HIRAM, HEAL THY NEIGHBOUR
The still night air was pierced by loud shouts echoing beyond the closed windows. A single taper flickered perilously in an upstairs window and the sound of shuffling feet danced over the floorboards. A short while earlier Hiram Edson had made his way across the fields with a lantern in his hand. He had the determined gait of a man on a mission as he crunched over the loose gravel and up the driveway of the little farmhouse not far from his own.
The house was still and there was no answer when Edson knocked on the door. He turned the knob and pushed the door open, leaving his lantern beside the doorstep. Once inside he peeked into the parlor and found the inhabitants of the home sprawled in front of the fire, fast asleep. Noiselessly he reached for a candle and made his way up the creaking stairs into the sick man’s room.
His neighbor had been ill for quite a while. The news of his illness and traveled across the farms in the vicinity, prompting the peaceful farming community in Ontario County, New York to pray for him. However, despite the prayers and well wishes, the man’s condition deteriorated over the following weeks until he lay on the verge of death. His wife and children were exhausted as they juggled the responsibilities of running a farm and caring for a sick family member. The community rallied around them but there was only so much they could do while they were juggling their own enormous workloads.
Edson had gotten home that evening looking forward to spending some quiet time relaxing in front of the fire with his family but as the evening wore on he sensed a persistent nudging on his heart. It was a quiet whisper, prompting him to go over to his ailing neighbors home to pray over him and heal him. At first, Edson dismissed the prompting as a figment of his wearied imagination but the more he tried to brush aside the thoughts the more persistent them became.
Finally, he had jumped to his feet and rushed out the door much to the surprise of his family. After hurriedly slipping on his boots and his coat, he grabbed a lantern and made his way over to his neighbors home.