fingers and taking blood and putting labels on it.  Your wife and kids are out there, and they take your blood type and they say, “Wait here in the parking lot and if we call your name, you can be dismissed and go home.”

    You stand around scared with your neighbors, wondering what in the world is going on, and that this is the end of the world.  Suddenly a young man comes running out of the hospital screaming.  He’s yelling a name and waving a clipboard.  What?  He yells it again!  And your son tugs on your jacket and says, “Daddy, that’s me.”

    Before you know it, they have grabbed your boy.  “Wait a minute, hold it!”

    And they say, “It’s okay, his blood is clean.  His blood is pure.  We want to make sure he doesn’t have the disease.  We think he has got the right type.”  Five tense minutes later, out come the doctors and nurses, crying and hugging one another—some are even laughing.

    It’s the first time you have seen anybody laugh in a week, and an old doctor walks up to you and says,  “Thank you, sir.  Your son’s blood type is perfect.  It’s clean, it is pure, and we can make the vaccine.”  As the word begins to spread all across that parking lot full of folks, people are screaming and praying and laughing and crying.

    But then the gray-haired doctor pulls you and your wife aside and says, “May we see you for a moment?  We didn’t realize that the donor would be a minor and we need... we need you to sign a consent form.”  You begin to sign and then you see that the number of pints of blood to be taken is empty.

“We need it all.”
    “H-h-h-how many pints?”  And that is when the old doctor’s smile fades and he says, “We had no idea it would be a small child.  We weren’t prepared. We need it all.”

    “But—but...”

    “You don’t understand.  We are talking about the world here.  Please sign. We—we need it all... we need it all!”

    “But can’t you give him a transfusion?”

    “If we had clean blood we would.  Can you sign?  Would you sign?”

    In numb silence you do.  Then they say,  “Would you like to have a moment with him before we begin?”

    Can you walk back?  Can you walk back to that room where he sits on a table saying,  “Daddy?  Mommy?  What’s going on?”  Can you take his hands and say, “Son, your mommy and I love you, and we would never ever let anything happen to you that didn’t just have to be.  Do you understand that?”

    And when that old doctor comes back in and says, “I’m sorry, we’ve... we’ve got to get started.  People all over the world are dying.” Can you leave?  Can you walk out while he is saying,  “Dad?  Mom?  Dad? Why - why have you forsaken me?”

    And then next week, when they have the ceremony to honor your son, and some folks sleep through it, and some folks don’t even come because they go to the lake, and some folks come with a pretentious smile and just pretend to care.  Would you want to jump up and say, “MY SON DIED!  DON’T YOU CARE?”

    Is that what He wants to say?  “MY SON DIED.  DON’T YOU KNOW HOW MUCH I CARE?”

    “Father, seeing it from your eyes breaks our hearts.  Maybe now we can begin to comprehend the great love you have for us.  Amen.”

“God made him who had no sin to be sin
for us, so that in him we might become the
righteousness of God.”
2 Corinthians 5:21
 
 
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HEARTLIGHT(R) Magazine is a ministry of loving Christians and the Westover Hills church of Christ.
Edited by Phil Ware and Paul Lee.
Copyright © 1996-97, Heartlight, Inc., 8332 Mesa Drive, Austin, TX 78759.
Article copyright (c) 1998, Jeff Walling. Used by permission.
HEARTLIGHT and the flared heart design are service marks of Heartlight, Inc.

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