Printable Version
Visit the sick
Ministering God's grace in times of illness
Sick note?
VISIT THE SICK
Ministering God’s grace in times of illness
By Brian Croft
Day One. 92 pages. £5.00
ISBN 978-1-84625-143-6
On books about healing in theory and testimony there seems to be no end. It is, therefore, very refreshing to come across a very readable yet down-to-earth book about sickness and the church’s responsibility and opportunity. Brian Croft writes from much personal pastoral experience, undergirded by a medical background.
Pastoral visitation is often a neglected aspect of ministry today. Difficulties abound but they can be overcome by diligence, ingenuity and prayerful determination. I can speak with much empathy, having built a lifetime of local church ministry on the assumption that home visits form an essential foundation. The old adage that ‘a housegoing parson makes a churchgoing people’ may no longer be so true and is probably not the highest motivation. But the call of Matthew 25 remains.
There is a helpful blend of theology and practical application here, not only inspiring present or would-be pastors to launch into the deep and knock on a few doors, but also to help train lay members of the church to share in the task. A full-time minister has certain special advantages but a layperson can often get nearer to the real person behind the closed door.
I have a habit of skipping appendices. That would be tragic here. All are good and the final one, a lengthy quote from dear Bishop Ryle, makes the perfect ending — or beginning!
Philip H. Hacking,
retired Anglican vicar and itinerant preacher
© Evangelicals Now - March 2009
Please consider supporting this ministry by subscribing.
|