Monday, August 25, 2025

Sacred Moments of Healing



“Prayer Beads”  Quilt

Roberta Lagomarsini, Bishop, CA

Personal Photo, AQS QuiltWeek, Grand Rapids, Michigan (2025)


"Singing is praying twice”

St. Augustine & Chance the Rapper



Finding the sacred is a quest that seems universal and central to the lig idea of healing.  I was reminded of this in the recent book, Fully Alive: Tending to the Soul in Turbulent Times, by Elizabeth Oldfield.  This book and her podcast capture the contemporary search for ”The Sacred” in our lives.  


In any culture, we are looking for a transformative response to our deepest disconnections.  We find these responses in words like, “mitzvah,” “mudita” “”jeong, and “ubuntu”.  In Western culture we see it in the institution of the Christian Church and its responses to suffering that we describe as “healing”.


What is hard to capture in the our meaning of “healing” is how it is understood as a community.  We largely see healing as an individual outcome, but as the quilters remind us this is about our connections with each other and the power of beauty.  


Prayers, like singing, are another place where we can experience those healing and sacred moments.  Here is a portion “A Liturgy for Medical Providers” of recently discovered books, “Every Moment Holy Series:”:


“There is no end to malady, sickness,

injury, and disease in this broken world,

so there is no end to the line of hurting

people who daily need my(our) tending.  


Therefore give me(us) grace, O God,

that I(we) might be generous with my(our) kindness,

and that in this healing and care-taking vocation

my(our) hands might become an extension of your

hands, and my(our) service a conduit for your mercy.”


        *Italic bold my change to original


These shared sacred moments of healing are present in our communities of healing found in the beauty of words and quilts.  Thanks be to God!


Marvin


References


AQS QuiltWeek, 2025

https://www.americanquilter.com/grand-rapids-2025


“Singing is Praying Twice” and More from Late Night with Chance the Rapper

https://thebothandblog.wordpress.com/2017/09/29/singing-is-praying-twice-and-more-from-late-night-with-chance-the-rapper/


Oldfield, E. (2024). Fully Alive. Baker Books.


This liturgy is from Every Moment Holy. Volume !,  by Doug McKelvey.  

https://www.everymomentholy.com/liturgies


Hage, M. L. (2020). Healing Disconnections.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2020/09/healing-disconnections.html


Hage, M. L. (2020). Finding Joy.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2020/01/finding-joy.html


Hage, M. L. (2024). Healing Peace Revisited.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2024/12/healing-peace-revisited.html

Friday, August 1, 2025

A Healing Vocation


“The Cunning Man” by Robertson Davies


The words of the reckless pierce like swords, 

but the tongue of the wise brings healing.

Proverbs 12:18 (NIV)



It’s not easy to describe the characteristics of a “healing vocation” in general or with specific events in your own life.  A stimulus for this recent effort began with our trip to Canada.  While in Toronto, I was reminded of a book by the Canadian author,  Robertson Davies, “The Cunning Man”.  This well known Canadian author wrote his last book describing the life of an atypical fictional physician, Jonathan Hullah, M.D., F.R.C.P.  I had first read it while practicing and teaching at Duke University.  I reread it now with a new appreciation and perspective.


A theme of this novel is the intersections of religion, science and the arts of a “healing vocation”.  The  protagonist, Dr. Hullah, embodies the influences of these powerful cultural forces to bring healing to those around him.  He describes a “high touch”, narrative medical care founded in both ancient and contemporary practice.  He sees the importance of ritual in its various forms.


The future of the “healing vocations” is being challenged in multiple ways that can be addressed by some ancient ideas and disciplines.  The good news is that these powerful cultural forces are still being explored today by authors like Imber, Sacks, Nussbaum and Verghese.


Marvin



References


Davies, R. (1995). The Cunning Man. New York : Viking.


Hage, M. L. (2023). Can AI be a Healing Agent?

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2023/08/can-ai-be-healing-agent.html


Bill Gates: Within 10 years, AI will replace many doctors and teachers—humans won’t be needed ‘for most things’  

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/26/bill-gates-on-ai-humans-wont-be-needed-for-most-things.html


Imber, J. B. (2008). Trusting Doctors: The Decline of Moral Authority in American Medicine 

(1 ed.). Princeton University Press.


Sacks, J. (2014). The Great Partnership: Science, Religion, and the Search for Meaning (Reprint ed.). Schocken.


Nussbaum, A. M. (2016). The Finest Traditions of My Calling: One Physician’s Search for the Renewal of Medicine (1 ed.). Yale University Press.


Hage, M. L. (2023). Healiing Visions.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2023/06/healing-visions.html