PARISH
EDUCATION PROGRAM (P.E.P.) 2007-2008 WINTER-SPRING SESSION
Session 158
Friday, February 8, 2008 – 2:00-4:00 P.M
The
Orthodox Church and Society: The Basis of the Social Concept of the
Russian Orthodox Church Bishops' Statement - Ch. 11 Health
OPENING PRAYER: PSALM 88
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[1] O Lord, my God, I call for
help by day; I cry out in the night before thee. [2] Let my prayer
come before thee, incline thy ear to my cry! [3] For my soul is full
of troubles, and my life draws near to Sheol. [4] I am reckoned
among those who go down to the Pit; I am a man who has no strength,
[5] like one forsaken among the dead, like the slain that lie in the
grave, like those whom thou dost remember no more, for they are cut
off from thy hand. [6] Thou hast put me in the depths of the Pit, in
the regions dark and deep. [7] Thy wrath lies heavy upon me, and
thou dost overwhelm me with all thy waves. [8] Thou hast
caused my companions to shun me; thou hast made me a thing of horror
to them. I am shut in so that I cannot escape; |
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[9] my eye grows dim through
sorrow. Every day I call upon thee, O Lord; I spread out my hands to
thee. [10] Dost thou work wonders for the dead? Do the shades rise
up to praise thee? [11] Is thy steadfast love declared in the grave,
or thy faithfulness in Abaddon? [12] Are thy wonders known in the
darkness, or thy saving help in the land of forgetfulness? [13] But
I, O Lord, cry to thee; in the morning my prayer comes before thee.
[14] O Lord, why dost thou cast me off? Why dost thou hide thy face
from me? [15] Afflicted and close to death from my youth up, I
suffer thy terrors; I am helpless. [16] Thy wrath has swept over me;
thy dread assaults destroy me. [17] They surround me like a flood
all day long; they close in upon me together. [18] Thou hast caused
lover and friend to shun me; my companions are in darkness. |
I. BIBLICAL REFLECTION:
Messages for our Christian Life in Christ from Psalm 87:3
“Glorious things are spoken of you, O city of God.”
Selection of memory verse from Psalm 88.
XI. Personal and national health
1. At all times the Church has been concerned for the human health, both
spiritual and physical. From the Orthodox perspective, however, the
physical health divorced from spiritual is not an absolute value.
Preaching by word and deed, the Lord Jesus Christ healed people, taking
care not only of their bodies, but above all of their souls, and as a
result of the integrity of the personality. According to the Savior
Himself, "I made a man’s whole body well” (John 7:23). The preaching of
the gospel was accompanied with healing as a sign of the power of the
Lord to forgive sins. Healing was an integral part of the apostolic
preaching as well. The Church of Christ, endowed by her Divine Founder
with every gift of the Holy Spirit, was from the beginning a community
of healing, and today too, in her rite of confession she reminds her
children that they have come into an infirmary to come out healed.
The biblical attitude to medicine is expressed most fully in the Book of
Jesus the Son of Sirach: "Honor the physician with the honor due him.
And also according to your need of him. For the Lord created him. . . .
The Lord created medicines from out of the earth and a sensible man will
not loathe them. . . . And he gave skill to men that He might be
glorified in His wonders. By them He heals and takes away pain. A
druggist making a compound of them. God’s works are never finished. And
from Him health is upon the face of the earth. My son, do not be
negligent when you are sick. But pray to the Lord and He will heal you.
Depart from your transgression and direct your hands aright, and cleanse
your heart from every sin. . . .... And keep in touch with your
physician. For the Lord created him; and do not let him leave you, for
you have need of him. There is a time when success is also in their
hands. For they will pray to the Lord to give them success in bringing
relief and healing.” (Wisdom of Sirach 38:1-2, 4, 6-10, 12-14
Orthodox Study Bible pp. 962-2).
The best representatives of the ancient medicine, included in the
community of saints, gave a special example of holiness — the holiness
of disinterested and miracle-working people. They were glorified not
only because they often suffered martyrdom, but also because they
accepted the medical calling as Christian duty of mercy.
The Orthodox Church has always treated medical work with high respect as
it is based on the service of love aimed to prevent and relieve people's
suffering. The recovery of the human nature distorted by illness appears
as the fulfillment of God's design for man. "May the very God of peace
sanctify you wholly and may your whole spirit and soul and body be
preserved blameless unto the coming of
our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Thessalonians 5:23). The body, free from
slavery to sinful passions and illnesses as their consequences, should
serve the soul, while the spiritual powers and abilities, transformed by
the grace of the Holy Spirit, should aspire for the ultimate goal and
calling of man which is deification.
Every authentic healing is called to be part of this miracle of healing
accomplished in the Church of Christ. At the same time, it is necessary
to distinguish the healing power of the grace of the Holy Spirit, given
in the faith in One Lord Jesus Christ through participation in the
church Sacraments,
from conjuration, incantation and other magic manipulations and
prejudices.
Many illnesses are still incurable and cause suffering and death. In the
face of such illnesses, the Orthodox Christian is called to rely on the
all-good will of God, remembering that the meaning of life is not
limited to earthly life which is essentially the preparation for
eternity. Suffering is a consequence of not only personal sins, but also
the general distortion and limitation of the human nature and as such
should be endured with patience and hope. The Lord voluntarily accepts
suffering so that the human race may be saved: "with his stripes we are
healed" (Isaiah 53:5). This means that God was pleased to make suffering
a means of salvation and purification, possible for every one who
endures it with humbleness and trust in the all-good will of God.
According to St. John Chrysostom, "whoever has learnt to thank God for
his illnesses is not far from being holy". This does not mean that a
doctor or a patient should not struggle with illness. However, when
human resources are exhausted, the Christian should remember that God's
strength is made perfect in weakness and that in the depths of suffering
he can meet Christ Who took upon Himself our infirmities and afflictions
(Isaiah 53:4).
2. The Church calls upon both pastors and her faithful to bear Christian
witness to health workers. It is very important that medical teachers
and students should be introduced to the bases of the Orthodox teaching
and Orthodox-oriented biomedical ethics. (see Chapter XII). The Church's
spiritual care in
the sphere of healthcare lies essentially in the proclamation of the
word of God and the offer of the grace of the Holy Spirit to those who
suffer and those who take care of them. Central to it are the
participation of patients in the salvific Sacraments, creation of an
atmosphere of prayer in clinics and the comprehensive charitable support
of their patients. The church mission in the medical sphere is a duty
not only for the clergy, but also for the Orthodox medical workers
called to create all the conditions for religious consolation to be
given to the patients who ask for it either directly or indirectly. A
believing medical worker should understand that a person who needs his
help expects from him not only appropriate treatment, but also spiritual
support, especially if he upholds a world-view revealing the mystery of
suffering and death. The duty of every Orthodox medical worker is to be
for the patient the merciful Samaritan from the Gospel parable.
The Church gives her blessing upon the Orthodox brotherhoods and
sisterhoods working in clinics and other healthcare institutions and
helping to found hospital churches, as well as church and monastery
hospitals, so that medical aid in all stages of treatment may be
combined with pastoral care. The Church urges the laity to give all
possible support to the sick to relieve human suffering with gentle love
and care.
3. For the Church, the problem of personal and national health is not an
external and purely social, because it has a direct bearing on her
mission in the world damaged by sin and infirmities. The Church is
called to participate, in collaboration with state structures and
concerned public circles, in the
development of such a conception of national healthcare whereby every
person would exercise his right to spiritual, physical and mental health
and social welfare under maximum life expectancy.
The doctor-patient relationships should be built on respect for the
integrity, free choice and dignity of the personality. It is
inadmissible to manipulate him even for the best purposes. The Church
cannot but welcome the development of doctor-patient dialogue taking
place in medicine today. This approach is
definitely rooted in the Christian tradition, though there is a
temptation to reduce it to a purely contractual level. At the same time,
it should be admitted that the traditional "paternalistic" model of
doctor-patient relations, rightly criticized for frequent attempts to
justify the doctor's arbitrariness, can also offer a truly paternal
approach to the patient, determined by the morality of the doctor.
Without giving preference to any organizational model of medical aid,
the Church believes that this aid should be maximum effective and
accessible to all members of society, regardless of their financial
means and social status, also in the situation of limited medical
resources. To make the distribution of these resources truly equitable,
the criterion of "vital needs" should prevail over that of "market
relations". The doctor should not link the measure of his responsibility
for giving medical aid exclusively with the financial reward and its
amount, turning his profession into a source of enrichment. At the same
time, worthy payment for the work of medical workers appears to be an
important task for society and state.
While acknowledging the benefit of medicine becoming more oriented to
diagnosis and prevention and welcoming the integral conception of health
and illness, the Church warns against attempts to make a particular
medical theory absolute, reminding of the importance of keeping the
spiritual priorities in the human life. On the basis of her age-old
experience, the Church also warns of the
danger that may be brought by attempt to introduce the occult-magic
practice under the guise of "alternative medicine", as this practice
subjects the will and consciousness of people to the power of demonic
forces. Every person should have the right and a real opportunity to
reject those methods of influencing his organism which contradict his
religious convictions.
The Church reminds the faithful that physical health is not
self-sufficient, since it is only one of the aspects in the integral
human being. It should be admitted, however, that in order to maintain
the personal and national health it is important to take preventive
measures and to create real conditions for people to engage themselves
in physical culture and sports. Competition is natural for sports. Its
extreme commercialization, however, and the ensuing cult of pride,
ruinous drug-taking and, all the more so, the contests in which severe
injuries are purposefully inflicted cannot be approved.
4. The Russian Orthodox Church has to state with deep concern that
the peoples she has traditionally nourished are in the state of
demographical crisis today. The birth rate and the average life
expectancy have sharply decreased, with the population continually
decreasing in number. Life is threatened by epidemics, growing
cardiovascular, mental, venereal and other diseases, as well as
drug-addiction and alcoholism. Children's illnesses, including
imbecility, have also grown. The demographical problems lead to
deformation in the social structure and decrease in the creative
potential of the people and become one of the causes of the weakening
family. The primary causes of the depopulation and health crisis of
these peoples in the 20th century are wars, revolution, hunger and
massive repression the consequences of which have aggravated the social
crisis at the end of the century.
The Church has been continually occupied with demographic problems. She
is called to follow closely the legislative and administrative processes
in order to prevent decisions aggravating the situation. It is necessary
to conduct continuous dialogue with the government and the mass media to
interpret the Church's stand on the demographic and healthcare policy.
The fight with depopulation should be included in the effective support
of medical research and social programs intended to protect motherhood
and childhood, the embryo and the newborn. The state is called to
support the birth and proper upbringing of children.
5. The Church regards mental diseases as manifestations of the general
sinful distortion of the human nature. Singling out the spiritual,
mental and bodily levels in the structure of the personality, the holy
fathers drew a distinction between the diseases which developed "from
nature" and the infirmities caused by the diabolic impact or enslaving
human passions. In accordance with this distinction, it is equally
unjustifiable to reduce all mental diseases to manifestations of
obsession — the conception ensuing in the unjustifiable exorcism of evil
spirits, and to treat any mental disorder exclusively by medical means.
More fruitful in psychotherapy is the combination of the pastoral and
the medical aid with due delimitation made between the jurisdictions of
the doctor and the priest.
No mental disease diminishes the dignity of a person. The Church
testifies that a mentally ill person, too, is a bearer of the image of
God, remaining our brother who needs compassion and support. Morally
inadmissible are the psychotherapeutic approaches based on the
suppression of a patient's personality and the humiliation of his
dignity. Occult methods of influencing the psyche, sometimes disguised
as scientific psychotherapy, are categorically unacceptable for
Orthodoxy. In special cases, the treatment of the mentally ill requires
both isolation and other forms of coercion. However, in choosing the
form of medical intervention, the principle of the least restriction of
a patient's freedom
should be observed.
6. The Bible says that "wine makes glad the heart of man" (Psalm 104:15)
and "it is good... if it be drunk moderately" (Sirach 31:27). But we
repeatedly find both in Holy Scriptures and the writings of the holy
fathers the strong denunciation of the vice of drinking, which,
beginning unnoticeably, leads to many other ruinous sins. Very often
drinking causes the disintegration of family, bringing enormous
suffering to both the victim of this sinful infirmity and his relatives,
especially children. "Drinking is animosity against God… Drinking is a
voluntarily courted devil… Drinking drives the Holy Spirit away", St.
Basil the Great writes. "Drinking is the root of all evils… The drunkard
is a living corpse… Drinking in itself can serve as punishment, filling
as it is the soul with confusion, filling the mind with darkness, making
a drunk prisoner, subjecting one to innumerable diseases, internal and
external… Drinking is a many-sided and many-headed beast… Here it gives
rise to fornication, there to anger, here to the dullness of the mind
and the heart, there to impure love… Nobody obeys the ill will of the
devil as faithfully as a drunkard does", St. John Chrysostom exhorted.
"A drunk man is capable of every evil and prone to every temptation…
Drinking renders its adherent incapable of any task", St. Tikhon
Zadonsky testifies.
Even more destructive is ever increasing drug-addiction — the passion
that makes a person enslaved by it extremely vulnerable to the impact of
dark forces. With every year this terrible infirmity engulfs more and
more people, taking away great many a life. The fact that the most
liable to it are young people makes it a special threat to society. The
selfish interests of the drug business help to promote, especially among
youth, the development of a special "drug" pseudo-culture. It imposes on
immature people the stereotypes of behavior in which the use of drugs is
seen as a "normal" and even indispensable attribute of relations.
The principal reason for the desire of many of our contemporaries to
escape into a realm of alcoholic or narcotic illusions is spiritual
emptiness, loss of the meaning of life and blurred moral guiding lines.
Drug-addiction and alcoholism point to the spiritual disease that has
affected not only the individual, but also society as a whole. This is a
retribution for the ideology of consumerism, for the cult of material
prosperity, for the lack of spirituality and the loss of authentic
ideals. In her pastoral compassion for the victims of alcoholism and
drug-addiction, the Church offers them spiritual support in overcoming
the vice. Without denying the need of medical aid to be given at the
critical stages of drug-addiction, the Church pays special attention to
the prevention and rehabilitation which are the most effective when
those suffering participate consciously in the Eucharistic and communal
life.
V. CLOSING PRAYER – KONTAKION FROM THE SACRAMENT OF HOLY UNCTION
As the fountainhead of mercy, infinitely good Lord, deliver
from all manner of distress those who call upon Your inexpressible
mercy. Take away their ailments, compassionate One, and grant them
divine grace from above. Amen.
A PERSONALIZED VERSION OF THE KONTAKION
As the fountainhead of mercy, infinitely good Lord, deliver me
from all manner of distress as I call upon Your inexpressible mercy.
Take away my ailments, compassionate One, and grant me divine grace from
above. Amen.
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