The Disciplers We Often Ignore

By Shaun Brooks

I am blessed to know some of the finest people in this world who happen to be persons with disabilities. They also happen to be the ones who are discipling me. 

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), about a quarter of the population in America has a disability, and the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that over 1 billion individuals worldwide, or just about 15% of the world population, can identify with a disability. It means that wherever you may live, there will be someone you know, if not yourself, who is a part of this community. Society, including the church, has often overlooked this community. In the minds of some, those with a disability are to be constantly prayed for until they are healed. Rarely are they considered whole, but are seen as lacking an ability that would make them truly happy and complete. Thankfully through the Possibility Ministries, our church is making strides in addressing these concerns and oversight.

For many who consider themselves non-disabled and Christian, there seems to be a mission mandate to make disciples of those with a disability, totally disregarding that they should be the ones to be discipled by those who happen to have a disability. If a disciple is a student per se who listens and takes notes from a teacher, it begs a few questions. What can you teach a person who is blind about trust when in their daily interactions, they rely upon others for various tasks? What can you teach a person confined to a bed about patience when many who are non-disabled were losing their patience in the brief time they were confined to their homes during the pandemic? What can you teach a person with developmental disabilities about forgiveness when they may be shown scorn and ridicule, yet they still demonstrate love for that community? What can you teach a person about perseverance, whose body does not respond to their commands but somehow they push through life, craving to see another day? 

I hope you are getting the picture that even if someone cannot cognitively respond to you, they are teaching you daily about the love of God. God continually responds to us even when we cannot adequately compute the mind of God. Providentially, God has allowed the disabled and non-disabled community to minister to each other mutually. Though we may live in different vessels, we are experiencing the same storm of sin; it’s just that we are affected in different ways. God desires us to grow and reflect His character, and we can do so through our daily interactions with those made in His image, for we are all made in His image and bear His likeness.

When we lock away our fellowship and refuse to interact with individuals with various disabilities, the church is no longer as effective as it could be. The church loses its Christ-centered distinctiveness when it is unable to see Christ in each person. It seems we have forgotten that when we are in heaven, Jesus will continue to bear the scars of a crucified body and that for time and eternity, as we see our Savior, we will view the marred yet precious body of our Lord. If we cannot fellowship and look upon those with disabilities here on earth, how can we be so sure that we will look upon Christ, who bears the hallmarks of visible disabilities upon His body? Another way of putting it is how can we love God, whom we have not seen, if we don’t know how to love those we see?

Each time I come across someone with a disability, I have a deep admiration for what I can learn from them. Through my continued interaction, I have grown in my emotional intelligence, and I’m learning more about the love of God. I am also learning to be more patient with myself and with others and I’m constantly learning from some of the greatest of Christ’s disciples as we journey through life together

Shaun Brooks, DMin, pastors the All Nations Seventh-day Adventist Church in Lilburn, Georgia. He also serves as the Possibilities Ministry Coordinator for Georgia-Cumberland Conference.

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