{"id":1721,"date":"2002-12-05T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2002-12-05T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/banneroftruth.co\/us\/resources\/articles\/2002\/handling-the-last-stages-of-cancer"},"modified":"2002-12-05T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2002-12-05T00:00:00","slug":"handling-the-last-stages-of-cancer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/staging.banneroftruth.org\/uk\/resources\/articles\/2002\/handling-the-last-stages-of-cancer\/","title":{"rendered":"Handling the Last Stages of Cancer"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><P><strong>As I sit here this side of death I look ahead with fear and yet         with hope. I do not want to die yet.<\/strong>      <P>by Ruairidh D. Macrae      <P>It has been a long journey from when I sent my first e mail about being                 diagnosed with cancer back in early 2001. My first encounter with the         &quot;Big         C&quot; caused me to write quite a few e mails to you all. Your outpouring         of         love and prayers then was an amazing encouragement for myself and for                 Audra. You came on our journey through the valleys and mountains &#8211; the                 valleys turning out to be the Bacca&#8217;s Vale (Psalm 84), with rejoicing         over         the Lord&#8217;s hand and healing. Then 3 months later, as I started the         College, providence again needed to be rejoiced in and God praised, though                 this time from the other side &#8211; with being rediagnosed with cancer. Now                 this was a harder blow in many respects to the first diagnosis. The         question &quot;Where is your God now?&quot; from one of my doctors was         already         screaming in my own heart and mind. The answer I gave was the only answer         I knew then. It remains the only answer I know now. Many of you will know                 it &#8211; so forgive the retelling. I come from the Black Isle, where the         northern view is dominated by Ben Wyvis. Easter Ross being as it is has                 rain a lot and often Ben Wyvis would be shrouded in cloud or mist &#8211; causing                 it to be blocked from view. If someone came along to me and said that         Ben         Wyvis was no longer there I would laugh and say &quot;don&#8217;t be ridiculous.         Of         course it&#8217;s still there &#8211; its just the clouds are blocking it from view.&quot;                 So it is for me with God &#8211; I know He&#8217;s still there as He always has been                 and promised to be. It&#8217;s just the clouds are blocking Him from my view.       <\/p>\n<p>      <P>Much has happened since that day just over a year ago. This year has         been         my sweetest, as well as my most painful. Firstly, I would like to give         you         all a heart felt apology. This time I shrunk away from the whole mass         e         mail thing which I had done the last time. The reasons for this are         probably varied with some being legitimate, others not. However, I know                 now more than ever, that this providence that we face was never meant         just         for me, not even just for us as a couple or a family, but for many. I                 don&#8217;t mean that in a boastful way, just that I have a deeper sense now         of         the Body of Christ. &quot;And we know that all things work together for         good to         those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.&quot;                 (Rom. 8:28) That means this is not just for my good, but for yours as                 well. It is for His glory and purpose. The interconnectedness of Christ&#8217;s                 Body the Church shows that to be true. I have not really been able to         work         that out in how I have lived and attempted to cope with a difficult         providence. And yet, I have continued to be amazed, humbled, overwhelmed                 and gratified at so many people&#8217;s faithfulness in prayer for us. I have                 not deserved such but I do thank you for it and ask you to continue to                 remember us in prayer. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>As I sit here this side of death I look ahead with fear and yet with         hope. I do not want to die yet. I am young (despite what my friends in         the Youth         Fellowship say, 25 this month is young!), and have been married for only                 two and a half years. I believe I have been called to the ministry and         am         in my second year of training at the Free Church College. Despite my         cancer, the last year or so has been awesome, being in St. Columba&#8217;s Free                 Church here in Edinburgh, training with great guys who love the Lord,         his         cause, people and the lost, growing together, being taught by some of         the         greatest theologians that Scotland (and much further afield) has today.         I         want to be there with them at graduation, working alongside them in the                 gospel, growing in our friendships, being married, having kids, etc. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>So you will excuse me if I don&#8217;t give relish the thought of death. I         yearn         for heaven, but not the means of entry. It is my enemy, robbed as it is.         It         is of great comfort to know that when Lazarus died, Jesus himself wept.         Nor         did he condemn Mary and Martha for mourning, rather he joined them and                 pointed them to himself as the resurrection and the life. Paul says that         to         die is gain. He is not saying dying or death is gain although it brings                 gain in heaven. Here is a subtle point I think we miss(?) Perhaps the         same         meaning would be going to heaven is gain. Paul is not talking about the                 dying process nor of death itself. My example here, as always, is Christ.                 He knew what was coming in Gethsemane and yet he was willing to do God&#8217;s                 will not his own will, but God&#8217;s be done. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>As I&#8217;ve said I don&#8217;t want to die just now. I know that for me, if things         go         as medically expected, it will be painful and frustrating. I hate being                 weak, and hate crippling pain. I can&#8217;t get to college often, or do things                 with my friends as I would like, or get out to church as much etc. But         the         amazing thing is this, that God uses us in our weakness, our weakness         as         those made in His image and yet fallen, or whether it is particular         weakness, like illness, dying, or whatever it is. I also know that all         my         pain, frustration, weakness and yes, even as I am dying, is in his Will.         We         serve a sovereign God, who is in control of everything, right down to         the         very sub-atomic level. He is in control of all. So while I would far rather                 not be dying of cancer, I am able to be strengthened and say it is his         good         will. That doesn&#8217;t mean I like cancer, but it does mean I can rejoice         in         his divine purpose being worked out for His glory, and our good. I don&#8217;t                 look at my cancer to answer the question &quot;Does God love me?&quot;         rather I look         at the Cross and ask it. The answer therefore is so much. Therefore nothing                 that happens to us can prove a denial of his love to his people. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>I fear what lies ahead. I want to live, to grow old with my wife, work         with         my brothers in the ministry for the extension of the kingdom, upbuilding         of         the Lord&#8217;s people and for his glory. I want to grow with my friends, see                 their kids grow up etc. to see what the Lord has in store for us. There         was         a very encouraging bit in the new biography of the late Jackie Ross where                 he basically said it was all right to want all these things just now,         but         when the ordained time came then he believed God would in a sense take                 earthly desires away, and he would be thoroughly and unequivocally prepared                 for heaven. I think such is a gift of grace given when it is needed. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>Yea, even when I walk through the dark valley of death I will not be                 afraid, for you are close beside me (Ps. 23:4). The everlasting arms are                 underneath us all, sustaining and holding us through everything. They         are         everlasting, because they are the arms of the eternal God, our refuge                 (Deut. 33:27) and so they hold us even through dying and death. It is         not         what we want that is important, rather God. That is difficult and yet         it is         glorious. For not one of us will in time turn around and say I wish it         had         been different, because it is all in his plan and we&#8217;ll see it was perfect,                 even the pain. We see a tiny corner of the tapestry, and even then just         the         back with all the mess of threads, criss-crossing and loose. One day it                 will be completed and we&#8217;ll see the whole finished masterpiece from the                 front, and see all the mass of seemingly messy unplanned threads form         a         thing of such great beauty that we will bow down and praise the Artist         all         the more. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>Death is our great enemy, and I will not trivialise or apologise for         my         fear and loathing of it for all it is and stands for. However, my Lord         has         taken its sting for me and for that I am eternally thankful. I can         therefore with confidence be assured with the Psalmist &quot;You will         keep on         guiding me with your counsel, leading me to a glorious destiny,&quot;         (Ps.         73:24) and &quot;Surely your goodness and unfailing love will pursue me         all the         days of my life, and I will live in the house of the LORD for ever.&quot;         (Ps.         23:6) Whatever God has chosen for me whether it is that I will soon die         or         whether it is for me to be healed, I hope and pray that I and all my         friends and family will rejoice in the Sovereign Lord for working out         his         purposes for our good and His glory. We serve a gloriously good God. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>But as for me, how good it is to be near God! I have made the Sovereign                 LORD my shelter, and I will tell everyone about the wonderful things you                 do.(Ps. 74:28) I don&#8217;t feel particularly close to God just now. In fact,                 because of pain, difficulty in concentrating and my own sinfulness, prayer                 is difficult. I rejoice that our groanings are made perfect by the Spirit.                 I know that He is with me because He has promised to be here always as         He         is with all His children. Death is awful, but I am glad that it will be         a         temporary separation from my loved ones and that I will see them perfectly                 in Glory when they die or the Lord Jesus returns. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>What makes death more hated and awful for me looking at it is all my         loved         ones who are not in Christ. My Dad, Gran, aunts, uncles, cousins, friends.                 For them death has not been defeated, which makes it all the more painful                 preparing for mine. All that is to say that I hate death as I hate sin.         I         know I will die whether it is soon or not, (unless Christ returns) and         I         fear the process of dying. I hate all death represents, our fallenness,                 weakness, sinfulness, corruptness etc. I don&#8217;t want to be separated from         my         loved ones, I want to work for the gospel cause now. I fear that I will                 fail and not die well. Yet the marvellous hope giving such awesome things                 is that Christ has gone before. He has defeated death, robbed it of its                 victory. It is still awful in its unrobed state, but nothing compared         to         what it was, or what Christ has done. It is nothing compared to the reunion                 we will have after our separatedness if we are in Christ. Death has been                 defeated, the Resurrection guaranteed. Death, along with all my, all your                 sufferings, is nothing compared with what lies before us in Glory. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>I long to go Home, even though I understand so little of it. As C.S Lewis                 said &quot;If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world         can         satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another                 world.&quot; I don&#8217;t know what it&#8217;s going to be like, but I know who is         there,         Christ Himself, my Lord. All the majesty of Scripture on heaven (i.e.         Heb.         4:9-10; 1 Peter 1:3-12; Rev. 4:8-11; 5:9-14 (wow); 21-22 just to name         but a         few) make us yearn, yet still the barrier between me and that is so huge                 for me to comprehend that I say not yet! I hope my clinging is a lot more                 to do with concern for my loved ones and the cause of Christ than my own                 fear and sin. I know it is both. Death is powerful, but Christ is greater.                 My hope and prayer is that I will in his strength die well and bear         testimony with my last breath to the Lordship and uniqueness of Christ,                 with the praise of him on my lips.&quot;And they will see his face, and         his name         will be written on their foreheads.&quot; Rev. 22:5 <\/p>\n<p>      <P>The story of the past year has been that a couple of months of radio                 therapy did nothing to stop the cancer spreading (other than averting         an         operation to have my spleen removed). Last December I started weekly         chemo. Some nine months later almost to the day the cancer has continued                 to spread and has intruded into almost all my organs. On August 30th they                 decided to cease treatment for two main reasons. It was beginning to         seriously damage my heart and lungs (as well as other bits and pieces)         It         was not being successful. This was a shock, if not much of a surprise.         It         was also fairly devastating and fairly relieving at the same time. Chemo                 was a great struggle for me &#8211; all the way through. Each and every time         I         got it felt like I was walking to be executed (how&#8217;s that for being         dramatic!) and was heavy. The hair loss was surprisingly disturbing for         me         &#8211; not least people&#8217;s reactions. God is good even in that however! I         remember being petrified of how Mairi, Donald and Sine (Kiki and Anna&#8217;s                 amazing kids whom we&#8217;ve adopted as nieces and nephew) would react to a                 completely bald (including eyebrows and goatee beard) me. They were         totally cool. &quot;Woowie (Donald&#8217;s name for me) where&#8217;s your hair gone?&quot;                 &quot;It&#8217;s fallen out pet&quot;. &quot;Oh, O.K.&quot; Then we were back         to playing again. How         good God was. Mairi and Sine were the same. It even got to be a game &#8211;                 whether my hair would be growing back in again or not or how my head felt.                 It never fazed them once. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>Thus there is now nothing else, at this present time at least, that can         be         done for me medically, and humanly speaking I have a few months to live.         I         have started Christianity Explored group with folks I had chemo with &#8211;         and         that&#8217;s been a great opportunity. Somebody asked me recently what I would                 ask them to pray for. So many things! <\/p>\n<p>      <P> 1) that I and everyone else would be able to accept God&#8217;s will whatever         it is. <br \/>        2) that if it is His will, I&#8217;d be healed. <br \/>        3) if it isn&#8217;t that I would be a good witness and as someone said recently         &quot;your job now is to die well&quot;. I am not afraid of death (lots         of other emotions about it though!) but the process, which is going to         be pretty awful, petrifies me. I don&#8217;t want to let God or anyone else         down. <br \/>        4) that my non-Christian relations would come to know Jesus as their Lord         and Saviour soon. <br \/>        5) that Audra (my wife from First Presbyterian Church Jackson Mississippi)         and I (along with Mum, Dad, Gran, the MacRae&#8217;s, and other friends) would         have great times <br \/>        6) that I would be kept in my walk with God. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>Please feel free to pass this on to anyone you want to. Thank you for         reading and praying. I pray that you know the Lord&#8217;s presence close to         you. <\/p>\n<p>      <P>RUAIRIDH D. MACRAE <\/p>\n<p>      <P>CANCER IS SO LIMITED &#8230; <\/p>\n<p>        It cannot cripple love <br \/>        It cannot erode faith <br \/>        It cannot eat away peace <br \/>        It cannot destroy confidence <br \/>        It cannot kill friendship <br \/>        It cannot shut out memories <br \/>        It cannot silence courage <br \/>        It cannot invade the soul <br \/>        It cannot reduce eternal life <br \/>        It cannot quench the Spirit <br \/>        It cannot lessen the power of the resurrection <\/p>\n<p>      <P>Rob Muncy, Cicero, Indiana. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>As I sit here this side of death I look ahead with fear and yet with hope. I do not want to die yet. by Ruairidh D. Macrae It has been a long journey from when I sent my first e mail about being diagnosed with cancer back in early 2001. My first encounter with [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[],"resource-author":[724],"topic":[],"class_list":["post-1721","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles","resource-author-macrae-ruairidh-d"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.3 (Yoast SEO v27.3) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Handling the Last Stages of Cancer - Banner of Truth UK<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"noindex, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_GB\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Handling the Last Stages of Cancer\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"As I sit here this side of death I look ahead with fear and yet with hope. 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