{"id":173410,"date":"2016-08-21T11:12:41","date_gmt":"2016-08-21T15:12:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/alternative-medicine-christian-research-institute\/"},"modified":"2016-08-21T11:12:41","modified_gmt":"2016-08-21T15:12:41","slug":"alternative-medicine-christian-research-institute","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/alternative-medicine\/alternative-medicine-christian-research-institute\/","title":{"rendered":"Alternative Medicine &#8211; Christian Research Institute"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Summary  <\/p>\n<p>    Over the past decade, governmental agencies, medical schools,    influential voices in the media, and the public at large have    seen a remarkable surge of interest in alternative medicine in    the United States. While many therapies focus on unproven but    otherwise spiritually neutral approaches (for example,    nutritional supplements), others arise from or validate    worldviews  especially the monism (All is One) of the New    Age movement  that are hostile to the teachings of Scripture.    The cultural developments that have brought alternative (still    often called holistic) therapies into the cultural mainstream    are complex and often understandable. However, a number of    general cautions are still in order regarding this movement.  <\/p>\n<p>    Twenty years ago a nurse tending to pediatric patients at Santa    Monica Hospital handed me a rather unassuming publication    bearing the title, Journal of Holistic Health. Along    with more than 2,000 health-care professionals and other    interested parties, she had just attended a conference in San    Diego entitled, The Physician of the Future. In more ways    than one, she had got religion at this meeting, and spoke    with great enthusiasm about the new paradigm that would soon    revolutionize our understanding of health and disease.  <\/p>\n<p>    The future of health care, she explained, lay in the concept of    holism, understanding the whole person  body, mind, and    spirit  who was in fact a great deal more than the sum of    several organ systems. It would become much more important to    understand the patient who had the illness, not merely the    illness that had the patient. Prevention, lifestyle, stress    reduction, and self-awareness would displace the invasive and    often destructive approaches  specifically, drugs and surgery     that had for so long dominated Western medicine. Eventually,    we would begin to define health in more uplifting terms: not    merely as the absence of disease, but as a state of increasing    energy, productivity, insight, and personal transformation.  <\/p>\n<p>    RISE OF HOLISTIC HEALTH  <\/p>\n<p>    It sounded intriguing. After all, I was training as a resident    in family practice  the specialty whose interest extended not    only to the whole patient, but also to her or his family, work,    relationships, and even the community where she or he lived. I    glanced through the articles in this home-grown journal (which    actually was a transcription of the previous years    conference), and then began to read more carefully, with    increasing concern. This movement appeared to have more on its    mind than changing dietary habits, encouraging exercise, and    coping with stress.  <\/p>\n<p>    The conference director, David J. Harris, who bore the title    Founder and President of the Association for Holistic Health,    had rhapsodized in his opening remarks that this gathering is    part of a process that is bringing about a new way of thinking,    a new science merged with religion. James Fadiman, Ph.D., at    that time Director of the Institute of Noetic Sciences at    Stanford University, declared that we are not primarily    physical forms. We are primarily energy around which matter    adheres. Richard Svihus, M.D., President of the California    Academy of Preventive Medicine, proclaimed that the holistic    health movement is desired by higher forces and consciousness    within the universe. Harold Bloomfield, M.D., a psychiatrist    who had written the best-selling TM: Discovering Inner    Energy and Overcoming Stress, extolled the benefits of    Transcendental Meditation. Dr. Elisabeth Kbler-Ross, widely    recognized as the worlds authority on the dying process,    stated unequivocally that death does not exist, and that    after transitioning from this life, you will have the    opportunity not to be judged by a judgmental God, but to judge    yourself. Many others with strings of initials after their    names and impressive titles used engaging anecdotes that    described healing through aligning the bodys invisible    energies, developing psychic abilities, and  most important     altering, expanding, and transforming consciousness.  <\/p>\n<p>    The pediatric nurse really had gotten religion  but    not a gospel that would set well with Luke, the doctor who    followed Jesus. It was, instead, a gospel better suited to Luke    Skywalker, master of the Force, the impersonal energy allegedly    pervading the universe. The holistic health movement, it turned    out, appeared to be yet another banner under the We are all    energy \/ All is One \/ I am God \/ You are God \/ We are all God \/    Aint that great? spirituality of the New Age movement. Such    spirituality was storming the gates of Western culture and    hoping to be welcomed with open arms.  <\/p>\n<p>    In my subsequent explorations of the holistic phenomenon I    attended two of the annual Association for Holistic Health    conferences in San Diego. For the most part, the speakers were    interesting, energetic, and sincere in their desire to promote    health and healing, while the audiences were far more attentive    than many I had observed at other medical conferences. These    total immersion experiences left no doubt in my mind that the    spiritual agenda of the new medicine  at least as presented    by its most active proponents  was of utmost importance.    Furthermore, a few direct questions to some of the speakers    made it abundantly clear that this spirituality, which    presented itself as generously inclusive of all religious    traditions, did not in fact harbor warm and fuzzy feelings    about such concepts as the sinfulness of humankind, Christs    atoning death on the cross, or our need for individual    repentance.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ask a speaker about Jesus, and you would hear He was a Master    Teacher, Enlightened Healer, Bearer of the Christ    Consciousness, and so forth. Mention atonement, and you would    be gently corrected, for Jesus demonstrated at-one-ment  an    understanding of His (and our) unity with God. Bring up    repentance, and you would be told that what we really need is    enlightenment  a direct experience of our own divinity. Bear    down on that distasteful event at Golgotha, and the air would    suddenly become rather chilly.  <\/p>\n<p>    Over the next several years, I both wrote and spoke of my    concerns about the holistic health movement in a variety of    settings, and while doing so, made a few observations:  <\/p>\n<p>    First, a number of conventional medical practitioners were    miffed over the idea that unorthodox healing systems were    promoted as treating the whole person more effectively.    Indeed, even the most narrowly focused subspecialist could    truly keep the patients entire life in focus, attending to the    mind and spirit as well as the body. Furthermore, there was no    guarantee that an unorthodox practitioner might not see a    patient as little more than a tangled wad of energy fields    needing to be balanced through some esoteric formulation.    (Take these supplements\/herbs that I have chosen for you    through the most inscrutable and subjective criteria, and call    me in the morning.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Second, many people  including committed Christians who would    go to the mat over the interpretation of a grammatical detail    in a passage of Scripture  appeared quite willing to lay    critical thinking aside while dealing with unorthodox healing    methods. Does it work? or, more specifically, Does it make    me feel better? were often far more important    questions than Does it make any sense? or Is there any    empirical proof? or On what world view is this healing system    based?  <\/p>\n<p>    Third, the holistic health movement appeared to be having    little impact on the practices of mainstream physicians. It had    somewhat greater success among nurses, particularly with a    specific healing technique known as therapeutic touch (see    below).  <\/p>\n<p>    Fourth, the new medicine also seemed to be making little    headway within medical schools, government bodies, and    insurance companies. Holistic health proponents repeatedly    expressed a desire to leave the fringes and enter the cultural    mainstream via research, public policy, and finance, but for    many years this goal proved elusive.  <\/p>\n<p>    Indeed, the persistent inability of holistic practices to gain    widespread acceptance by the powers that be was undoubtedly a    sore point for this movement for a number of years. Despite the    grandiose optimism expressed during the San Diego conferences    and others during the late 1970s and early 1980s, holistic    health seemed to sputter through the 1980s, keeping itself    alive primarily through paying clients who beat a path to the    doors of unconventional practitioners. I concluded that there    would always be holistic voices crying in the wilderness, but    that our culture would probably keep them there.  <\/p>\n<p>    My unspoken prediction, however, was proven wrong by some    startling developments over the past few years. A dramatic    turnabout has brought the gamut of holistic therapies     including those with New Age and Eastern mystical flags fully    unfurled  squarely into the mainstream of American culture    under a new banner: alternative medicine.    Some proponents prefer the more conciliatory term    complementary medicine, while a few describe    themselves as promoters of integrative medicine,    seeking to unite all forms of health care into a coherent    system. Alternative medicine, however, is the most    widely used term.  <\/p>\n<p>    ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE TODAY  <\/p>\n<p>    It is difficult to pinpoint when or how this reversal began.    Promoters of alternative health care would likely argue that    this movement hasnt actually enjoyed a revival, but that it    has been alive and well all along, and that the power elites of    the press, government, and medicine have only recently noticed.    This idea is supported to some degree by a now-famous 1993    article in the New England Journal of Medicine, a    publication not exactly known for tabloid excesses.  <\/p>\n<p>    The report detailed the findings of a 1990 survey of health    care utilization in the United States, suggesting that more    than 30 percent of American adults availed themselves of at    least one form of alternative therapy that year, paying an    estimated 425 million visits to providers of such treatments     about 40 million more than the number made to primary care    physicians! The tab for this care was nearly $14 billion, of    which more than $10 billion was not covered by insurance and    thus was paid out of pocket. The survey indicated that    unconventional therapies were used mostly for chronic rather    than life-threatening conditions, that most people using these    alternatives didnt discuss them with their physicians (no    great surprise since conventional practitioners tended to    dismiss such options with eye-rolling disdain), and that the    elderly represented a significant proportion of the    clientele.1  <\/p>\n<p>    A RECENT SURGE IN PUBLIC INTEREST  <\/p>\n<p>    It would not be surprising if a survey taken today showed even    more widespread involvement in alternative practices. Recent    indications of a surge in public interest include the    following:  <\/p>\n<p>    A Time cover story entitled Faith and Healing (24    June 1996) painted its subject with broad strokes, encompassing    traditional faith in God, meditative techniques, and    biochemistry. It described controlled studies designed to    determine whether patients who were the recipients of prayer     defined in a variety of ways  fared better than others.  <\/p>\n<p>    A bumper crop of books on alternative therapies now line the    shelves of the Health and Medicine section of the typical    neighborhood bookstore. No longer limited to the off-label and    self-published material that was once the staple of New Age    outlets, the newer titles come from mainstream publishers, and    place unconventional treatments on equal footing with Western    medicine. One prominent example is The Medical Advisor: The    Complete Book of Alternative and Conventional    Treatment,2 published last year by Time-Life    Books. This handsome volume describes health problems in    encyclopedic detail, noting for each the conventional medical    approach and then listing several alternatives: ancient    Chinese, homeopathic, herbal, and so on.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Public Broadcasting System (PBS) has repeatedly broadcast    presentations of alternative healing. Bill Moyerss 1993    series, Healing and the Mind, attracted almost twice    the normal PBS viewing audience. Andrew Weil, M.D., a popular    author who now teaches Integrative Medicine at the University    of Arizona School of Medicine, has offered articulate    distillations from his book Spontaneous Healing on a    program of the same name. Deepak Chopra, M.D., a publishing    hot-ticket and Americas foremost purveyor of Indias ancient    healing system known as ayurveda, captivated viewers    in the PBS specials, Body, Mind and Soul: The Mystery and the    Magic and The Way of the Wizard.  <\/p>\n<p>    Websites devoted to alternative therapies abound on the    Internet. If one tells the Yahoo search engine to look for    alternative medicine, he or she will be escorted to more than    200 sites, many of which provide links to dozens of others. On    the other hand, cautionary notices and critical analyses by    organizations such as the National Council against Health Fraud    and the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of    the Paranormal (CSICOP, a humanist think tank that publishes    Skeptical Inquirer) are few and far between.  <\/p>\n<p>    Periodicals promoting alternative therapies are now available    both for the general public (for example, Natural    Health) and health care providers. The monthly journals    Alternative and Complementary Therapies and    Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine contain    articles and studies of variable quality, which in some cases    (unlike standard medical journals) freely wade into    metaphysical and promotional material.  <\/p>\n<p>    The most striking foray into the realm of conventional medicine    occurred last November when American Family Physician,    the official journal of the American Academy of Family    Physicians (normally a reliable resource), published as its    cover article, Alternative Medicine and the Family    Physician.3 Authored by James M. Gordon, M.D., who    directs the Mind-Body Center in Washington, D.C., the article    offered a bland overview of alternative care, admonished family    physicians to convey a sensitive acceptance and an openness    to.their patients interest in alternative therapies, and    encouraged practitioners to explore this realm themselves     starting with Gordons own book, Manifesto for a New    Medicine. An accompanying editorial strongly endorsed    physician involvement in alternative therapies, and a    duplicable information sheet did likewise for patients. Nowhere    in these materials was there a note of caution or concern about    any of the approaches mentioned.  <\/p>\n<p>    NEW LINKS WITH CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE  <\/p>\n<p>    Manifestations of increasing interest in alternative health    care have not been limited to the general public and news    media. In 1991, Congress mandated the formation of the Office    of Alternative Medicine (OAM), now permanently established    within the National Institute of Health (NIH). OAMs mission is    to encourage and support the investigation of alternative    medical (AM) practices, with the ultimate goal of integrating    validated alternative medical practices into health    and medical care (emphasis added).4 To this end, 10    exploratory centers have been established at institutions such    as the University of Minnesota Medical School, Stanford    University, and Columbia Universitys College of Physicians and    Surgeons. NIH guidelines for these centers call for a    systematic analysis of alternative treatments and their effect    on major diseases, health, and wellness.5  <\/p>\n<p>    It remains to be seen whether the centers, each of which will    focus on a specific health care issue, will approach    alternative therapies with open arms along with open minds.    Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, for example, has already    established the Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Center for    Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the first of its kind    at an American medical school. A quote in the Rosenthal    Centers brochure from Woodson Merrell, M.D., sounds less than    dispassionate: The fact that medical schools are beginning to    incorporate alternative modes of healing into their curriculum    is a major step in medical education. It is very exciting.  <\/p>\n<p>    The enthusiasm for alternative medicine displayed by those    involved with OAM certainly raises some doubt that its programs    will provide evenhanded analysis of the therapies they study.    Representative John E. Porter (R-Ill), Chairman of the Labor,    Health and Human Services Education Subcommittee, which    oversees funding for NIH, not only supports OAM but also sees    it as fulfilling a specific mission: As I see it, the most    important contribution the OAM can make to the practice of    medicine is to provide that link between alternative and    conventional medicine.Therefore, it is important to continue    making contacts on Capitol Hill and to deliver the message:    alternative medicine is integral to biomedical research,    provides effective results, and is a priority for spending    decisions.6 James Gordon, M. D., who wrote the    above-noted Manifesto for a New Medicine, also serves    as Chairman of the Program Advisory Council for OAM.  <\/p>\n<p>    WHY THE INTEREST?  <\/p>\n<p>    What might explain this surge of interest in alternative    therapies? There are many possible reasons, but the heart of    the matter is this: for all of its technological prowess,    especially with acute and critical conditions, Western medicine    continues to bump against the limits of its effectiveness when    dealing with many disabling chronic conditions  especially    those related to aging, such as degenerative arthritis  as    well as complex diseases, such as cancer and HIV\/AIDS. A    massive tide of baby boomers is now facing mid-life and    menopause, and, having challenged the status quo at every stage    of life, this generation is not about to accept a just deal    with it approach to the health problems of its golden years.  <\/p>\n<p>    Moreover, stress and common lifestyle-induced problems, such as    chronic fatigue and depression, do not always find sympathetic    ears and definitive solutions in the doctors office. Many    conventional practitioners drive large numbers of people to    alternative therapists by spending as little time as possible    with their patients and by clinging to outmoded authoritarian    roles (I know whats best for you, so dont ask me those    irritating questions.). Alternative practitioners may listen    more attentively to their patients, and they frequently promote    themselves as encouraging a more collaborative relationship.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet encouraging mutual respect, open communication, and    informed decision-making are not the exclusive province of    alternative therapies. In fact, many conscientious doctors    within the conventional model have inadvertently contributed to    the popularity of alternative therapies by candidly admitting    the limits of their capabilities and carefully explaining the    pros and cons of treatment options. Maintaining this evenhanded    approach requires using words such as might, maybe, and I    dont know. Furthermore, an increasing  and appropriate     emphasis on informed consent over the past few decades requires    physicians to present both the risks and the benefits in    connection with a given medication or surgery.  <\/p>\n<p>    As a result, in many situations a physician may not be able to    bring the power of positive expectation to bear on the    patients problem. Alternative therapies, on the other hand,    are typically brimming with optimism, often inversely    proportional to their ties to reality. After hearing more than    one doctor say, I dont know what is causing your problem or    what we can do about it, someone with a complex illness may    feel a breath of hope when the alternative practitioner    announces, I can find out why you feel so poorly, and I have a    specific plan that will get you on the road to recovery.  <\/p>\n<p>    Other reasons for the rising interest in alternative therapies    include:  <\/p>\n<p>    1.) The appeal of natural approaches  often touted    as helping the body to heal itself  over drugs and surgery.    There is no question that ounces of prevention are better than    pounds of cure, and positive lifestyle choices (regular    exercise, prudent eating habits, and avoidance of harmful    substances) are very likely to reduce medical problems in the    future. But all too often the term natural is misapplied to    bizarre, illogical treatments or the use of huge (and    unnatural) amounts of vitamin and mineral supplements. Eating a    variety of wholesome foods every day is natural; taking a    tackle-box full of supplements is not.  <\/p>\n<p>    2.) The current cultural enthronement of choice     the need to have options, to have it my way  has become a    national credo. The word alternative implies that there is a    choice to be made regarding health care, as opposed to simply    following doctors orders.  <\/p>\n<p>    3.) Skyrocketing costs, especially related to    high-tech procedures and expensive medications, continue to    plague the conventional health care system. Because alternative    therapies tend to be relatively lowtech and often stress    activities that the individual can do for himself or herself,    some managed care\/HMO systems are investigating their potential    for lowering health care bills.  <\/p>\n<p>    4.) A deep and widespread spiritual hunger. A number    of therapies serve as a gateway to spiritual technologies and    world views that address needs for meaning, knowledge, and    power.  <\/p>\n<p>    So what is the problem with alternative medicine? Before    addressing that question, it is important to state what is    not at issue.  <\/p>\n<p>    1.) Turf battles. As a conventional, Western-trained    practitioner, I can readily affirm that any concerns that I or    others raise about alternative practices are not driven by    possessiveness for patients or the income derived from them.    Furthermore, it is important to counter an allegation that    circulates with variable fervor in alternative circles: The    A.M.A., the medical establishment, the pharmaceutical    industry, or some other nefarious conglomerate is suppressing    effective alternative treatments  especially for cancer  as    part of an evil scheme to keep people sick so that billions    of dollars can be made treating them. This paranoid delusion    has as much basis in reality as a Stephen King novel, and begs    the obvious question: What do these plotters do when any one of    them  or a loved one  develops cancer? This rumor needs to be    given a decent burial.  <\/p>\n<p>    2.) Optimizing lifestyle. Many alternative devotees    pay close attention to their daily living habits and make wise    decisions (although sometimes for odd reasons). Primary care    physicians are always delighted to have low maintenance    patients who make wholesome dietary choices, exercise    regularly, shun harmful substances, and deal effectively with    lifes stresses. If this were the sum of alternative or    holistic health, there would be little to be concerned about    and much to applaud.  <\/p>\n<p>    3.) Effective treatments based on rational thinking and    solid research. One of the potential benefits of the    Office of Alternative Medicine is the sponsorship of studies to    separate alternative wheat from chaff. For example, the    Rosenthal Center is conducting a double-blind, randomized study    to determine whether a specific Chinese herbal preparation is    effective in treating menopausal hot flashes. If such research    validates this particular herbal remedy as a useful therapeutic    tool and provides guidelines for its appropriate use, many    women will be grateful beneficiaries.  <\/p>\n<p>    4.) Recognizing the spiritual dimension to health.    Human beings are indeed more than a collection of complex    biochemical reactions, and their spiritual values can play an    important role in both health and illness. Research    psychiatrist David Larson, M.D., at the National Institute for    Healthcare Research has collected a large number of studies    that indicate that regular churchgoers are, among other things,    more likely to have a reduced risk of coronary artery disease,    lower blood pressure, less depression, and fewer    anxiety-related illnesses. Furthermore, these benefits appear    to be independent of lifestyle decisions (such as abstaining    from smoking) that might arise from spiritual commitments.    However, a number of alternative therapies and conceptions of    health embrace metaphysical orientations overtly hostile to the    teachings of the Old and New Testaments.  <\/p>\n<p>    PROBLEMS WITH ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE  <\/p>\n<p>    Presenting a detailed critique of even a sampling of    alternative therapies is beyond the scope of this article. The    following basic problem areas are presented, however, as a    caution to those involved in this realm.  <\/p>\n<p>    Excessive promoting. To say that the realm of    alternative medicine is characterized by optimism is an    understatement, and undoubtedly much of its success is due to    its unabashedly positive outlook. Unfortunately, this buoyancy    tends to pervade even its serious journals, such as    Alternative and Complementary Therapies, raising    doubts about the willingness of alternative practitioners to    engage in any serious form of peer review. For all of its    faults, Western medicine has progressed by honoring skepticism    and doubt, and by demanding that the efficacy of its    interventions be validated by controlled studies. Even the    extensive advertising to physicians and patients by the    pharmaceutical industry is governed by strict guidelines    regarding claims that can be made about a given product.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is no similar oversight for the myriad of herbal    formulations, supplements, homeopathic remedies, and other    concoctions heavily promoted in magazines, health food stores,    and infomercials. (On weekends, some Christian radio stations    literally transform into alternative therapy flea markets,    without any apparent regard for the credibility of the material    emanating on their airwaves.) Expansive claims abound for    restoring energy, improving digestion, and solving a variety of    poorly defined ailments (heart problems, kidney disease,    etc.), all unspecified. Testimonials and anecdotes serve as    proof positive, and any attempt by the Food and Drug    Administration to bring some order to this Dodge City are met    with howls of protest from merchants and buyers alike.  <\/p>\n<p>    Everything you know is wrong. A number of    alternative therapies also postulate alternative realities     convoluted explanations of how things work in the human body    (or the universe in general) that are totally at odds with the    most basic facts of physiology. These are politely referred to    in OAM literature as traditional and ethnomedicine therapies,    and include such far-flung systems as ancient Chinese medicine    and its offshoots (classical acupuncture and acupressure, among    others), ayurvedic medicine from India, and    homeopathy. Each operates as a self-contained system with its    own internal logic, and while they seem to coexist happily    under the big tent of alternative medicine, each is quite    incompatible with the others. Questions about the validity of    each systems basic assumptions are usually deflected with    references to the accumulated wisdom of thousands of years of    careful observation or the hundreds\/ thousands\/millions of    treatment successes\/satisfied customers or (best yet) the    many scientific studies documenting the effectiveness of _____    . What proof is there, for example, for the ancient Chinese    notion that invisible energy called chi circulates in    equally invisible channels called meridians, and that disease    results from disturbances in that flow?  <\/p>\n<p>    The reference to many scientific studies is the most ironic    because the methodology of modern scientific inquiry clearly    came up with an understanding of health and disease that bears    absolutely no resemblance to the precepts of these systems. For    a quick reality check, imagine for a moment the reception that    would greet an alternative system of mechanical engineering,    aeronautics, or navigation based on ancient Eastern mysticism.    Imagine, for that matter, an effort by your local emergency    room to revive Hippocratess doctrine of the four humours as    the basis for diagnosis and treatment.  <\/p>\n<p>    Postmodern thinking. The fact that fanciful healing    systems thrive in industrialized nations is partly due to the    fact that postmodernism has penetrated Western    cultures to a significant degree. This world view rejects both    scientific rationalism and biblical notions of absolute truth,    and substitutes for them intense subjectivism: Truth is    defined by my experience\/my feelings\/my understanding. The    scientific method and all that it entails  rational    hypotheses, logical deductions, controlled studies, and    revising ones opinions based on this arduous process  are    seen as no more valid a way of understanding the world than any    individuals mystical experiences or intuitive hunches. Any    claim that one approach to obtaining knowledge might, in fact,    be better than another, or that there is any absolute truth     especially a transcendent God who is the truth  is    viewed as a power play, an attempt by one person to suppress    and oppress someone else.  <\/p>\n<p>    One alternative well suited to a postmodern culture is    therapeutic touch, a practice that has continuously    gained in popularity among nurses since its introduction in    1975 by New York University Professor Dolores Krieger, R.N.,    Ph.D. Now taught at more than 80 universities and hospitals,    therapeutic touch purports to detect and adjust invisible    energies supposedly flowing within and emanating from the human    body. This involves entering a meditative state, moving the    hands slowly about two inches above the patients skin in an    effort to detect subtle sensations such as tingling or heat,    using the hands to sweep away excess energy that might have    been detected, creating mental images of desirable energy    states, and then directing these images to the patient through    the hands.  <\/p>\n<p>    Aside from its misleading title (it should be therapeutic    nontouch), the utter lack of objective validation for an    invisible human energy field and the spectacular subjectivism    of its technique (how in the world can anyone tell whether    someone is doing it correctly?), therapeutic touch possesses    a mystical heritage that should chill any practitioner who    possesses even the faintest belief in the veracity of    Scripture. Dr. Kriegers book The Therapeutic Touch    makes it clear that she views Eastern mysticism and the Hindu    concept of a universal energy called prana as the    cornerstone for her therapy. She writes, The idea that prana    might be transferred from one individual to another may not be    so readily apparent to us unless we have gotten into the    practice and literature of hatha yoga, tantric yoga, or the    martial arts of the orient.7  <\/p>\n<p>    Whenever therapeutic touch is called into question, a chorus of    protest  even from some Christian nurses who embrace this    technique (often erroneously equating it with the laying on of    hands in the New Testament)  is a virtual certainty. But    regardless of the benign intentions of its practitioners and    its frequent proclamations of validation by some scientific    studies, this technique represents a florid invasion of Eastern    mysticism into the corridors of Western medicine.  <\/p>\n<p>    The hijacking of prayer. Alternative medicine has    embraced prayer as a healing modality, and in doing so, it has    repeatedly fooled even mature Christians. This has occurred in    two ways. One is exemplified by a 1988 study reported in the    above-noted Time article, Faith and Healing. Nearly    400 patients in the coronary care unit at San Francisco General    Hospital were randomly assigned to two groups. Patients in the    experimental group were prayed for by born-again Christians,    while those in the control group were not. Neither group of    patients knew this was being done. Lo and behold, the    prayed-for group had one-third the number of complications.    Some Christians who become aware of such studies are thrilled:    Finally science is validating what the Bible says about    prayer.  <\/p>\n<p>    But is God Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, an appropriate    subject for a controlled study? Is the potter going to be    subject to a randomized protocol of the clay? Is prayer merely    a form of spiritual technology? This type of experiment    encompasses the worst of both worlds  misdirected science and    presumptuous theology  and indirectly validates the misguided    assumption (prevalent even among many Christians) that prayer    is a cosmic call button, in response to which an omnipotent    butler automatically fulfills human desires.  <\/p>\n<p>    The other fake-out, involving some inventive verbal sleight of    hand, is exemplified by the writings of Larry Dossey, M.D.,    author of the bestselling Healing Words and the more    recent Prayer Is Good Medicine. Dossey is widely    quoted even in reputable Christian publications because of his    encouraging thoughts about the role of prayer in healing. But    his notions of prayer extend well beyond the basic concept of    communication between a human being and the omniscient,    omnipotent, and loving Creator. He views prayer as a nonlocal    extension of human consciousness: Prayer actually enlarges the    reach of human consciousness. It is a way for us to transcend    our physical limitations  to be nonlocal, like    gods.8 It doesnt matter much whether one prays to    Jehovah or to the entire universe, or merely extends positive    thoughts in another persons direction. To him its all prayer    and its all good.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the Bible, however, the importance of worshiping and    honoring the one true God is of paramount concern. It    does matter to whom we pray, and with what attitude.    Furthermore, doing so requires that we have a clear    understanding that God is God, and we arent  which brings us    full circle to the last and most serious problem with    alternative medicine.  <\/p>\n<p>    Health is godhood. As noted at the beginning of this    article, the holistic health movement of 20 years ago embraced    a concept that was in fact deeply embedded in many of its    therapies: Matter and energy are different forms of the same    reality. We are all congealed energy  the same energy that    fills the universe, which some call God. Therefore we are God.    Alternative medicine in the 1990s has in no way distanced    itself from this world view.  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps the most successful proponent of this philosophy in the    United States is Deepak Chopra, M. D., author of numerous best    sellers including Ageless Body, Timeless Mind and    The Way of the Wizard, ubiquitous endorser of other    alternative medicine books, and favorite of PBS viewers and    movie stars. Originally trained in Western-style endocrinology    and once the prime promoter of Maharishi Mahesh Yogis foray    into health care, Chopra is now in command of his own Chopra    Center for Well Being in La Jolla, California.  <\/p>\n<p>    Chopra shouts the virtues of ayurveda from the media    housetops. He promotes the notion that we are all local nodes    in the infinite, universal energy field (call it God if you    wish): All of us are connected to patterns of intelligence    that govern the whole cosmos. Our bodies are part of a    universal body, our minds an aspect of a universal    mind.9 So when the physical body dies, we have    nothing to fear. As he explains in a recent column in    Natural Health, Once our physical body disintegrates,    we go through a period of deep slumber as an astral body.after    which we gradually awaken to experiences that we need to work    out. Eventually we get in touch with our karmic software and    then re-emerge on the physical plane with a higher level of    awareness. With each cycle of life and death we move into a    higher or more refined vibratory frequency of    consciousness.10  <\/p>\n<p>    THE SAME OLD LIE  <\/p>\n<p>    This is, of course, the old reincarnation shuffle, presented to    reassure readers of this alternative health magazine that all    will be well during their next several appearances on earth,    until ultimate health  a final unity with the universal mind     takes place. Obviously, in such a scenario there is no need    for God to have become a man to become a ransom for many, and    no need for repentance, but only a need for each of us to    experience our godhood.  <\/p>\n<p>    These are yet another presentation, in all of their primal    seduction, of the two most basic lies ever told to human    beings: You shall be as gods, and you will not die.    Unfortunately, despite an abundance of optimism and good    intentions, many who are involved in alternative medicine     especially those who claim to detect and manipulate invisible    energies  are unwittingly distorting Gods true identity as    creator and Lord, and our true identity as creatures who need    first to be saved by Him and then to serve Him.Paul    Reisser, M.D., is a family physician in private    practice in Southern California. He is the coauthor of several    books, including New Age Medicine (InterVarsity Press,    1988) and the upcoming Focus on the Family Complete Book of    Baby and Child Care (Tyndale). He is a member of the Focus    on the Family Physicians Resource Council and medical    commentator for the radio broadcast Family News in Focus.  <\/p>\n<p>    NOTES  <\/p>\n<p>    1D. M. Eisenberg, R. C. Kessler, C. Foster, F. E.    Norlock, D. R. Calkins, and T. L. Delbanco, Unconventional    Medicine in the United States: Prevalence, Costs and Patterns    of Use, New England Journal of Medicine 328    (1993): 246-52.2The Medical Advisor: The    Complete Book of Alternative and Conventional Treatment    (Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books, 1996).3James M.    Gordon, Alternative Medicine and the Family Physician,    American Family Physician 54,7 (1996):    2205,124Exploratory Centers for Alternative    Medicine Research, NIH Guide, vol. 23, no. 15 (RFA:    OD-94-004), 15 April 1994.5Ibid.6John E.    Porter, OAM Funding: A Shared Responsibility, Alternative    Therapies in Health and Medicine 1,3 (1995):    80.7 Dolores Krieger, The Therapeutic Touch: How    to Use Your Hands to Help or Heal (Englewood Cliffs, NJ:    Prentice-Hall, 1979), 13.8 Larry Dossey, Prayer    Is Good Medicine (New York: HarperCollins Publishers,    1996), 79.9Emperor of the Soul, Time, 24    June 1996, 68.10Deepak Chopra, Soul Searching,    Natural Health, January\/February 1997, 192.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read this article:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.equip.org\/article\/alternative-medicine\/\" title=\"Alternative Medicine - Christian Research Institute\">Alternative Medicine - Christian Research Institute<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Summary Over the past decade, governmental agencies, medical schools, influential voices in the media, and the public at large have seen a remarkable surge of interest in alternative medicine in the United States. While many therapies focus on unproven but otherwise spiritually neutral approaches (for example, nutritional supplements), others arise from or validate worldviews especially the monism (All is One) of the New Age movement that are hostile to the teachings of Scripture <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/alternative-medicine\/alternative-medicine-christian-research-institute\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187738],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-173410","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-alternative-medicine"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/173410"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=173410"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/173410\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=173410"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=173410"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=173410"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}