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Exemple

Orthodoxy, meaning right knowledge of reality arising from the right source of truth serves as a necessary foundation for the right living of life that we call orthopraxy.  This right and sure foundation of right knowledge does not guarantee that the praxy of life will build well upon it.  Praxy must build on the foundation as well as according to the rules of that foundation.  Though one may understand well the blueprints of right knowledge, if they are not followed they will not lead to their intent.  Tools of discernment do not provide shelter for life’s storms unless they are applied to the actual work of building. A blueprint unfollowed can at best cover one’s head for a light shower.  Instead, the right knowledge must be applied wisely to build something worthy of the foundation.  Application of doxy in praxy is absolutely required. 

                As the primary source of a Christian’s truth, the Bible offers clear examples the necessity of application.  James 1:23-24 offers one well-known reference in the Bible urging us to know be a hearer without being a doer as well.  In this verse, the right knowledge exerts a temporary effect that is eventually forgotten without bearing any fruit in one’s life.   Jesus’ words in Matthew 7:26-27 go beyond the idea of truth having no effect but emphasize that ignoring His words will place one in a precarious position of building on sand during a storm.  The lack of application will produce a building, but a building unable to remain standing for long.  Actual application of right knowledge becomes the only good option.

                With the obvious necessity of application before us, what will lead us to apply the right knowledge gained from God’s words or from right knowledge about His creational order?  Proverbs 1:7 and Psalm 111:10 instruct us that a fear of God serves as the beginning of wisdom.  Such a fear should be ever-present before the mind of a Christian who knows that God is watching over them.  Beyond that, in a sense, both Christians and non-Christians should live in fear that God’s natural order, when violated, will also result in consequences.  The laws of nature press upon the lives of both believers and unbelievers as the sun shines and the rains fall upon both (Matt. 5:45).  Neither can ignore how God has designed the moral order nor the physical order of His creation.

                In order to press into application, we must value God’s approval in the moral areas of life and/or must value the results of application in the natural order He has instituted.  As Christians, the fear of God leads to obedience to His Word, applying what is recognized as truth to our choices in daily life.  For believers and unbelievers, placing value on varying results of life will lead us to choose what truths of natural order to apply.  Valuing health will lead us to apply ourselves in caring for our bodies.  Valuing relationships will lead us to apply ourselves in building connections with others.  Without valuing either the outcome of God’s approval or a particular outcome of our natural lives, we won’t be likely to apply even what we know to be true. 

                We must value these ideals, as yet unrealized outcomes which do not presently exist in physical or spiritual reality.  Application requires that we devote some measure of time and effort into bringing about their reality.  We must value the right knowledge which serves as the foundation on which to build.  We must value changes from the present reality into such yet future realities so that we diligently seek to bring them about. 

                We can better understand these abstract concepts by looking at examples in real life.  Knowing confidently that eating healthy food will promote bodily health means little to nothing if you do not value the resulting good health.  It means little if you do not believe that you are a steward of your own body with the power to influence your health outcomes or if you do not value the further downstream benefits of good health.  Likewise, knowing that destructive relational behaviors are hurting others means little if you do not value other’s well-being.  If you do not value having friends or do not fear God’s disapproval for such behavior, such knowledge will not go far in changing behavior. 

                When pressed, we all know that the action of application is required for right knowledge or truth to bear fruit.  While this appears so obvious, so many seem to live life as if they have forgotten that application is required for building a worthy structure upon the foundation of knowing truths about health and life.  They complain about not having health yet continue to pursue habits they know to be harmful.  They complain about bad relationships but continue in habits they know have never led to better relationships.  In these and so many instances, they have undeniable knowledge of what is true and good, yet wonder why they do bear better fruit.  Such examples provide ample evidence for the proof that knowledge without application leads to structures built on sand whose only future are ones of collapse.

Next in this series… Why Practice?

Footnote:

                While beliefs should be practically identical between individuals since we all live in the same reality, each person’s values will differ to some extent.  There can be some legitimate space for different preferences between individuals. There can be legitimate space for different preferences in the same person at different stages of life.  These differences are with the realm of being good as long as they submit in each person at each stage of life to the values of our Creator as revealed to us in the Bible.

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                As we move forward with what the practice of life looks like, the nitty-gritty of one’s days, we dig deeper into the Greek word, Praxy.  You could say this is the style of our life, our lifestyle and habits, but that would not explain the why behind our choices and actions.  The why of praxy arises from our beliefs and values. We choose an action because we believe that it will result in something we value or desire.  There comes a simplicity and complexity to this praxy as we walk it out daily.

                Assuming that we are acting rationally, meaning choosing according to logic, we will choose an action based on our certainty of our view of reality. Basically, what we believe about reality and how deeply we believe it will play the major role in influencing whether we make one choice or another.  Even choosing to not do something is still a choice to do nothing.  For example, if we believe that gravity will pulls us down a 100 foot cliff, we will not likely step off the cliff.  On the other hand, if we strongly believe that gravity is not real, stepping off the cliff’s edge is a real possibility. 

                This highlights the need for belief to match reality when one considers the ramifications of stepping off a cliff.  Believing something strongly does not make it real unlike the story books of childhood and modern-day movies.  The belief must be a correct belief but not all beliefs are true beliefs.  Again, only true beliefs when acted upon will produce an intended or a desired effect.

                Building on belief, particularly belief that is true to reality, one will choose between actions based on which outcome will result in that which they value the most.  If one values safety, rock-climbing and tornado chasing will be discarded as being inconsistent with held values.  If one’s values thrilling experiences, fame, or a sense of challenge, then those same choices could be different. 

                Looking at yourself, you may not understand your choices of life, your praxy.  You may ask why do you keep up a lifestyle that is risking your life in some way.  The answer to this question may lie in your beliefs about reality or in your values of life or to some degree in both.  If you believe that genetics is the determinant of your health fate, you may not change your diet when counseled by others.  If you believe that you are at the mercy of some supernatural force outside of your control, you likely won’t try very hard to change bad habits.  If you value the taste of food, regardless of its health effects, you won’t weigh the consequences of its sugar content or artificial ingredients.  If you value comfort, you may not maintain any commitment to an exercise routine that requires short-term discomfort.  Your choices arise from your beliefs and your values.

                Making choices which results in whole person health requires both right belief and right values.  Right beliefs require time and effort to attain the knowledge of them and the wisdom in how to apply them.  Right beliefs do not result from following the majority culture of our world nor by watching mainstream media which follows its own set of values and beliefs working to influence you in various ways.  Right beliefs require humility to accept you were wrong about something and need to change your mind or change your actions.  Right values require time to sit and to reflect on what is important.  Right values must also come from outside your own being, from the one who created You.  Right values require a commitment on your part to pursue or else they will be influenced by so many other forces in life that you won’t be in control of your own.  If you want to pursue whole person health you need both correct beliefs and correct values which are supported by vigilance. 

Next in series… Doxy Must Be Applied.

Footnote:

                While beliefs should be practically identical between individuals since we all live in the same reality, each person’s values will differ to some extent.  There can be some legitimate space for different preferences between individuals. There can be legitimate space for different preferences in the same person at different stages of life.  These differences are with the realm of being good as long as they submit in each person at each stage of life to the values of our Creator as revealed to us in the Bible.

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              Welcome to the “Prac-sy” series, where you will find short essays aimed at living out truth in applying it, in other words the “Prac-tical” side.  These essays arise from practice of life in our fallen world and the practice of medicine with chronically ill patients living through major health storms.  This endeavor exceeds the capacity for this one post to cover or to even introduce adequately.  For this reason, several essays following this brief introduction will address several foundational concepts or principles before continuing with regular installments regarding the practice of whole person health.  Many half-truths parade themselves in our world as whole truth. Many half-truths also parade themselves as the practical answers to life.  At times, they make whole person health more complex and difficult than it has to be, and at times, they oversimplify the matter and fall short.  Instead, I want to help you find your successful “Goldilocks” approach where it is just right for you. 

              Besides the practice of pursuing a knowledge of truth as worked out in the “Doc-sy” series, those seeking whole person health must develop a practice of applying that truth, of living truth out in the day to day.   Head knowledge needs some fruit to go with it in the form of wisdom in action.  This is often easier said than done as knowing something is only a first step and of little worth if choices are not made to act upon the truth.  Furthermore, the application of truth to life is not a one-time deal, but requires repetition and daily habit.  It also requires self-reflecting to be sure it is done well or right each day.  Once you see the truth, don’t walk away from the mirror, make the changes in life to live out a whole person health (more in the “Doc-sy” series on what this “true health” is).

              Time continues to march forward providing ongoing opportunities to practice life whether we want to put on the brakes or not.  We will practice life each day, the question becomes whether we do it well or not so well.  Doing the practice of daily life well requires doing it based on the truth of reality.  Believing contrary to the facts of reality does not make something true.  Repetition of an unfruitful health practice will not make it true or fruitful.  Just because a bunch of people around you or on the internet are doing it does not make it true.  Practice without truth is a pattern of chaos and pointless in terms of achieving the whole person health that one desires.  Practice founded on truth, in contrast, bears fruit such as when one practices daily health eating or walking out your days trusting God’s care. 

              Again, the practice of whole person health requires more than just knowing the facts in a book.  Sometimes the practice of applying such knowledge is challenging in terms of one’s present ability, one’s available time, one’s available resources, or just remembering the knowledge in order to follow through.  Sometimes, the practice takes courage as truth can be hard to face.  Some practices have a cost in terms of what you have to give up even in terms of relationships.  You may have to go against the grain of society around you.  Sometimes, it takes humility when you don’t get something right the first time and you have to try again and again.  Knowing facts in a book therefore is the simpler first step which much be followed by action steps.

              We rarely if ever complete practice of whole person health after one action step, but each morning we face the same truths needing to be applied again and again.  Without a habit of applying repeatedly, we can undo what was done the day prior.  With habitual practice, the benefits of pursuing whole person health can accumulate.

              Such habits are necessary, but insufficient to achieve the kind of whole person health that truly blesses one and satisfies.  Repetition without reflection can slowly go off track.  We must also be learning and aiming for better and better practice each day, each week, each stage of life.  We cannot achieve this optimal level of health without looking in the mirror of life and learning from what we did so we can consider altering what we do next.  We should also listen to the views of trusted others with similar whole person health goals who are traveling alongside us in life.  We can never learn it all and will always have room for improvement.

              Whole person health based on truth requires daily “Prac-sy” through daily learning, daily applying the learned truths, and reflecting on one’s progress to determine if changes are needed.  We must be able to forgive ourselves for stumbling in practice and for shortcomings in knowledge.  We must eat healthily daily.  We must exert our physical bodies daily.  We must pursue spiritual health daily.  We have a responsibility to steward our health before our maker and a worthy reward for such diligent “Prac-sy” when the fruit grows out of daily application of truth in regards to whole person health.

Next in this series… “Prac-sy” Based on Truth from What We Believe and Value.

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Exemple

We have discussed the variety of goals one might pursue in health and the need for a higher standard than just individual or collective man’s competing opinions in a prior essay.  By definition, the goals and the actions which move one toward them must have an end in view, an ultimate purpose which is necessarily based on beliefs in what is real and what is right.  This higher purpose will be further shaped by what we value, what we desire, and what we prioritize.  As Christians we should look back to God to direct us in each of these influences.  In a sense we should think His thoughts after Him (Colossian 2:3 and Johann Kepler) and value His values (Matthew 22:36-40 and the 2 greatest commandments).  We can learn what God values in health by reading and studying His Word. First, we can look at the specific words used to convey God’s views of health and how each convey different emphases.  Second, we can look at a few explicit instructions concerning health in the bible.  Third, we can look at God’s interactions with mankind in regard to how God acted towards man regarding health.  Finally, we can compare and contrast these systematically with how other Biblical truths come together.

First, several words from the Old and the New Testament comprise a Biblical etymological study.  In the Old Testament, we consider the terms shalom and raphe. With the next essay, we consider hugianio, therapeou, iamoai, and sozo in the New Testament.

We start with the Old Testament’s word for health, shalom.  From the Brown-Driver Briggs Bible dictionary, we read the definition, “Completeness, safety/soundness, Peace/quiet/tranquility”.  This term is most often used of “peace” in different settings, always indicating a completeness.  In Genesis 43:27-28 Joseph as a leader in Egypt asks his brothers if their father is “shalom”.  This is more than just being alive, but if he is living in “peace”.  In Numbers 6:26, Aaron’s blessing upon the people includes having God’s face shining upon them, having God’s grace upon them, God’s lifting His countenance upon them, and concludes with giving them “peace” indicated by this word “shalom”.  In Psalm 35:27, in calling upon righteous judgment upon how others are treating him, David pronounces “Great is the lord, who delights in the shalom of his servant!”  The servant’s life was meant to be at “peace” in its completeness when under the blessing of God.  Elsewhere in Psalm 38:3, a lack of shalom meant that David’s flesh was affected by God’s indignation towards him.  David’s bones suffered due to sin.  Spiritual health and physical health and emotional health were all interdependent and included within this “complete” sense of shalom.

In the Old Testament, we also read of “raphe” which generally referred to healing.  The Brown-Driver-Briggs dictionary defines the term as:

1) to heal, make healthful; 1a) (Qal) to heal; 1a1) of God; 1a2) healer, physician (of men); 1a3) of               hurts of nations involving restored favour (figuratively); 1a4) of individual distresses (figuratively)

1b) (Niphal) to be healed; 1b1) literal (of persons); 1b2) of water, pottery; 1b3) of national hurts               (figuratively); 1b4) of personal distress (figuratively)

1c) (Piel) to heal; 1c1) literal; 1c2) of national defects or hurts (figuratively)

1d) (Hithpael) in order to get healed (infinitive)

With the term used at least 60 times depending on one’s Bible translation, several examples demonstrate how it was used literally and primarily of physical health yet also connected to spiritual health. In Exodus 15:26, God is called Jehovah Raphe, the one who heals after He removes the bitterness of the waters of Marah for the Israelites to drink.  Soon afterwards, it includes a promise to not put any of the diseases of the Egyptians upon the Hebrews.  Elsewhere in Hosea 6:1, the prophet calls out for the Jews to return to the Lord which includes the promise that though God had torn them, he might “heal” or “raphe” them if they returned to Him.  Their breaking of the covenant was the reason for the curse from God’s hand.  Given that the text mentions “revive us” and “struck us down” it likely included physical effects of the covenant breaking and subsequent healing of these physical afflictions as a result of the spiritual restoration.  Psalm 103:3 unequivocally addresses physical illness with “who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases” yet draws together physical and spiritual health. Jeremiah 17:14 then serves as an example from the prophets where Jeremiah is praying for healing with echoes of “save me”.  Physical and spiritual health are connected within these verses as verse 16 returns to the physical sense of health with Jeremiah saying “I have not desired the day of sickness”.  With a further review of the other verses where raphe is found, the physical aspect of health is more often in view, yet frequently the spiritual health of the one being healed is connected to the physical.

Between shalom and raphe with their references, the Old Testament view of health presents God as one who cares for whole person health including the physical aspects.  The Old Testament views the complete health of shalom as including physical health along with spiritual and emotional health.  When raphe or healing occurred, the focus was usually on the physical yet the spiritual health of the one receiving healing was interdependent.  These words and their Scriptural references help us understand how God viewed the health of man and what God valued.  While spiritual health across the Old Testament was clearly God’s primary emphasis, the physical health was not ignored, but instead frequently provided for both in a pre-emptive sense of God’s giving initial health and in a responsive sense of restoring health after disease had occurred.

Next in this Docsy Series… “Part 2:  New Testament Word Study Regarding God’s View of Man’s Health”

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Exemple

Truths in health make a significant difference on where we land on the health spectrum only when we apply them.  This may seem obvious but with each of us searching for optimal health amongst the plethora of divergent ideas from claiming to be true, we need to consider our own systematic application of the truth upon our health and well-being decisions. 

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Understanding truth requires understanding its primary source or secondary sources.  Having assumed in the previous essay that truth exists and recognized that the functioning of life requires a basis of truth, we turn our attention to identifying the primary source from which truth comes.  As Christians we recognize that God designed and created all things (Genesis).  Any true knowledge that reflects this reality must have come from God.  Even scientific truth reflecting scientific reality is simply thinking God’s thoughts after Him.  Any truth has already been in the mind of God before we even existed in reality.  Besides the order of the physical world, neither did the order of what is good nor is right, what we label ethics, come into being on its own.  God, as designer and creator was and is the potter with the clay creating both the physical world and truth behind the physical reality.  Thus, beyond what physically is, God is the source of truth for what should be.  God is the ultimate source of truth for physical and ethical reality.

In attempting to understand its source, the world often treats truth as an abstract reality separate from the reality in which we all live.  These attempts look to man or mankind as the source of truth rather than to God. Philosophers may handle it carelessly as if they own the rights to it or at least to an understanding of it.  Some unbelievers marvel that it even exists in the first place.  Some unbelievers scoff at it as a figment of other’s imagination.  Some unbelievers loathe the idea of truth’s existence as it is viewed as an obstacle to the life they want to pursue. Some even practically worship it as the creator of all we see in some gnostic or pantheistic manner.  Truth viewed in isolation from reality can be deified, demonized, or dismissed.

As God’s creation and possession, we cannot disrespectfully play with truth nor irreverently attempt to tear it apart.  As God’s possession to share with His creatures, we cannot ignore its reality nor worship it as the ultimate force of nature.   The reality of our finite lives and the unavoidable need for a creator, despite modern man’s attempt to argue otherwise, means it must come from someone other than itself or from the physical reality it describes.  With this recognition we can seek it in God with humility and with hope.  We can honor it as his possession without worshipping it.  We can respect and honor truth rather than constantly fight against it.

Approaching truth as the act of thinking God’s thoughts after Him in the way that Christians in science of past days, we cannot create new truth that did not exist prior in God.  We cannot create new truth that did not already exist in God.  Even the heresies and errors of man are primarily copies of prior errors.  We can only hope to uncover truth that God already formed and knew.  Then, seeing all truth as coming from Him, we can seek it from the correct source.

By knowing Him, we can better understand what truth is.  We know Him by His revelation in His word, the Bible.  Knowing He is a God of order and unchangeableness, we can look for consistency and order in creation rather than randomness or changing rules of nature.  Knowing he created us in His image, we can look to our reason and senses as means of not only receiving the facts of sensory input, but also assimilating and synthesizing them to reflect His truth.  In His image we should not be surprises that we can find pleasure not only in the beauty of what we observe and experience upon the earth, but in the goodness behind, within, and underneath what we observe or may experience.

Though we seek after a comprehensive and exhaustive understanding of truth, we also recognize that our ability to perceive and to understand are limited.  There are things we cannot sense.  In the physical world, microscopic processes continuously carry on life which we cannot truly observe directly even with the technological tools we have available.  Also in the physical world, at the other end of the size scale, we gaze upward upon astronomical realities we cannot comprehensively understand due to the sheer vastness of the data required.  In the spiritual world, we are even more limited in our understanding.  All around us spiritual reality touches our lives yet we rarely recognize these influences in their fullness.  It is even said that this spiritual reality will outlast the physical reality in which we currently live (2 Corinthians 4:18).

Depths of wisdom and insight exist which neither a single human nor a collective humanity can process.  On one hand this is simply facing the limit of a created and finite human mind that can hold only so much in active thought at one time or can only remember so many interrelationships of reality simultaneously.  On the other, the Fall of Adam marred man’s reasoning (Romans 1:21) such that even what lies within one’s physical limits may become distorted and lose an accurate reflection of reality.

We come humbly to recognizing the need to look to God as the source of truth.  Having recognized that our means of perception is limited, our means of reasoning is both limited and marred despite being in God’s image (to be explored in future essays), and recognizing that God intends for us to grow in knowledge and wisdom, we humbly seek God to reveal both physical and spiritual truth that we might live both “wholly” and “holy” not only as individuals before God, but collectively as His children before His face.

Next in this series… Truth: What does it have to do with health?

 

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Truth, What is It?

Oddly, although a definition of truth would seem something most would agree upon, many opinions arise from challenges to the nature of truth.  Society debates whether there is one truth for all or many truths.  Society debates whether truth changes or not.  Society debates over who determines truth.  Some even doubt whether truth exists or at least whether we can know truth though it exists.  With different opinions come significant downstream ramifications.  If there are more truths than one, how can we know which is true for us?  If truth changes, can we be certain of the future.  If someone does control truth, must we submit to them or create our own truth?  If there is no truth, what is the point of life?  A correct definition of truth requires one to answer these foundational questions.

Understanding truth is critically important for many reasons.  Living and acting in contradiction to truth will produce unexpected consequences.  Inaccurate views of gravity will lead to injury and death.  Inaccurate views of health can lead to illness and death. Inaccurate views of the nature of reality can lead to spiritual death.  In coming essays, we will touch on each of these.  Ultimately, the current point to remember is that believing something contrary to reality does not alter that reality. In contrast, knowing truth has the hope of making life more rewarding and less dangerous.

We may define truth as that knowledge which comports with or describes what is real, that which exists in reality.  Given our finite minds, this truth comes primary in parts and pieces rather than an understanding of the whole.  While such portions are not an exhaustive description of reality, they serve as an accurate depiction of the part being described.  Simultaneously it must be consistent with the whole without contradicting interconnected portions of reality.

Building upon this definition of truth, we must consider if we can know truth and how we acquire it, a process called epistemology.  We are dependent on our senses to provide correct input.  We are dependent on our minds to interpret that sensory input correctly.  To know beyond the physical world, into the spiritual, we are dependent on revelation.  Epistemology considers how our senses, our minds or reason, and revelation from God informs us and what these three methods of obtaining truth can tell us.

If the existence of truth or the ability to discover it is doubted, then little more can be gained from our senses or our reasoning.  In contrast, knowledge and wisdom begin with an acknowledgement that truth exists.  Biblically, it begins with a fear of God, or a recognition of His being as well as Jesus’ self-affirmation that He is the truth.  Fighting against acceptance of reality’s existence and against truth leads to irrational beliefs if not a denial of one’s own existence.  But if both truth and the ability to know truth are accepted, truth’s details can be worked out over time.  We will approach truth and the whole of this series assuming that truth exists, and we can know it at least in part as doing otherwise leads to irrationality.

We continue with an understanding that truth is accurate knowledge about reality gained through our senses, through our minds or reason, and through revelation to cover physical and spiritual reality.  Truth exists, is knowable to some extent, and does not change in its fundamental nature.  Without going into a major proof at these assertions, we will assume them to be true for the time being until it becomes necessary to dive deeper into proving them.

Next in the series…. The Source of Truth.

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Exemple

              Welcome to the “Doc-sy” series, as in OrthoDOXY (right doctrine), where you will find short essays aimed at truth, especially truths pertaining to whole person health.  These essays arise from the life of a “Doc” practicing medicine while also leading my own family through a crazy world.  These endeavors exceed the capacity for this one post to cover or to even introduce adequately.  For this reason, several essays following this brief introduction will address several foundational concepts or principles before continuing with regular installments regarding truths of whole person health from a Biblical perspective.  Today, I will share a short clip of my personal journey in pursuing truth, my perception of the problems we face today regarding truth, and a brief overview of what is coming in this series. 


              While other essays will provide more insight into the life that led me to write these installments, a quick self-introduction is in order.  The truths or “Doc-sies” that I hope to share with you in the coming weeks and months have been shaped by over 50 years on this earth directly and indirectly experiencing life in a fallen world.  I have witnessed the need and practice of such “docsy” truths for the better and for the worse with chronically ill patients asking hard questions about physical and spiritual health.  I have lived the need in endeavoring to raise 6 children alongside an amazing wife in a world gone crazy. I have witnessed through the stories of my patients’ lives how these principles and “doc-sy” truths work themselves out.  I have worked to care for my own body’s health and the health of my family as well as my patients applying whole person truth.  I have shaped my own spiritual life and counseled the spiritual life of others using God’s Word.  I have walked through dark nights of the soul with loved ones.  During these times I have not only seen the fruits of Biblical views of health and life but also the adverse effects of having bad views of health and life.  Now I want to offer light for those following their own health journey’s so they can avoid missteps which I struggled with or watched others struggle through.

              We, meaning our once more Christian society, came to this need for a reappraisal of what whole person health means to a Christian for many reasons.  On one hand, we in society forgot the source of truth.  God and His Word has been pushed to the wayside by the modern world as a source for truth.  In forgetting God, we also forgot the means of knowing truth through His Word and through reason or logic.  Instead, we have pursued autonomy from God, moving from rationalization to irrationalization.  We disliked God’s truth so we sought truth outside of God.  When the crises and storms of life hit, much anxiety and fear came with them as we lost a foundation on which to stand.  We have been looking in all the wrong places and been too pragmatic as well as short-sighted. 

              Truth about health encompasses more than can be even outlined in this introductory essay.  At the very least the series will address and discuss: (the fancy theological terms are in parentheses for those interested)

  • What is truth as well as its source? (metaphysics)
  • What is man? (ontology and anthropology)
  • What is man’s telos or purpose? (teleology)
  • How does man know anything?  (epistemology)
  • What is man’s measure for right and wrong, good and bad, success and failure? (ethics)
  • How does man understand physical and spiritual health and the relationship between them?

              These essays offer much more to come in upcoming installments.  I will start with several foundations on which the following floors can be built week by week.  On each floor we will work through filling in the rooms one or two at a time.  Sometimes we will step back to look at the big picture, sometimes we will hone in on the details.  Over time, I hope to develop a full-orbed Biblical view of health while dispelling the half-truths, misconceptions and flat-out deceits in regard to true whole person health and true medicine.

              I hope to point us back to God.  By pointing to the Bible and to the reality of reason which comes to us as part of the image of God in Man, I hope an emphasis on “doc-sy” as in Orthodoxy will lead to orthopraxy or right practice in life.  This orthodoxy and orthopraxy has a hope to restore healthier more abundant whole person health in body and spirit, individually and relationally.

Next in this series… What is truth?

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