Actor Christopher Reeve was paralyzed in a horseback
riding accident in 1995. Prior to this tragedy, he had played the part of a
paraplegic in a movie. In preparation, Reeve visited a rehabilitation facility.
He recalled: “Every time I left that rehab center, I said, ‘Thank God that’s
not me.’ ” After his accident, Reeve regretted that statement: “I was so
setting myself apart from those people who were suffering without realizing
that in a second that could be me.” And sadly, for him, it was.
We too may look at the troubles of others and think
that it could never happen to us. Especially if our life journey has led to a
measure of success, financial security, and family harmony. In a moment of
vanity and self-sufficiency, King David admitted to falling into the trap of
feeling invulnerable: “Now in my prosperity I said, ‘I shall never be moved’”
(Ps 30:6). But David quickly caught himself and redirected his heart away from
self-sufficiency. He remembered that he had known adversity in the past and God
had delivered him: “You have turned for me my mourning into dancing” (v.11).