Monday, December 30, 2024

Healing Words Revisited

 Gift from members of the “Medico Brigada" 

January, 1996


“Then to love the sick, each and all of them, more than if my own body were at stake.”

Paracelsus (1493–1541)


“To Love is to Act” - “Aimer, c’est agir” 

Victor Hugo, May 19, 1885


It is interesting to look back at what you have written and lived.  Sometimes you miss the significance or you just got it wrong.  Sometimes you need to re-examine the context, sources and meaning of those experiences.


I just finished the book, Changing my Mind by Will Willimon.  He has been a prolific writer and leader, but most importantly for me, a friend.  Part of our friendship centers on the formation and support of “Exploring Medicine” that sent medical, nursing , divinity students and faculty to join with local hosts to Honduras(1994-1998) as a medico brigada.  Willimon’s book challenges young clergy with the reality and the power of the good words and actions they deliver.  


This latest book of former Bishop Willimon, reminded me of another bishop character, Bishop Myriel in Victor Hugo’s “Les Miserables”.   This “bishop creation” of Victor Hugo closely parallels the life of Hugo who confronted the reality of suffering and concludes that “Love” is the basis for the lives that we are called to live.  See the wonderful book of Marva Barnett, To Love Is to Act: Les Misérables and Victor Hugo’s Vision for Leading Lives of Conscience.


For me, the ancient admonition “to Love” is central to our healing vocations and exists only because we were first Loved and experienced it within our faith communities.  I had focused on the suffering and did not fully appreciate the centrality of the many “love benedictions” freely given to me during my life.

 

Thanks be to God, for “Good Words”!


Marvin


Benediction:


“And whenever I see people engaged in that work of love, 

I sense the divine presence brushing us 

with a touch so gentle you can miss it, 

and yet know beyond all possibility of doubt 

that this is what we are called on to live for, 

to ease the pain of those who suffer 

and become an agent of hope in the world.”  

Rabbi Jonathon Sacks


 Être aimé est toute Grâce - To be loved is all Grace


References


The Oath of Paracelsus

https://weeksmd.com/2009/08/the-oath-of-paracelsus/


Willimon, B. W. H. (2024). Changing My Mind. Abingdon Press.


Barnett, Marva A.. To Love Is to Act: Les Misérables and Victor Hugo’s Vision for Leading Lives of Conscience (p. 56). Swan Isle Press. Kindle Edition.


Hage, M. L. (2012). Healing Words.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2012/09/healing-words.html


Hage, M. L. (2013). Suffering.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2013/02/suffering.html


Hage, M. L. (2013). The Nature of Healing

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-nature-of-healing.html


Sacks, Jonathan. The Great Partnership: Science, Religion, and the Search for Meaning (p. 206). Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. Kindle Edition. 


Hage, M. L. (2021). All is Grace.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2021/01/all-is-grace.html


Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Healing Peace Revisited


American Cemetery

Colville-Sur-Mer, Normandy, France


Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be
called children of God.

Matthew 5:9(NIV)


Most of the time we pray for peace in the middle of wars, large and small.  In battlefields we erect museums and memorials and call for peace.  Usually there is no clear articulation of the prerequisites for Healing Peace. Here are two books that are exceptions: 

In his recent book, “Cherished Belonging” by Greg Boyle, we are introduced to a Christian answer that happens within a very violent environment.  He describes how tribalism can be replaced with a deeper connectedness between former enemies.  What is remarkable is how these responses have cross-cultural parallels in the words, “mitzvah”, “jeong” and “ubuntu”.  These are good words that describe the different dimensions of our connectedness and the prerequisites for Healing Peace. 

The other exception is Eleni Stecopoulos’s book, “Dreaming in the Fault Zone: a Poetics of Healing”.  She describes the interconnectedness of ancient and modern healing traditions with the art of words used to describe the healing.   It is a powerful critique of our recent experience with the Covid 19 pandemic, our post pandemic state as well as her search for healing.  We need to find those words that connect and tell the stories of healing and loss. 

In this season of advent we welcome Healing Peace when we connect again our current stories with the heritage of those larger stories and ideas. 

Shalom,

Marvin 


References 

Boyle, G. (2024). Cherished Belonging. Simon and Schuster.


Stecopoulos, E. (2024). Dreaming in the Fault Zone: a Poetics of Healing. 


Hage, M. L. (2012). Healing Peace.

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2012/06/healing-peace.html 


Hage, M. L. (2012). Thoughts. 

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2012/10/thoughts.html 


Hage, M. L. (2015). Going Far Together. 

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2015/03/going-far-together.html 


Hage, M. L. (2020). Finding Joy. 

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

 

Hage, M. L. (2023). Pandemic Mourning. 

http://healingagents.blogspot.com/2023/10/pandemic-mourning.html 


Monday, December 2, 2024

Hope Adventure

“Hope” by Robert Indiana, 2008


And now these three remain: faith, hope and love.

1 Corinthians 13:13 (NIV)


It was late in the evening some sixteen hours after leaving Raleigh when we arrived at La Esperanza, Honduras (1994). It was a small hotel that was dark.  We really didn’t know where we were, but wherever, it was very different than any place we had ever been before.  We did know that we were tired, so sleep came easier than you might expect being in such a strange place.  The paradox of La Esperanza is that it is the city of Hope.  We would see hope in some desperate places not far away.   This was the beginning of a new medical educational elective at Duke University Medical School, “Exploring Medicine”.


My life as an obstetrician has been intimately associated with waiting!  It is a task that can be understood as passive(noun) and active(verb).  I have come to most appreciate “hope” when it is active.   I think hope is best understood as “active waiting”.  It can be an individual response but is best done with others.  It is best experienced with the other action verbs of “love” and “faith”.  These are not possessions but are actions.


So as we begin this advent season of “active waiting”.  May we find hope in the actions of others.  May we find hope in the celebrations that we have taken for granted.  May we see hope in the faithful responses to a world filled with uncertainty!


Living in Hope is a promise this advent season.  It is what we saw and experienced in La Esperanza.  It can be born this advent season where ever you are in living into the promises of Hope.


Marvin




References


Hage, M. L. (2010). Healing Agents: Christian Perspectives Second Edition (2 ed.). CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.


Hage, M. L. (2012). Awaiting “Good News”.

http://healingagents.blogspot.co.ke/2012/12/awaiting-good-news.html