Blood Relatives

June 5, 2018

Christian Standard

By Gene Shelburne The son born to Robert and Suzanne Massie was a normal baby in most respects. He had the correct number of fingers, toes, eyes, and ears. He was intelligent, probably a brighter-than-usual child. He cried, sucked, yowled, and wet his diaper just like other babies. Only one thing made Bobby Massie different. … Read more

By Gene Shelburne

The son born to Robert and Suzanne Massie was a normal baby in most respects. He had the correct number of fingers, toes, eyes, and ears. He was intelligent, probably a brighter-than-usual child. He cried, sucked, yowled, and wet his diaper just like other babies. Only one thing made Bobby Massie different. He was a hemophiliac. A bleeder.

Little did Bobbyโ€™s parents suspect how crushingly cruel that difference would beโ€”the abuse they would suffer from doctors, the fear that caused schools to refuse to educate Bobby and made the coupleโ€™s friends forbid their children to play with the boy. They were unaware of the astronomical cost of braces, wheelchairs, and similar equipment, and worst of all, the ceaseless, often fruitless, and almost bankrupting search for blood.

To supply plasma for their sonโ€™s bleeding joints, the Massies worked continually in blood drives. In Journey, the Massiesโ€™ 1975 book, they tell how Bobbyโ€™s need for plasma soared as he grew up, rising from 39 transfusions in 1961 to 107 just six years later. Without the blood, Bobbyโ€™s knees and elbows soon would become frozen and useless. So they badgered friends and strangers for blood.

Sometimes the Massies became bitter, they admitted. Such as when Red Cross officials let a major advance in hemophilia therapy go down the drain. Or when drug companies immorally price-gouged them. And whenever fellow Americans seemed calloused to the woes of hemophiliacs.

But the Massies also had reasons for thanksgiving.

โ€œThere was a Russian friend of mine,โ€ Sue Massie wrote, โ€œwho gave blood at Christmas โ€˜because that is all I have to give.โ€™โ€ Across the nation, thousands shared their blood. โ€œBobby might not be alive today,โ€ Sue acknowledged, โ€œbut for this unseen, unsolicited sense of brotherhood.โ€

Christians gathered at the table surely understand this feeling, for we are tied together inseparably by an unsolicited gift of blood.

When we ask the Lordโ€™s blessing upon our drinking from the cup of wine at the Lordโ€™s Table, this means, doesnโ€™t it, that all who drink it are sharing together the blessing of Christโ€™s blood? (1 Corinthians 10:16, The Living Bible).

Gene Shelburne has served as the pulpit minister at the Anna Street Church in Amarillo, Texas, for 49 years. He is senior editor of the Christian Appeal and his column โ€œCross Currentsโ€ appears in several newspapers, including the Amarillo Globe News. He has written four books, including The God Who Puts Us Back Together.

Christian Standard
Author: Christian Standard

Contact us at **@********************ia.com

Sponsored

Renew University

Sponsored

fame ad2

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Help Keep Christian Standard Free & Accessible with a Tax Deductible Donation

We can doย more together!

Every gift makes a difference!

No, thank you.
100% secure transactions - receipts provided.
Does Your Church Want to Support Christian Standard?

Would your church consider including support for Christian Standard in its annual missions budget? Your support would help us not only continue the 160-year legacy of this unifying ministry, but also expand the free resources, cooperative opportunities, and practical guidance we provide to strengthen churches in the U.S. and around the world.

We can doย more together!

Every gift makes a difference!

No, thank you.
100% secure transactions - receipts provided.
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x