Dr. Jack L. Arnold
THE PLACE OF
DOCTORS AND MODERN MEDICINE
Medicine.
God is Lord over all His creation and every natural, physical and
chemical process is subject to His will; therefore, medicine and healing from
medicine may not be
miraculous but they are from Him. God should receive as much glory when a natural
healing takes place as when a supernatural healing takes place. Whenever medicine is taken, it of
itself does not heal. Medicine
only allows the body to heal itself. The
bodyÕs recuperative powers are traced to the Creator. If an aspirin relieves a headache, it is not the
pharmaceutical company that ultimate gratitude is due. God supplied nature with the
ingredients in aspirin, and it is God who created, sustains and enables the
human body to respond positively to its medicinal properties. All genuine
healing, whether miraculous or not, is ultimately a work of God.
Doctors. In His
creation, God has provided medical doctors to heal in the area of their
expertise. Whether doctors will
acknowledge it or not they have been given their brains,
aptitudes and skills by God and He expects them to use their skills for
His glory. Many of us in this room
are alive today because of a knowledgeable doctor or a skilled surgeon, and we
praise God for them.
However, we must never look to science or medicine
or doctors as the ultimate healer, but we must look to the Great Physician -
Christ. There is a tendency in a
secular culture to set up science and the medical profession in particular as
little gods who are the saviors for life.
Physicians are but men and are ultimately accountable to God.
Medicine and Healing. Medicine and divine healing fight a common enemy one fights
the enemy of disease naturally (and hopefully by faith and prayer) and the
other does so supernaturally (and hopefully by faith and prayer). To polarize medicine and faith is
false. God may
choose to heal, He gets the glory.
Physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists and
counselors can be a tremendous help to the Christians, especially if these
professionals are working from a Christian context.
Christians should pray for a healing before they go
to a doctor, and they should continue to pray for healing when the doctor
prescribes medicine. The tendency
in our society is to go to the doctor first and then pray, or as the very last
resort turn to God for healing.
There should be a balance between faith and medicine and each of us must
find that balance.
Medicine Removal. If
a person is under medical care and senses God has given a healing, he should
not take himself off medication until a doctor has been consulted.
Peter
Wagner again says, ÒA medical doctor is the only one who has the authority to
remove a patient from a prescribed medication. Those who believe they have received healing for a condition
requiring medication should check with their doctor before altering their
prescribed treatment.Ó