The Bible And Medicine
Ahead of its Time
Prevention of the Spread of Infection
Isolation and Quarantine
Sanitation
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Diet
Food Hygiene
Housing and Health
Rest and Recuperation
Conclusion
Ahead of its Time
In the last century childbirth was hazardous, for even after
the baby had been born and 'both were doing well' there remained
a high risk that mothers would die subsequently from puerperal infection
or 'childbed fever'. Strangely, the risk seemed to be highest when
mothers were attended not by a midwife, but by a consultant! In
some hospitals, of every four mothers who entered, one would die
from this disease.
Yet, the patients of one obstetrician,
Philip Ignaz Semmelweis, had a very much higher chance of survival.
Of his patients only about eight women in a thousand died, that
is, less than 1%!!
What was his secret? It was very simple: Dr
Semmelweis washed his hands!
Today we take it for granted
that medical practitioners wash their hands before examining patients
and again afterwards. Surgeons "scrub up" vigorously before
they put on their sterile gloves.
But in the 19th century
doctors usually went from the mortuary, after conducting a postmortem
examination, or from the dissecting room after teaching students
anatomy, straight onto their rounds of the hospital wards, hardly
stopping to wipe their hands on their already soiled aprons.
Semmelweis realised that the doctors themselves were spreading
the disease from the infected patients to the healthy ones. By simply
washing his hands and thus curtailing the spread of the infection
he was able to reduce significantly perinatal mortality.
When he used what today we would call an "antiseptic"
solution, instead of soap, the results were even better.
For some time the medical profession did not accept his conclusion
and he was ostracised. Eventually, he had to leave Vienna and practised
in Pest.1
But time proved that he was right and Joseph, Lord
Lister, the father of modern aseptic surgery confessed: "Without
Semmelweis my achievements would be nothing. To this great son of
Hungary, surgery owes most."
Yet this apparently radical
breakthrough in preventing the spread of infection was not so original
as might at first be thought. For about three and half thousand
years previously the Law of Moses had set provisions which, if they
had been adopted in the last century, would have prevented this
terrible and unnecessary toll of lives of young women. Three of
them are particularly relevant.
Firstly there were provisions
for preventing the spread of infection:
"When any
man has a bodily discharge, the discharge is unclean... this is
how his discharge will bring about uncleanness:
Any bed the man
with a discharge lies on will be unclean, and anything he sits on
will be unclean.
Anyone who touches his bed must wash his clothes
and bathe with water, and he will be unclean till evening. Whoever
sits on anything that the man with a discharge sat on must wash
his clothes and bathe with water, and he will be unclean till evening.
Whoever touches the man who has a discharge must wash his clothes
and bathe with water, and he will be unclean till evening.
If
the man with the discharge spits on someone who is clean, that person
must wash his clothes and bathe with water, and he will be unclean
till evening...
Anyone the man with a discharge touches without
rinsing his hands with water must wash his clothes and bathe with
water, and he will be unclean till evening."
Leviticus 15:2-11
Prevention
of the Spread of Infection
Although the word "unclean"
primarily referred to the person's religious status, it would also
cover what we today would call "infectious". The emphasis
on washing contaminated clothing and bathing on the part of those
tending the patient would ensure that the risk of spreading the
infection would be minimised.
The reference to the need to
avoid the spread of disease on infected hands and its prevention
by rinsing in water seems particularly relevant to the Semmelweis
case.
There are provisions for the return of the patient
to the community after he is cured, including a seven day wait and
further ablutions.
Secondly, the treatment of mothers who
had just given birth is also covered in the Law.
"A
woman who becomes pregnant and gives birth to a son will be ceremonially
unclean for seven days..."
Leviticus 12:2
This
provision ensured that the woman would be regarded as potentially
infectious and, if she proved to be, would give time for the disease
to become evident.
Thirdly, the treatment of those who had
come in contact with a corpse, either at autopsy or in anatomical
teaching, is covered.
"Whoever touches the dead body
of anyone will be unclean for seven days..." Numbers 19:11
Application of this law would mean that medical staff could
not perform autopsies or dissect bodies and then go onto the wards.
Had all these measures been applied then the chances of spreading
childbed fever (or any other diseases) would have been minimal.
Today we understand how infectious diseases are caused by bacteria
and viruses which may be spread by physical contact. How did the
ancient people of Israel "know" this, some 3,500 years
ago? Why are so many of the provisions of the Law of Moses still
relevant after all this time? In other words, how is it that the
Bible was so much a book ahead of its time?
The explanation
is given in the Bible itself:
"See, I have taught
you decrees and laws as the LORD my God commanded me, so that you
may follow them in the land you are entering to take possession
of it.
Observe them carefully, for this will show your wisdom
and understanding to the nations, who will hear about all these
decrees and say, 'Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding
people'...
And what other nation is so great as to have such
righteous decrees and laws as this body of laws I am setting before
you today?
Only be careful, and watch yourselves closely so that
you do not forget the things your eyes have seen or let them slip
from your heart as long as you live. Teach them to your children
and to their children after them."
Deuteronomy 4:5-9
Isolation
and Quarantine
Before the last century the cause of infectious
diseases was not understood. For example, malaria was thought to
be caused by the vapours coming from lakes, ponds and ditches; hence
the name, from the Italian Mal'aria, 'bad air'. Now we know that
it is caused by a microscopic organism spread by mosquitoes which
breed in still water. The link with water was evident but the real
cause was not understood. For most other diseases, the way in which
disease-causing organisms (bacteria or viruses) were spread from
infected individuals through the population as a whole was not appreciated.
Not only did the Law of Moses deal with the transmission of
infectious disease but it also had provision for the isolation of
infected individuals with contagious (and incurable) diseases.
"When anyone has... an infectious skin disease, he must
be brought to... a priest... the priest is to put the infected person
in isolation for seven days.
On the seventh day the priest is
to examine him, and if... unchanged... he is to keep him in isolation
another seven days.
On the seventh day, the priest is to examine
him again, and... if the rash does spread in his skin after he has
shown himself to the priest... it is an infectious disease.
...
As long as he has the infection he remains unclean. He must live
alone; he must live outside the camp."
Leviticus 13:2-8,
46
Note how the patient is isolated and checked again
after seven days, just as patients today are told by their doctor
- "come again and see me in a week's time"- by which time
it will be evident whether the problem is clearing up or whether
it may be necessary to consign the patient to an indefinite quarantine.
'Quarantine' comes from the Italian word for 40, quaranta,
that is, the number of days a ship carrying a sick crew was kept
isolated offshore. By the
end of this period they would be cured
or dead!
Not so long ago 'isolation hospitals' were part
and parcel of everyday life, established to try to reduce the spread
and consequent mortality from infectious diseases such as scarlet
fever and tuberculosis.
Even today it is necessary to consign
some patients to an isolation ward in order to prevent the spread
of certain diseases. Even more rigorous measures must be instituted
for such diseases as Lassa fever and viral hepatitis for the protection
of those who nurse and care for patients.
Although powerful
drugs such as antibiotics are available in order to treat many infectious
diseases, preventing the spread of infection through rigorous attention
to washing at isolation still remains a very high priority in our
highly technologically advanced hospitals. This has been particularly
important since the advent in many hospitals of MRSA (methycillin
resistant Staphylococcus aureus), a strain of bacterium which has
acquired resistance to even the most powerful antibiotics.
The Law of Moses required rigorous procedure before a previously
isolated person could be admitted back into the community, once
it had been established that they were now cured.
"The
person to be cleansed must wash his clothes, shave off all his hair
and bathe with water; ... After this he may come into the camp,
but he must stay outside his tent for seven days.
On the seventh
day he must shave off all his hair; he must shave his head, his
beard, his eyebrows and the rest of his hair. He must wash his clothes
and bathe himself with water, and he will be clean."
Leviticus
14:8-9
These provisions would ensure that any premature
return could be detected and by removing all the hair, any small
area of residual infection would become evident. Once it was certain
that the person was fully cured, the final shaving and washing would
eliminate any remaining bacteria. These measures are followed by
presentation before the priest who would make a final check before
pronouncing the person clean and making the prescribed offerings.
Sanitation
One of the major scourges of the present world is water-borne
disease. It is an all too familiar problem in refugee camps where
inadequate sanitation causes contamination of the water supply.
Typically, typhoid, dysentery and cholera afflict the inmates.
Generally, water-borne diseases including parasitic diseases
(e.g. bilharzia) are all too common in third-world countries and
cause tremendous suffering and loss of life. These diseases also
plagued European cities well into the last century. Sewage ran in
the streets and contaminated the streams and wells from which drinking
water was taken.
A well-documented case in London concerned
the physician John Snow who provided epidemiological proof that
the cholera epidemic of 1854 originated from the Broad Street pump.
By removing the handle, users were forced to obtain water from a
more distant, uncontaminated, source. Safe disposal of human
wastes by burial is commanded in the Law of Moses:
"Designate
a place outside the camp where you can go to relieve yourself.
As part of your equipment have something to dig with, and when you
relieve yourself, dig a hole and cover up your excrement."
Deuteronomy 23:12-13
If only this simple procedure had
been adopted throughout the centuries, millions would have not died
from water-borne diseases. The towns and cities of the so-called
civilised world rarely had adequate means for the disposal of waste.
Quite often, London's Parliament had to move elsewhere when the
stench from the River Thames became intolerable.
The residual,
but fast-declining, custom of gentlemen walking on the outside of
the pavement when accompanying ladies has its origins in the days
when the contents of chamber-pots were unceremoniously emptied through
the window into the street below, with or without an audible warning
such as "gardyloo!".
But eventually things did
improve. The Victorian maxim "Cleanliness is next to Godliness"
was reflected in the great pride which they took in establishing
safe public water supplies (treatment works and pumping stations
looked like cathedrals to hygiene!) and in building sewerage systems.
Many Victorian sewers are operating efficiently today.
We
readily accept the need for personal and public hygiene to help
prevent the spread of disease. But this is a relatively new concept.
It is said that Queen Elizabeth I had a bath once a year even when
she did not need one! The Victorian legacy extended to public baths
(not simply swimming pools but provision for taking a bath by those
without facilities in their homes) and public wash-houses.
It is ironic to think that, three and a half thousand years
before this "enlightenment", God's word had provided instructions
regarding personal and public hygiene which prevented disease. No
wonder the Jews in Europe were vilified when, during the numerous
outbreaks of epidemics in mediaeval cities, their communities survived
largely unscathed while thousands of others succumbed. Their Bible
was way ahead of its time!
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Sadly, we live in an age when sexual promiscuity is the norm.
Fear of an unwanted pregnancy has largely disappeared through sex
education and the wide availability of effective contraception,
and the shame which once attached to being an unmarried mother has
largely disappeared. But the Law of Moses, and in particular the
seventh of the Ten Commandments, gave the clear command:
"You shall not commit adultery." Exodus 20:14
This was a serious offence, as was homosexuality and also
bestiality:
"If a man commits adultery with another
man's wife - with the wife of his neighbour - both the adulterer
and the adulteress must be put to death...
If a man lies with
a man as one lies with a woman, both of them have done what is detestable.
They must be put to death; their blood will be on their own heads...
If a man has sexual relations with an animal, he must be put to
death..."
Leviticus 20:10-15
"If a man is found
sleeping with another man's wife, both the man who slept with her
and the woman must die. You must purge the evil from Israel."
Deuteronomy 22:22
The Law provided clear teaching against
fornication, adultery and incest (Leviticus 18:1-17). Before the
advent of powerful drugs, especially antibiotics, the spread of
venereal diseases by means of promiscuous sexual intercourse brought
suffering, not only to those who indulged in the activity but also
to the children who resulted from it. Syphilis and gonorrhoea are
the most well-known of several sexually transmitted diseases. These
are largely treatable today but because of sexual promiscuity the
incidence of disease is still rising in epidemic proportions.
The latest sexually transmitted disease, Acquired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome (AIDS), cannot be cured although some relief of the symptoms
can be provided. This disease first became evident amongst the male
homosexual community but now occurs throughout the population as
a result of bi-sexual relationships and the sharing of contaminated
hypodermic needles by abusers of injected drugs. Now HIV infection
has become an epidemic in many countries with large proportions
of the populations of the poorest countries, especially in central
Africa, being HIV positive. This is beginning to have very serious
consequences for nations which already are suffering economic hardships.
Not only did the Law against illicit sexual relationships prevent
the spread of the then incurable venereal diseases, a situation
akin to our AIDS problem, but it also contributed to the stability
of marriage and family life. It seems highly probable that the ease
with which casual sexual relationships may be indulged is a significant
factor in the current breakdown in family life and one contributory
factor in the high incidence of divorce which, in Britain at present,
is about one in three marriages. To these figures must be added
the break-up of once-stable relationships which are not formalised
by marriage.
Diet
One aspect of the
dietary laws of the Jews is very well known, namely the prohibition
regarding pork. But this is only one of several foods which were
forbidden:
"Of all the animals that live on land,
these are the ones you may eat:
You may eat any animal that has
a split hoof completely divided and that chews the cud.
There
are some that only chew the cud or only have a split hoof, but you
must not eat them. The camel, though it chews the cud, does not
have a split hoof; it is ceremonially unclean for you.
The coney,
though it chews the cud, does not have a split hoof; it is unclean
for you.
The rabbit, though it chews the cud, does not have a
split hoof; it is unclean for you.
And the pig, though it has
a split hoof completely divided, does not chew the cud; it is unclean
for you."
Leviticus 11:2-8
Several reasons for
excluding the pig are suggested, including trichinosis and the pork
tapeworm from the cysticercus of 'measly' pork. Also Echinococcus
hydatid cysts affect the brain.
In the field of environmental
health, before the vast increase in consumption of chicken and the
risk of Salmonella, the highest incidence of food poisoning tended
to be from pig meat, and especially derivatives (pies, sausages
etc).3 The scavenging behaviour of pigs is also said to be a reason
for their prohibition as food.
What is also problematic about
pigs is their close similarity to man, not only in being omnivorous
in diet but similar in physiology etc. The close affinity between
men and pigs transmitted the influenza virus to humans and, later,
swine vesicular disease was originally a human strain of a virus
which pigs have caught from us.
Pig tissues, for example
heart valves, are used in human transplant operations. Until recently,
diabetics were dependent on pig insulin. More recently there has
been considerable research to create a transgenic pig in which human
genes have been incorporated in order to facilitate further organ
transplants without rejection problems. These facts emphasise the
close similarity between pigs and man and the inherent possibility
for the transmission of disease.
The Mosaic food regulations
also forbid shellfish and other sea foods. Again, this is a common
source of food poisoning. Many shellfish are filter-feeding bivalves
which strain minute particles from the water as their food source.
A particularly rich source of food particles today is untreated
marine sewage outfalls! The potential for contamination by human
pathogens is the reason for current regulations regarding the treatment
of shellfish which are intended for human consumption. This entails
keeping them in clean seawater for a specified period in order to
allow them to clear the contaminated material from their guts. Shellfish
need careful cooking to eliminate pathogens, which doesn't quite
square with the fashion to eat oysters raw and alive!
The
code which the Law of Moses applies to determine what is allowed
is simple and effective:
"Of all the creatures living in
the water of the seas and the streams, you may eat any that have
fins and scales.
But all creatures in the seas and streams
that do not have fins and scales... you are to detest... you must
not eat their meat...
Anything living in the water that does
not have fins and scales is to be detestable to you."
Leviticus
11:9-12
This simple rule excludes all mussels, oysters,
clams, whelks, winkles and also lobsters, crabs, prawns, shrimps
etc. but allows normal "fish". It seems that strict observance
by Jews excludes eels since, although they have evident fins, their
scales are too small to be seen with the naked eye!
Jewish dietary laws prohibit the consumption of fat and blood:
"This is a lasting ordinance for the generations to
come, wherever you live: You must not eat any fat or any blood."
Leviticus 3:17
This rules out "black puddings"
at a stroke!
The Law did not only apply to animals offered
in sacrifice:
The Lord said to Moses, "Say to the
Israelites: Do not eat any of the fat of cattle, sheep or goats.
The fat of an animal found dead or torn by wild animals may be used
for any other purpose, but you must not eat it.
... And wherever
you live, you must not eat the blood of any bird or animal."
Leviticus 7:22-26
The normal western diet, high in fat
(especially saturates) is regarded as a major cause of the present
epidemic of circulatory and digestive disease, particularly heart
attacks and bowel cancer. The current obsession with low cholesterol
and low fat diets is a recognition of the need to reduce our fat
intake.
On the positive side, the diet which the Jews consumed
would be a healthy one. Meat was allowed but would not form a large
part of the diet. Olive oil (low in saturates!) was used in cooking
and milk products (butter and cheese) would provide the necessary
dietary fat and minerals. Wholemeal bread and parched corn would
provide fibre along with fruit such as grapes, dates, figs, pomegranates
etc.
Wine is a mocker and beer a brawler; whoever is led
astray by them is not wise.
Proverbs 20:1
Actuarial
data show that, in general, those who are "teetotal" have
shorter life expectancy than those who drink alcohol in moderation.
This is not, of course, advocating its consumption nor is it a criticism
of those who abstain! However, the scientific evidence is clear
and accords with Bible teaching.
Food Hygiene
Not only were provisions made prohibiting foods with a high
health risk but rules were also laid down to ensure that food poisoning
was not a danger from permitted foods. Rules were given regarding
the cleanliness and procedures to be observed to avoid contamination.
Recently there have been a number of very serious outbreaks of food
poisoning in Britain and this in spite of our modern knowledge of
the dangers. But the Law of Moses had laid down the relevant principles
3,500 years ago!
Modern refrigeration was not available to
help keep food fresh so other provisions were made. Food must not
be left too long before it is eaten: this is a wise precaution in
middle-eastern temperatures.
When you sacrifice a fellowship
offering to the Lord... it shall be eaten on the day you sacrifice
it or on the next day; anything left over until the third day must
be burned up.
If any of it is eaten on the third day, it is impure
and will not be accepted."
Leviticus 19:5-7
"A
clay pot that the [infected] man touches must be broken, and any
wooden article is to be rinsed with water."
Leviticus 15:12
"This is the law that applies when a person dies in a tent...
every open container without a lid fastened on it will be unclean."
Numbers 19:14,15
"When one of them [an unclean animal]
dies and falls on something, that article, whatever its use, will
be unclean, whether it is made of wood, cloth, hide or sackcloth.
Put it in water; it will be unclean till evening, and then it will
be clean.
If one of them falls into a clay pot, everything
in it will be unclean, and you must break the pot.
Any food that
could be eaten but has water on it from such a pot is unclean, and
any liquid that could be drunk from it is unclean..." Leviticus
11:32-34
These instructions accord with our current knowledge
of bacterial contamination. Porous clay vessels cannot be cleansed
satisfactorily simply by washing, as bacteria could still remain
in the pores. However, it is now known that wooden articles have
bactericidal properties and so washing would be adequate.6 This
is why there has been a recent reaction against plastic butchers'
chopping blocks and a clamour for the old fashioned scrubbed beech.
In order to mimic the bactericidal action of wooden chopping-blocks,
recently plastic blocks have been impregnated with a bactericide
which is gradually released as the block is used.
All the
regulations regarding unsafe foods with high propensity to cause
food poisoning; the importance of a low-fat diet; the need for care
in storing food, and the importance of clean containers and utensils
are now fully appreciated. But we must remind ourselves that these
laws were followed by the Jews over three thousand years ago!
How can we explain this? The only explanation is that the Jews
were privileged to receive a direct revelation from God through
Moses. In our present scientific age this may be difficult to accept
but we have taken centuries to discover for ourselves what anyone
could have read in their Bible.
Housing and Health
It is well established that much illness can be ascribed to
poor housing. It is still a problem in relatively modern council
housing where inadequate heating and ventilation produce damp and
moulds, leading to chest disease and other conditions. Similarly,
dry rot and wet rots need attention.
"... The owner
of the house must go and tell the priest, 'I have seen something
that looks like mildew in my house.'
The priest is to order the
house to be emptied before he goes in to examine the mildew...
After this the priest is to go in and inspect the house.
On the
seventh day the priest shall return to inspect the house. If the
mildew has spread on the walls,
he is to order that the contaminated
stones be torn out and thrown into an unclean place outside the
town.
He must have all the inside walls... scraped and the material...
dumped into an unclean place outside the town.
Then they are
to take other stones to replace these and take new clay and plaster
the house.
If the mildew reappears in the house... the house
is unclean. It must be torn down - its stones, timbers and all the
plaster - and taken out of the town to an unclean place."
Leviticus 14:35-45
These provisions are very close to
modern practice. When a surveyor examines a house, his report may
have to include reservations if he has been unable to examine it
properly because of furniture and fitted carpets etc. Here the Law
required the property
to be emptied in order that the priest
could make a thorough examination. The action required in an infected
house also accords with present methods. For example, in the case
of dry rot all the infected material is removed and replaced with
new. When housing is "unfit for human habitation" it is
condemned and "slum clearance" follows! It is also significant
that the material is to be dumped and not reused in building another
house since the fungal spores will, of course, still be present.
Rest
and Recuperation
In today's stressful world we recognise
the value of holidays and times for relaxation. The provisions in
the Law of Moses for rest and recuperation are unparalleled in ancient
history. For example, the Egyptian 30 day month was divided into
3 "weeks" of 10 days each, with no guaranteed day of rest.
The Babylonians had a five day week but no day of rest. This contrasts
with the Jewish week of six days for labour and a day of rest.
"Observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy, as the
Lord your God has commanded you.
Six days you shall labour and
do all your work,
but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord
your God. On it you shall not do any work, neither you, nor your
son or daughter, nor your manservant or maidservant, nor your ox,
your donkey or any of your animals, nor the alien within your gates,
so that your manservant and maidservant may rest, as you do.
Remember that you were slaves in Egypt and that the Lord your God...
has commanded you to observe the Sabbath day."
Deuteronomy
5:12-15
The Sabbath rest also applied at the busiest
times of the agricultural year such as ploughing and harvest (Exodus
34:21), something which is not observed in modern agricultural practice.
Although the feasts of the Law such as Passover, First fruits, Tabernacles
(Numbers 28:16,26; 29:1,7,12) were primarily religious, they also
provided periods of rest and recuperation.
Finally, there
were provisions for retirement under the Law.
The Lord
said to Moses, "This applies to the Levites: Men twenty five
years old or more shall come to take part in the work at the Tent
of Meeting,
but at the age of fifty, they must retire from their
regular service and work no longer."
Numbers 8:23-25
Conclusion
It is evident from this, by no means exhaustive,
review of medical and health issues considered in the Bible that
this very ancient book is very much up-to-date. It is easy to forget
how recently the health and hygiene procedures, which we take so
much for granted, were rediscovered. Only when we consider what
the contemporary nations surrounding Israel in Old
Testament
times practised, or even European cultures until the 20th century,
do we begin to realise how much the Bible was, and is, ahead of
its time. Comparison of the Law of Moses with contemporary Egyptian
medical papyri,10 of which the Ebers papyrus is probably the best
known, demonstrates the heavy dependence of Egyptian medicine on
magic. A medical historian12 has commented:
"Although
the Bible is not a medical text, its historical accounts, laws and
precepts, and even its wording, yield an abundant harvest of information
concerning the structure of the human body, diseases, injuries,
cares and, above all, preventative and sanitary procedures. The
material contained in some portions of the Pentateuch... is so factual
that even the sophisticated present-day student cannot help but
be amazed at what he reads there. Especially the sanitary regulations
of cleanliness and purity, such as the prohibition against the consumption
of blood and quarantines for infectious diseases, are unique and
do not occur in the codes of the civilized nations of antiquity
that surround the Land of Israel."
And another:
"The chief glory of Biblical medicine lies in the institution
of social hygiene as a science."
Yet it is not principally
a book about science or medicine. These matters are incidental to
its main themes.
The Bible deals with issues and questions
for which science has no answers. It is often said that science
helps explain the 'how' of things but not the 'why'. Why are we
the way we are? Why is the world the way it is? The Bible explains
these and, even more important, it sets out what will be our collective
and individual destinies and the options which face us.
It
is mainly concerned with what has come to be called the 'human condition'.
Our failure to be able to live up to the highest ideals of which
most people approve and our tendency rather to do what we recognise
to be wrong; what the Bible calls 'sin' and which leads ultimately
to death:
"The wages of sin is death." Romans
6:23
As the Apostle Paul explained:
"Therefore,
just as sin entered the world through one man [Adam, the first human],
and death through sin, and in this way death came to all men, because
all have sinned..."
Romans 5:12
so, he went on...
"just as sin reigned in death, so also grace might reign
through righteousness to bring eternal life through Jesus Christ
our Lord."
Romans 5:21
The Law provided for the
well-being of God's people by reducing the impact of disease and
promoting physical health. But the main theme of the Bible points
to something far better. It is concerned with the provision of spiritual
health: a hope of redemption from the law of sin and death.
The Law which God gave to Moses not only taught important spiritual
lessons regarding holiness and righteousness but primarily it was
intended to prepare them for the coming of his Son.
"So
the law was put in charge to lead us to Christ that we might be
justified by faith.". Galatians 3:24
It is significant
that the majority of the miracles performed by the Lord Jesus concerned
healing of the sick, both physical and mental illnesses. These miraculous
cures provided tangible evidence of his power to heal and save,
a foretaste of the future Kingdom of God when...
"God...
will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death
or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed
away,"
Revelation 21:3-4
Of course, we have to
trust the Bible's message: to show our faith in its truth. Some
find this hard to do.
But, if the Bible was right 3,500 years
ago about things which we only began to understand within the last
100 or so years, surely it must be right about these vital issues
with which it deals?
Bible medicine is a help to our faith:
evidence of the supernatural character of the Bible.
Evidence
that not only was God prepared to reveal to his people how they
might mitigate the effects of disease arising from the law of sin
and death but evidence that his Word is the source of eternal life,
through faith in his Son.
"For God so loved the world
that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him
shall not perish but have eternal life."
John 3:16
DR JOHN HELLAWELL