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recently released...
Reclaiming the Body:
Christians And the Faithful Use of Modern Medicine

by Joel Shuman and Brian Volck

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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, the assumptions it takes for granted, and the judgments it pronounces are taken as gospel. But as Christians, we are called to view all of life--including medicine--through the lens of faith, for after all, it was God who created the bodies we inhabit.

In Reclaiming the Body, a physician and a theologian take a critical look at some of our 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, it is a book that invites the reader to do theological and ecclesiological reflection on both the body and the Body in an effort to reframe the relationship between Christian faith and medicine. Along the way, the authors deal with timeless and contemporary issues such as embracing suffering, what it means to fully care for the sick, children and reproductive technologies, medicine and the poor, our obsession with and pursuit of physical perfection, and death and dying.

Shuman, an ethicist, and Volck, a pediatrician, are on a mission to persuade Christians to stop worshiping the medical establishment and to start 'using medicine as if God mattered.' It is easy to put medicine in the place that only God should occupy. . . . Christian theology, however, teaches that 'because we come from God, belong to God, and are destined finally to return to God, we need not fight without restraint to control all the circumstances of our existence, or to preserve our lives as they near their end.' As they develop this theme through literature, contemporary stories, and theological reflection, the authors affirm the goodness of the human body, the importance of the church as the gathered body of Christ, and the necessity of hospitality toward the world's helpless and suffering. Brilliantly reasoned and artfully written, this quotable book should reach well beyond its obvious market of medical and spiritual caregivers to engage anyone concerned about human values in a technological age.
-- from Publishers' Weekly


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Trade Paperback.
Publisher: Brazos Press (2006).
List price: $19.95.

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[ Books of the Month ]

John Howard Yoder: Mennonite Patience, Evangelical Witness, Catholic Convictions,
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Free of Charge : Giving and Forgiving in a Culture Stripped of Grace , by Miroslav Volf

Reclaiming the Body: Christians And the Faithful Use of Modern Medicine,
by Joel Shuman /
Brian Volck


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