Description |
173 pages ; 23 cm. |
Series |
The Christian practice of everyday life series |
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Christian practice of everyday life.
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 139-164) and index. |
Contents |
Doctors and Christians -- Naming the power of medicine -- Life as a body -- The shape of what's given -- What are children for? -- A body without borders -- Perfection money can't buy -- Frailty and grief, overcome by hope and love. |
Summary |
In our age of advanced medical technology that emphasizes health and well being, the human body has become the near-exclusive province of the professional health care industry. The solutions it proposes and the judgments it pronounces are taken as gospel. As Christians however, we are called to view all of life, including medicine, through the lens of faith. In Reclaiming the Body, a physician and a theologian take a critical look at some common assumptions and explore what theology has to say about medicine, our bodies, and our health. This is not a Christian treatise on medical ethics nor a book with a medicine-bashing agenda. Rather, Reclaiming the Body invites the reader to a theological and ecclesiological reflection on both the human body and the Christian body in an effort to reframe the relationship between Christian faith and medicine. Along the way, the authors discuss contemporary issues such as what it means to fully care for the sick, children and reproductive technologies, medicine and the poor, and our obsession with and pursuit of physical perfection. |
Subject |
Medicine -- Religious aspects -- Christianity.
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Health -- Religious aspects -- Christianity.
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Medical ethics.
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Religion and Medicine.
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Attitude to Health.
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Christianity.
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Ethics.
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Health -- Religious aspects -- Christianity.
(OCoLC)fst00952778
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Medical ethics. (OCoLC)fst01014081
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Medicine -- Religious aspects -- Christianity.
(OCoLC)fst01015045
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Added Author |
Volck, Brian, 1959-
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ISBN |
1587431270 |
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9781587431272 |
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