Missionary Spotlight-God’s plan in a TB sanatorium

Doug Nichols Doug Nichols and his wife Margaret have served in missions for nearly 47 years of which 20 years were in the Philippines. They presently reside in Issaquah, Washington, where Doug serves as Global M
01 April, 2003 2 min read

In 1967, while serving as a young man with a missionary society in India, tuberculosis forced me into a sanatorium for several months.

I did not yet speak the indigenous language, but tried to give Christian literature written in their own language to patients, doctors and nurses. Everyone refused – some politely, some rudely.

I sensed many were not happy about an American being in a free, government-run sanatorium (to them, all Americans are rich – they did not know how broke I was!).

Need

The first few nights I awoke around 2.00am coughing. One night, in my coughing spell, I noticed one of the older, sicker patients across the aisle trying to get out of bed.

He would sit up on the edge of his bed and try to stand, then in weakness fall back into bed. I did not understand what he was trying to do.

He finally fell back into bed exhausted. I heard him crying softly. The next morning I realised that the man had been trying to get up and walk to the bathroom!

The stench in the ward was awful. Other patients yelled insults at him. Angry nurses moved him roughly from side to side as they cleaned up the mess. One nurse even slapped him.

The old man curled into a ball and wept. The next night I again woke up coughing. I noticed the man across the aisle sit up and again try to stand. Like the night before, he fell back whimpering.

I do not like bad smells, and I did not want to become involved, but I got out of bed and went over to him.

Love

When I touched his shoulder, his eyes opened wide with fear. I smiled, put my arms under him and picked him up. He was very light, due to old age and advanced TB.

I carried him to the restroom, which was just a small, filthy room with a hole in the floor.

I stood behind him with my arms under his armpits as he took care of himself. After he finished, I picked him up and carried him back to his bed.

As I laid him down, he kissed me on the cheek, smiled, and said something I could not understand.

The next morning another patient woke me up and handed me a steaming cup of tea. He motioned with his hands that he wanted a tract.

As the sun rose, other patients approached and indicated they also wanted the booklets that I had tried to distribute before.

Throughout the day, nurses, interns and doctors asked for literature.

Faith

Weeks later, an evangelist who spoke the indigenous language visited me, and as he talked to others in the sanatorium, he discovered that several already professed faith in Christ as Saviour as a result of reading my literature!

What did it take to reach these people with the gospel? It wasn’t health, the ability to speak their language, or a persuasive talk. I simply took a trip to the bathroom. Anyone could have done it!

Doug Nichols and his wife Margaret have served in missions for nearly 47 years of which 20 years were in the Philippines. They presently reside in Issaquah, Washington, where Doug serves as Global M
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