You’ve heard the phrase “wearing several hats” before I’m sure. It’s what we say when we’re filling multiple roles simultaneously. When it comes right down to it we all wear more than one hat. I am a father, a son, a husband, a pastor, a friend…the list goes on.
Some of the hats that we wear are expected, they don’t surprise our friends and family at all. Yet other hats surprise even our closet friends when we’re discovered wearing them. When we follow Jesus we are assigned some roles, or given a few hats to wear if you will. Over the next few posts I would like to look at the 4 main hats Christians are to wear and ponder with you whether the world sees them as obvious or surprising.
Hat 1: The role of Healer.
To understand this role we must first see that Jesus Christ has healed us. (Isaiah 53:4, 1 Peter 2:24). Jesus, understanding that we were slaves to sin, came down to this earth in order to release us from our bondage. This required that he pay the price of our sin which was death. His death healed us from the coming punishment of sin. We become healed spiritually. Or put another way we are now spiritually healthy.
Thus the follower of Jesus is a spiritual healthy individual living in a world full of suffering. This suffering is not just limited to one’s spirit either. Many in our world suffer physically as well as spiritually. This illustration is a bit of a stretch but in some ways Christians are like Will Smith in the movie “I am Legend”. We live in a world in desperate need of a cure. The big difference is we aren’t searching for the cure as he was…we know the cure is Jesus Christ. Our role as healer is to offer people access to the healing power of Jesus Christ.We introduce them to the “Great Physician” (Luke 5:321-32).
But we h
eal in other ways as well. When we enter into the pain of another we are helping them find the healing they need. Remember, Will Smith was immune and we are too. When we seek justice for those who have none, when we offer mercy to those who normally don’t experience it we are healing wounded hearts and in so doing show that we too have been healed.
In a world full of pain we have the responsibility to take on the role of one who offers healing. Of one who points to the source of all healing Jesus Christ. Are you wearing the hat? Are you healing the physically broken, are you carrying the physically wounded to the feet of Jesus?
Community Questions:
Is the church today doing a good job of wearing the hat of healing? Would the world agree with your assessment?
What are some practical ways we can bring healing to the world in which we live?
Sometimes we just need God to show up in a big way. We have to decide whether or not to move our family across the country to take a new job. We need to decide if we will allow our adult son to move back into the house. We need to decide if a friendship needs to end. These decisions are big, life altering, decisions and if we’re honest we have this sinking feeling, in the pit of our stomach, that tells us it is exactly these issues on which God seems to be mysteriously silent. The Bible will not tell you whether or not to take the job or to end that particular relationship. So what are we to do in these situations?

