The Importance of Theological Understanding
by Nigel M. de S. Cameron
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Nigel M. de S.
Cameron,
PhD is Senior Fellow and International Advisory Board member
of the Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity and serves as
Director of the Council on Biotechnology Policy and Dean of
the Wilberforce Forum. |
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Post Date:
Spring 1998 |
The development of an understanding of bioethics which is rooted in the
health care professions and set within the context of Christian faith will
neither answer all our current problems nor readily commend itself to the
secularists who largely adorn the bioethics academy. But it will achieve two
vital results. First, it will enable those many physicians, nurses,
administrators, and ethicists who work self-consciously within the context of
their Christian faith to be freed from the notion that they must do secular
bioethics. Although they will still need to engage in the wider discussion
which claims secular grounds within hospitals and professional contexts,
their own position can be informed by the commitments of Christian faith
before they seek to translate it into terms in which it can be traded in the
marketplace of ideas. They do not need to begin with secular starting-points.
Secondly, and partly as a result, the development of a thriving Christian
bioethics will itself challenge the raw secularity of the field, since only
by the exclusion of Christian sensitivities has bioethics been able to ignore
its own long tradition, and its grounding in the identity of medicine. Yet
most Christians have been slow to articulate their understanding of medicine
in theological terms aside from its offering a context for Christian service
and mission.
The blend of Christian Hippocratism which was still remarkably intact a
little more than a generation ago is now ignored in most bioethics discussion
or, when noted, generally reviled. In its place, as the basis for the moral
structure and integrity of medicine, we see the rise of a post-Hippocratic
tradition which has been enshrined in the mainstream bioethics of the last
twenty five years. As it is post-Hippocratic, it is also post-professional in
character. The marriage of skills and values which characterized Hippocratism
and laid the foundations of professional identity has crumbled. It is no
surprise that these changes have gone hand in hand with a growing reduction
of the medical "profession" to essentially a consumerist-corporatist exercise
in the delivery of saleable skills to the market.
Now in this context, how should Christian physicians and other believers who
would support them position ourselves? We must seek to maintain a presence
within the medical culture of our day. But it must be a presence
characterized by dissidence. As in the culture at large, so here, there is no
virtue in withdrawal. By the same token, there is not much more in simply
conforming to the image of the new medicine and being absorbed. We must be
present, but present as dissidents. In order to prepare ourselves to engage
in that kind of task, the dissident task, we must turn first of all to a
theological understanding of medicine, which in turn derives from a
distinctive perspective on the nature of human being. CBHD
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Copyright 1998 by The Center for Bioethics and Human
Dignity
The contents of this article do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
CBHD, its staff, board or supporters. Permission to reprint granted as long as The Center for Bioethics and
Human Dignity and the web address for this article is referenced.
Published in the Spring 1998 issue of Dignity.
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