Tuesday, June 30, 2009

‘the ethical dimensions of patient care’ -- #47

5. ‘Respect’ as the anchor for assessing patients’ spiritual wellbeing:

‘Respect’ is foundational to effective assessment of patients’ spiritual wellbeing. The root meaning of respect – i.e., ‘to look at again and again’ -- is very vivid. There is very little benefit from attempting to assess a patient’s spiritual centeredness or spiritual distress if the professionals responsible for the patient’s care do not genuinely respect the patient.

It should not be taken for granted that caregivers possess the skill/art of truly respecting their patients. I suspect that many caregivers have been born into and/or raised in fairly conservative religious and social settings. I was. In the religious and social setting into which I was born and in which I was raised, I remember being taught to doubt the motives and to avoid taking seriously the ideas of all others who differed with ‘us’. In time I came to see this instruction as instruction in disrespecting others. Variations on instruction in disrespecting others are implicit, if not explicit, to some degree in virtually all organized constituencies or spheres in our society (including the medical sphere).

‘Respect’ does not mean ‘cater to’. It does mean ‘take very seriously’. This clarification calls attention to the rather complicated process by which the attending physician and medical team work with the patient and family/friends in decision-making.

The following set of questions illustrates the skill/art physicians and other caregivers need in order to be fully informed about and respectful of hospitalized patients who are experiencing spiritual distress:

  1. “What makes for a good day for you?” – with attention given to how ‘good’ is described

  2. “What are your difficult days like?” – with attention given to how ‘difficult’ is described

  3. “Do your good days help you make it through your difficult days?” – with attention given to indications of how firm a ‘yes’ is and whether the good:difficult ratio is diminishing

  4. “Do you more often find yourself waking up in the morning hoping for a good day or hoping not to have a bad day?” -- with attention given to how encouraged or discouraged the patient is

  5. “What do you want me to know as I and the team consider how best to take care of you? – with attention oriented toward acceptable or unacceptable outcomes rather than toward management plan details

  6. “What outcomes do you want to keep fighting for?” – with attention drawn to feasible outcomes

  7. “Are you concerned that your illness will interfere with your participation in any activities or events in the near future that are especially important to you?” – with attention given to what demands these activities or events would make on the patient, to how feasible it is for the patient to participate, to what condition the patient hopes to be in at the time of these activities or events

  8. “Do you have any questions or worries that are hard to talk about with your family or friends?” – with reassurances that such can be discussed with you in complete confidence

  9. “Patients sometimes tell me they find themselves thinking ‘that would be worse than dying’. Have you had this thought?” – with attention given to what such conditions would be

Monday, June 29, 2009

‘the ethical dimensions of patient care’ -- #46

4. Defining/distinguishing ‘spirituality’ and ‘religion’:

I suggest that caregivers begin with this premise – i.e., all individuals are more than the insights made possible through various empirical analyses. In the health care sphere, this premise implies that patients are more than potential or actual illnesses and accidents; professionals, more than highly skilled scientists/technicians. To consider this ‘more’, a vocabulary and a manner of discourse -- in addition to scientific/clinical language -- are required. I have found that most (perhaps all) individuals have, with varying levels of sophistication, such vocabulary and manner of discourse. Such vocabulary and manner of discourse disclose, in the most elemental and inclusive way, each individual’s spirituality. An individual’s spirituality reaches, shapes, and sustains his/her integrity (i.e., wholeness, oneness, character).

The definition of ‘spirituality’ that has worked well over the years for me in opening discussions of this subject with health care professionals is:
‘Spirituality’ has to do with the sort of person a patient is, with the basis upon which her life has integrity and balance. A patient reveals her spiritual identity when she shares her core beliefs and life values and when she explains how she sustains these beliefs and values. Feelings of fear, loneliness, and guilt as well as happiness, contentment, and wonder are windows into a patient’s spirituality.
Some caregivers may question the absence of the word ‘God’ or a reference to a divine transcendence in this definition of spirituality. This definition represents an attempt to define spirituality so as to minimize the risk of eliminating individuals as ‘spiritual’ by definition. I strongly recommend against making either a reference to a divine transcendence or a claim of experience of/with a divine transcendence prerequisite to being considered ‘spiritual’. Instead, the transcendence that, in my judgment, is prerequisite to a fully inclusive approach to spirituality is the human spirit (i.e., the ‘more’ about human beings for which empirical analysis/explanation alone does not account). I am proposing (1) that this transcendent realm is present in/with all patients and (2) that this transcendent realm is very relevant to empirically-driven health care professionals who are expected to assess their patients’ spiritual wellbeing. With this transcendence – i.e., the human spirit -- in common, patients experience and express their spirituality in ways special/peculiar to each one (including but not limited to those who interpret their spirituality in terms of experience of/with a divine transcendence).

The definition of ‘religion’ that has worked well over the years for me in opening discussions such as this one is:
‘Religion’ has to do with the way many patients experience and express their spirituality. They center their lives on worshipful devotion to ‘God’ as a mystery that transcends human beings and the world. They are encouraged in their communities of faith to live this way through the study of sacred writings, the affirmation of core beliefs and life values, the sharing of inspirational stories, and the celebration of special rituals.
Some caregivers may express concern that this definition of religion is decidedly institutional in wording. There are certainly less institutional ways to define/nuance ‘religion’. However, in order to meet the Joint Commission regulations for assessing patients’ spiritual wellbeing and in light of the likely assumptions many caregivers hold re ‘religion’, it seems to me that an institutional definition of religion accomplishes the primary objective of distinguishing religion as a subset of the larger phenomenon of spirituality.

I suspect that a significant number of physicians and their support staff as well as most of their patients are more familiar with the following association of spirituality and religion:

‘Religious’ subdivides into --
‘Spiritual’ (a favorable assessment according to the particular religion’s criteria)
‘Not spiritual’ (an unfavorable assessment according to the particular religion’s criteria)

rather than:

‘Spiritual’ subdivides into --
‘Religious’ (in experience and expression)
‘Non-religious’ (in experience and expression)

The definition of and approach to spirituality followed by a hospital, in a clinic, and by a medical team need to be inclusive of all the patients for whom care is being delivered. Not all patients are religious. Not all patients are affiliated with a particular religion. Not all patients are members of any one sub-division of one particular religion. And crucial non-religious aspects of every patient’s spirituality are missed when ‘being spiritual’ is viewed as interchangeable with or a subset of ‘being religious’. Concerning these missed windows into a patient’s spirituality, here are some examples:

a morning/evening walk
participation in community/civic organizations
a refreshing hobby (e.g., photography or gardening or hiking or . . .)
participation in volunteer community service activities
reminders of life-changing experiences
travel opportunities
inspiring music
the company of a pet
a thought-provoking book
a favorite art gallery or museum
social pleasures (e.g., a glass of wine or a pleasant dinner or a theater outing or a sports event or . . .)
a special friend

Sunday, June 28, 2009

‘the ethical dimensions of patient care’ -- #45

3. Understanding a patient’s spiritual distress:

The root meaning for ‘distress’ has to do with pressure, strain, . . . . To be distressed, therefore, is to be strained, tense, troubled, oppressed, threatened.
‘Spiritual distress’ has to do with the loss of peace, joy, hope, and resolve individuals experience (to varying degrees) when faced with unsettling life circumstances that threaten to overwhelm their core beliefs and values.
Responses to respiratory distress may range from ‘observe closely’ to ‘intensive intervention’. Caregivers are trained to think in terms of the least invasive/intrusive means (i.e., ‘do no harm’) to resolve a patient’s problem. The response to an asthmatic patient who is wheezing should be less intensive than the response to an asthmatic patient who is listless. The intervention should match the level of concern/danger. Caregivers should have an analogous framework by which to assess a patient’s spiritual wellbeing. Visualize a diagram with two paradigms – i.e., ‘spiritually centered’ and ‘spiritually distressed’ – separated by a threshold. Variations of the ‘spiritually centered’ paradigm range from ‘thriving’ to ‘holding’. Variations of the ‘spiritually distressed’ paradigm range from ‘troubled’ to ‘despairing’.

<-- ‘Spiritually Centered’ -------------|-------------‘Spiritually Distressed’----->


<--‘thriving’------------'holding’ ------|------‘troubled’ -----------‘despairing’-->


Caregivers cross a threshold when the paradigm or framework that most fully accounts for their observations about a patient shifts from ‘spiritually centered’ to ‘spiritually distressed’.

Patients who are spiritually centered are capable of participating meaningfully in the decisions about their care and can be counted on to be diligent in fulfilling their responsibilities. Some of these patients may appear to be undisturbed by their condition. They come across as attentive, hopeful, and self-confident. They ask insightful questions, make accurate comments about their condition, and have a sense of humor. Other of these patients may be struggling to maintain their balance and focus. They show signs of being fearful, upset, disoriented, and impatient. As these dispositions strengthen, they are moving toward and may eventually cross the threshold into the ‘spiritually distressed’ paradigm.

Patients who are spiritually distressed complicate the decision-making process and the management of their care. Some of these patients are troubled for inward as well as circumstantial reasons. They are losing confidence, motivation, hope. They may appear despondent or panicky. They may deny the reality of their situation. Other of these patients are despairing. They are immobilized, depressed, apathetic, fatalistic. Their spiritual distress may surpass in urgency their injury or disease. Professionals with special training for such situations (e.g., social workers, psychologists, chaplains, ethicists, . . .) may need to be more central to the medical team’s care for these patients.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

‘the ethical dimensions of patient care’ -- #44

2. Objectives for considering a patient’s spiritual wellbeing:

Given the immediate attention in health care settings to patients’ physical needs, the objectives for integrating attention to spiritual wellbeing into patient care need to be precise and appropriately circumscribed. Hospitals and outpatient clinics do not have purposes parallel to spiritual retreat centers, synagogues, churches, mosques, . . . . What would be objectives for attending to a patient’s spiritual wellbeing that are consistent with the purposes of health care settings? Possible answers might be (1) to insure effective communication, (2) to show respect for and understanding of patient preferences regarding their medical care, (3) to maximize the health benefits associated with patients having the heart of a fighter, (4) to search for factors contributing to a patient’s failing health, (5) . . . .

Attending to a patients’ spiritual wellbeing, then, has to do with minimizing the spiritual disturbance she is experiencing due to being in a hospital and/or due to injury/illness in order to maximize the benefits from her spiritual resources (1) for making decisions about her care and (2) for realizing her full measure of healing. To make the objectives for assessing a patient’s spiritual wellbeing concrete, think in terms of assessing a patient’s centeredness – her balance and her focus. It is crucial that the patient has (or recovers) sufficient balance and focus to communicate well (which requires listening carefully, thinking courageously, and speaking clearly) and to participate appropriately in decisions about her care.

Assisting patients in the recovery of balance and focus is, in my judgment, the primary goal/consequence that makes giving attention to spirituality pertinent to caring for patients. (Fear of) serious illness or injury can challenge/threaten a patient’s balance and focus, thus raising crucial questions about the credibility of the spiritual foundation upon which she has built her life. A hospital is a particularly difficult setting in which to face this possibility. Sheer pain may eclipse a patient’s use of her spiritual resources. By being in a clinic exam room or in a hospital, she is distant from (or even cut off from) the activities and experiences essential to her spirituality. Then again, a patient’s spirituality may be contributing to her loss of balance and focus.

Loss of balance and focus may be a deeply significant process by which a patient’s spirituality is tested and eventually strengthened. How many individuals, before being confronted with (the possibility of) significant injury or disease, have ever taken seriously the existential premise that facing one’s finitude is prerequisite to authentic living? Whatever the fraction who have, the number is far too low for caregivers to assume that patients will retain their balance and focus when faced with (the real possibility of) life-threatening injury or disease. You, thus, may face a dilemma -- (1) on the one hand, you need your patients to be balanced and focused in order for management decisions to flow, (2) while on the other hand, you may have to give some of your patients time/opportunity to experience the spiritually refining/restructuring that may be necessary for them again to be centered.

Friday, June 26, 2009

‘the ethical dimensions of patient care’ -- #43

1. When to consider a patient’s spiritual wellbeing:

For several years, the senior physician at the Appalachia community health center where I worked before coming to Barnes-Jewish Hospital and I met weekly to review his most perplexing and burdening patient encounters. Below is a summary narrative of one such case:
It was a busy Wednesday afternoon. The patient was in her late-20s, had four children, and was now 32-weeks pregnant. The fetus’ fundal height was smaller than expected. She had sought no prenatal care. A colleague asked David to do an ultrasound. The patient was sitting on the edge of the exam table when David and his nurse entered the room. David helped the patient into a supine position. She was covered with a sheet up to her blouse. The nurse turned down the light. As David began the exam, the patient said barely above a whisper, “I have a lot of scars.” David’s first thought – “surgery . . . perhaps a previous c-section”. Once he saw the scars, he thought – “accident . . . perhaps a burn”. He asked the patient, “Did you have a car accident or . . .?” She interrupted and, as she starred at the wall, said quietly, “My mother set me on fire when I was three.” David had no response. It turned out the baby was fine. As we later reflected on the case, David explained to me, “Her life is so far removed from my range of experiences. I didn’t know how to respond. She will never be free of this childhood experience, these scars. If my mother had . . .” His voiced trailed off.
When the patient said “I have a lot of scars”, she was making a figurative as well as a literal observation. Simply put, she was saying, “My story is broken. Can you help me fix it.” (Howard Brody, MD/PhD, is my source for this way to frame a patient’s meaning.)

Imagine you and your medical team are looking down a hallway with patients in most of the rooms. Whether or not the patients in these rooms share similar definitions of or approaches to spirituality is immaterial to each patient. The patients are not together in the hospital as a community. What does matter to each patient ultimately is her own particular spirituality. However, you and your medical team – moving from room to room – need a definition of and an approach to spirituality that prepare you to meaningfully integrate the ‘spiritual’ and the ‘physical’ in caring for each patient. Finding/embracing such a definition of and approach to spirituality is no simple task.

Most hospitals and outpatient clinics exist to respond to patients’ physical needs and, therefore, are centered by scientific/clinical language and perspective. Scientific/clinical language is the ‘first language’ of health care settings. With symptoms, with injuries, with diseases, . . . – patients come (or are brought) anticipating that their physical conditions can be corrected or brought under control. The expansion/deepening of the scientific knowledge base and the introduction of increasingly sophisticated technologies continue to concentrate attention on patients’ physical interests in health care settings.

Patients hope that entering a hospital or a clinic will be no more than a pit stop or, at most, a repair shop delay in their day-to-day routines and life journeys. The circumstances that lead patients to seek medical attention are often benign and/or quickly resolved. In these situations, assessing a patient from a spiritual perspective may remain (by patient choice and/or by caregivers’ choice) on the periphery. By ‘periphery’ I mean that caregivers remain attentive to subtle or incidental indications that, in addition to the patient’s immediate problem, there may be a deeper ‘wound’. Such indications put the caregivers in the tough position of deciding whether they have the time and emotional capacity to determine if indeed there is a deeper ‘wound’. And the circumstances that lead patients to seek medical attention may in fact have to do with a deeper ‘wound’. In these situations, a spiritual language and perspective should be more centrally and intimately present for caregivers as they attend to the patient’s needs.

‘the ethical dimensions of patient care’ -- #42

With entries #42-#48, I want to share most recently revised draft of a Grand Rounds lecture on the subject of assessing patients’ spiritual wellbeing I was invited to deliver in August 2000 for the Obstetrics and Gynecology residents in the Phoenix area. I did not know personally any resident or faculty member in the Phoenix audience. In an attempt to justify why I had been asked to speak on this subject, I began by profiling my experience and training in four ways. First, I explained my three ‘weight-bearing’ positions (as distinguished from an ‘ethicist’ role) on the medical education/practice ‘field’ over the previous eight years – i.e., (1) as project coordinator and evaluator with an intervention project at the University of Miami for 125 cocaine-abusing women who had prematurely delivered cocaine-exposed babies, (2) as residency coordinator and ethics educator while on faculty with the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Louisiana State University in New Orleans, and (3) as a member of the executive leadership team for a non-profit community health center serving medically un(der)insured individuals and families in three poverty-ridden Appalachia counties of eastern Tennessee and Kentucky. Second, I referenced my participating as an adjunct faculty member with Michigan State University’s Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences in the development of a curriculum for addressing spirituality in medical education. I had corresponded for several years with Howard Brody, MD, PhD, at Michigan State as he attempted to keep his course in the medical school curriculum on ‘spirituality and the practice of medicine’ from collapsing into a ‘religion’ course. Third, I recalled my first wife’s fourteen-year struggle against her deterioration and eventual death due to multiple sclerosis. Fourth, I mentioned the impetus for clarifying my thought re ‘spirituality and medicine’ that came from preparing to participate in the creation of an educational video at Vanderbilt for hospital employees re assessing patients’ spiritual needs.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

The ‘scrapheap’ Job -- #77

[August 2000 journal entry]

Is it plausible to see the composer of the story/play Job most thoroughly represented in the Tempter/Accuser? This idea recently crossed my mind as I have moved to the conclusions (1) that the ‘scrapheap’ Job did in essence/spirit curse ‘God’ and (2) that the ‘scrapheap’ Job had lost his rationale/motive for acting altruistically/sacrificially toward others. Concerning #1, it seems to me that this conclusion can only be avoided by arguments based on technicality re the definition of ‘cursing’. Concerning #2, I have not yet found indication in the story/play that the ‘scrapheap’ Job –- either in thought or action – has other than the ‘religious’ T/O paradigm in his rationale/motive for acting in the interests of others. In other words, the Tempter/Accuser was pretty much on target re Job’s character.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The ‘scrapheap’ Job -- #76

[August 2000 journal entry]


Can correlations be seen between the prologue picture of ‘God’ in the story/play Job and pictures of ‘God’ in other texts in Jewish scripture or Christian scripture?

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

The ‘scrapheap’ Job -- #75

[August 2000 journal entry]


What does the ‘scrapheap’ Job’s offering a sacrifice (in the epilogue) for his three close friends suggest for how his post-tragedy reentry should be imagined/portrayed? Is there any reason to interpret the story/play to suggest that others than the three close friends should be thought of as hearing or knowing Job’s remarks from the ‘scrapheap’? Is there any reason to interpret the story/play to suggest that anyone other than the three close friends knows of the sacrifice in their behalf? Is the sacrifice in the epilogue suggesting that the ‘scrapheap’ Job is endorsing the ‘P’(riestly) perception of ‘God’?

Monday, June 22, 2009

The ‘scrapheap’ Job -- #74

[August 2000 journal entry]


Perhaps – in addition to silent presence -- the courage to say “I don’t understand either” and then quickly return the ‘scrapheap’ Job’s questions to him for further comment would be the way the missing character in the story would gently but persistently prompt the ‘scrapheap’ Job. To do so, s/he would have to possess a radically (i.e., to the root) different perspective from the ‘religious’ T/O paradigm that is of ultimate importance to the ‘scrapheap’ Job’s three close friends.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

The ‘scrapheap’ Job -- #73

[August 2000 journal entry]

Is there any indication in the story/play Job that the ‘scrapheap’ Job continues -- after the tragedies had struck him and those immediately around him -- to pursue the altruistic values attributed to him before the tragedies struck? that altruistic values are so rooted in him that he continues to think and react -- during as well as after the tragedies – in a manner consistent with the unique friendship he expects from his three close friends (see 6:14 in the text)? Or does his dependence on the ‘religious’ T/O paradigm turn him inward, take away his incentive/motive for being this sort of person, and leave him inattentive to other sufferers around him? Are all references to his virtues in the past tense? The story/play leaves the impression that the ‘scrapheap’ Job is abandoned and alone except for the painful presence of his three close friends. Is there any indication that his mind’s eye sufficiently clears/focuses to see and identify himself with other sufferers? Or is he stuck in the “There’s been a big mistake! I don’t belong here!” mindset created by his dependence on the ‘religious’ T/O paradigm?

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Fragment -- #151

[September 2000 journal entry]

What anchors a well-lived life? For me, the anchors are (1) a simple/unambiguous statement re who I am and intend to be, (2) the realization that I am finite, (3) a ‘from below’ alignment with and respect for the most vulnerable.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Fragment -- #150

[September 2000 journal entry]

By what criteria should an experience be called ‘tragic’ – e.g., timing? severity of circumstances? quantity/quality of lost potential?

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Fragment -- #149

[July 2000 journal entry]

In a recent conversation with my new artist/theatre friend Dean, he asked me to explain my use of the ‘wilderness’ metaphor. Among the reflections I shared with Dean were – (1) the centrality of silence/solitude, (2) being in natural (rather than artificial) surroundings, (3) the necessity of simplicity, (4) the absence of conventional societal spheres, (5) the necessity to be self-reliant, (6) the dangers, (7) the pressure to concentrate, (8) the importance of imagination, (9) . . . .

‘Wilderness’ experiences may come suddenly/abruptly. They may not. ‘Wilderness’ experiences may be entered willingly. They may not. ‘Wilderness’ experiences may be entered naively. They may not. ‘Wilderness’ experiences may become home. They may not.

For me, the transition from a sense of place within societal spheres to the existential isolation of the ‘wilderness’ was gradual enough to adjust to living without the assumptions and props of the various societal spheres within which I was raised and continued to live until several years into my first wife’s illness. Perhaps this gradualness is the reason I did not think of ‘terror’ (as did Dean) when explaining to him my use of the ‘wilderness’ metaphor. He proposed that I had been a bit naïve in hoping/striving for some radically different direction to be possible within the ‘religious’ sphere. I told him that, looking back, I agree. It took me so long to get past this naiveté for several reasons, not the least of which was my awareness that to act consistently would leave an unbridgeable chasm between me and those closest to me.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Fragment -- #148

[July 2000 journal entry]

What centers/anchors who I am (aspire to be)?
  1. To be(come) the character absent in the story/play Job (i.e., the character who is able to be with the ‘scrapheap’ Job without harming him).
  2. To be the sort of person who can be truly present with the most vulnerable, difficult, troubled, harmed, shunned, displaced.
  3. To consider my most essential/radical ‘community’ experiences to be found in extending gestures of respect toward individuals from whom there is no reason to expect similar gestures in return.
  4. To be intellectually critical and thorough without restrictions re previously held ideas.
  5. To be consistent re who I am (perceived to be) across/within the various situations in which I find myself.
  6. To be consistent in how I participate in the multiple conversations and discussions central to my work and life experience.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Fragment -- #147

[August 2000 journal entry]

The premise of the song The Rose is again being proven true for me – i.e., it is not possible to have the richness of an unconditional relationship without also having the piercing pain that may be caused either
  1. by accident or injury,
  2. by the end of circumstances within which such a relationship has developed, and/or
  3. the eventual end of such a relationship in death.
And the converse of the premise is also being confirmed again for me – i.e., the piercing pain does not outweigh the sacred experience of an unconditional relationship. The circumstances and roles are changing. But the essence remains real and true.

Monday, June 15, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #122

[August 2000 journal entry]

I plan to think in a more penetrating way about Bonhoeffer’s observation in his prison correspondence addressed to Eberhard Bethge that he had become more at ease speaking of ‘God’ with ‘non-religious’ than with ‘religious’ individuals (see the 30 April 1944 prison letter). What was the nature of the ‘God’ language he thought was credible with ‘non-religious’ individuals? How does this observation square with his proposition later in his prison correspondence with Bethge that “God as a working hypothesis in morals, politics, or science has been surmounted and abolished; and the same thing has happened in philosophy and religion” ( see 8 June 1944 and 16 July 1944 prison letters)? Was his ‘God’ language with ‘non-religious’ individuals less vulnerable to idolatrous use?

Sunday, June 14, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #121

[August 2000 journal entry]

It seems to me neither Job’s ‘scrapheap’ thoughts/insights nor Bonhoeffer’s prison ideas should be seen as having had sufficient time to mature when they (including Bonhoeffer had he survived the war) would be facing the pull/pressure to conform associated with reentering societal spheres (including the ‘religious’ sphere).

Saturday, June 13, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #120

[August 2000 journal entry]

A ‘non-religious’ approach to ethics and spirituality is distinguishable from a ‘religious’ approach in that the former requires a ‘from below’ rationale/justification rather than the ‘from above’ appeal to ‘revelation’ characteristic of the ‘religious’ sphere re the core for being human from which ethics and spirituality form. For me, this core has to do with the presence/exercise of such traits as
  1. language, memory, imagination, creativity, . . . ;
  2. finitude, vulnerability, death;
  3. pain and suffering;
  4. ease, comfort, peace.
The ‘non-religious’ path I am experiencing is distinguishable from a ‘religious’ path on each of these four sets of traits. It is characteristic of societal spheres (including but not limited to the ‘religious’ sphere)
  1. to permit such traits as language, memory, imagination, and creativity only to the point that the credibility of the sphere is threatened,
  2. to deny or diminish the reality of finitude, vulnerability, and death,
  3. to consider pain and suffering only to the point that the credibility of the sphere is threatened.

Friday, June 12, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #119

[August 2000 journal entry]

It seems to me that Bonhoeffer’s decision to join the Abwehr circle of conspirators entailed a course of action that implied a ‘without God’ approach to ethics and spirituality in that he joined a direct, definite, and final attempt to end the Hitler-driven tragedy for which neither the ‘religious’ T/O paradigm nor his pre-1939 ‘Confessing Church’ perspective could justify/support.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #118

[July 2000 journal entry]

It seems to me the experiences claimed within the ‘religious’ sphere (e.g., “personal relationship with God”, “knowing God”, “the Lord led me”, . . .) make numerous assumptions that are not (and cannot be) validated/established (e.g., the canon, the implied view of ‘God’, the resulting interpretations of life events, . . .). In other words, it is as if the claimant is saying, “If you grant with me that . . . , then my claim is credible and the experience was real/actual.” By analogy, consider the movie Harvey. Those around Elwood P. Dowd begin to wonder if there is a six-foot rabbit named Harvey and eventually begin to try/long to think so. However, Elwood is convinced he sees and is talking to Harvey. The experience claims made within the ‘religious’ sphere are different from the anchoring assumption upon which my approach to a ‘non-religious’ ethics and spirituality is based – i.e., the ‘more’ about being human.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #117

[July 2000 journal entry]

Having more than twenty years experience within the medical education/practice sphere, I am convinced the pressure I have felt to weigh every word carefully and radically (i.e., to the root) is not found/felt within the ‘religious’ sphere (or within the ‘medical’ sphere to the extent I anticipated). Discourse within the ‘religious’ sphere is neither conducted so as either to include or to be accountable to the criteria/perspectives of ‘secular’ hearers/participants. I find the absence of pressure within the ‘religious’ sphere to weigh every word carefully and radically (i.e., to the root) to be the case even in the minority of churches where there would be some level of concern.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #116

[July 2000 journal entry]

In order to be consistent and complete re the transition to and re retaining direction on a ‘non-religious’ path, I must press all ‘God’ language past an initial/elementary acknowledgment that such language is ‘morphic’ (i.e., anthropo-, socio-, cosmo-) and ‘metaphorical’. Why? (1) The existential pressure to do so has been/is sufficiently penetrating and personal to sustain the effort. (2) The stark and solitary pressure associated with a ‘wilderness’ existence tests every thought with immediate consequences. (3) The pressure to weigh every thought/idea (even every word) in order to have a meaningful presence within the medical education/practice sphere has been constant and strong.

Monday, June 8, 2009

A ‘non-religious’ view of Dietrich Bonhoeffer -- #115

[July 2000 journal entry]

Being ‘non-religious’ re ethics and spirituality is demonstrated, evident, and clarified (in distinction from ‘religious’) at the methodological level. It is, therefore, important to delineate in as much detail as possible ‘non-religious’ and ‘religious’ methodologies.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Seeing ‘Jesus’ from below #37

In the Broadway dramatization of the legend about medieval England (Camelot), King Arthur objects to the logic that ‘might is right’. Instead, he envisions his Camelot as the heart of a new order of chivalry committed to the idea of ‘might for right’. Heralds announce Arthur’s dream and soon the map of England is covered with the royal seal as knights from across land and sea join the Knights of the Round Table. When Lancelot and Queen Guenevere betray Arthur “in their hearts”, he momentarily tilts toward revenge, but recovers, determined not to let passions destroy the dream. However, even as peasants report that their villages no longer need door locks and their children walk free on the roads, insurrection stirs among the knights. Finally forced to set punishment for Lance and Guenevere, Arthur sees the Round Table die. Once Lancelot rescues Guenevere from the stake and flees across the channel to his castle in France, battle is inevitable. The knights thirst again for what Arthur knows to be “that most worthless of causes -- revenge”.

While putting on his armor at dawn on the day of battle, Arthur despondently recalls to himself all they had been through for “the idea” and sees only folly. Then he hears rustling in the nearby brush and calls out, “Who’s there?” A young lad sheepishly steps out, expressing his intent to be a knight. Arthur asks the stowaway how he had decided on this “extinct profession”. The boy enthusiastically responds, “Only by the stories people tell -- might for right . . . right for right . . . justice for all . . . the round table where all knights will sit”. After knighting the boy Sir Tom of Warwick, Arthur -- the gleam in his eyes restored -- orders the boy:

Hide behind the lines till the battle is over. Then return to England alive to grow up and grow old. Ask every person if he has heard the story and tell it strong and clear if he has not. Don’t let it be forgot that once there was a spot for one brief shining moment that was known as Camelot. Now shout it out with love and joy!
To which inspired Tom responds, “Camelot! Camelot!”

The ‘gospel of Jesus’ is more than the memory of an idea; it is an announcement. In the Jewish man ‘Jesus’ of Nazareth, for a fleeting moment light shown uniquely in our midst, the will of ‘God’ was done on earth; mercy and justice merged. ‘Jesus’ sent his disciples into the world to keep alive, by life and thought, his good news of a way of life so extraordinary as to meet injurious aggression by the seemingly foolish and impossible standard of turning the other cheek.

That a trace of what he envisioned may endure is his legacy.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Seeing ‘Jesus’ from below #36

A few days into the Montgomery bus boycott, Martin Luther King, Jr. answered a midnight phone call and heard – “Nigger, we’re tired of you and your mess now. If you ain’t out of town in three days, we’re gonna blow your brains out and blow up your house.” Weary, frustrated, and fearful for his family, King told himself he had to “call on that something and person Daddy used to tell me about, the power that can make a way out of no way.” He discovered that “religion had to become real to me and I had to know God for myself.”

‘Jesus’ does not attempt to tell those who will listen what they should do in every situation involving adversaries. He does inform them that they will be distinguishable in their attitude and behavior toward their enemies. Even if forced to harm an enemy in defense of those for whom they have an overriding obligation, their process of decision-making and their reaction to the painful consequences that befall an enemy will be exceptional.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Seeing ‘Jesus’ from below #35

In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque described the terror, the stench, boredom, the savagery, the courage experienced by a platoon of young German soldiers caught in the brutal trench fighting of the last chaotic days of World War I. In close combat, the longing to survive grips the main character:
We crouch behind every corner, behind every barrier of barbed wire, and hurl heaps of explosives at the foot of the advancing enemy before we run. Crouching like cats we run on, overwhelmed by this wave that bears us along, that fills us with ferocity, turning us into thugs, into murderers, into God only knows what devils; this wave that multiplies our strength with fear and madness and greed of life, seeking and fighting for nothing but our deliverance. If your own father came over with them you would not hesitate to fling a bomb into him.
Away from battle, reflection would slip back in. When guarding Russian prisoners, he pondered how “A word of command has made these silent figures our enemies.” Eventually a veteran of numerous attacks and counterattacks, the German youth was sent out at night to discover how far the enemy position had advanced. He played dead, dagger in hand, in a crater half-filled with water as the enemy rushed by in attack and then back-stepped in retreat. When a French soldier fell into the shell hole, the German soldier stabbed him madly three times. The crossfire kept him trapped with his French adversary through the night. During the daylight hours, he could not avoid his victim. Finally, he bandaged the dying man’s wounds and soaked up dirty water in a handkerchief to relieve his thirst. By mid-morning, the fatigued German soldier started talking to his victim:
I did not want to kill you. But you were only an idea to me before, an abstraction that lived in my mind and called forth its appropriate response. It was that abstraction I stabbed. But now, for the first time, I see you are a man like me. I thought of your hand grenades, of your bayonet, of your rifle; now I see your wife and your life and our fellowship. Why do they never tell us that you are just poor devils like us, that your mothers are just as anxious as ours, and that we have the same fear of death, and the same dying, and the same agony? Forgive me, comrade; how could you be my enemy?
When the French soldier died that afternoon, the German soldier promised, “Today you, tomorrow me. But if I come out of it, I will fight against this that has struck us both down -- from you, taken life -- and from me? -- life also. I promise you. It shall never happen again.”

As he crawled away toward the German line that night, he repeated, “I will fulfill everything I have promised you”. But he knew he merely uttered these words to avert ill luck. He knew he would not do as he promised.

That fleeting moment of insight in the shell hole is the enduring effect ‘Jesus’ can have on anyone who dares to listen (and listen again). To say “yes” is to say “yes” to the unnatural and seemingly foolish resolve to see an enemy as a brother/sister, as a neighbor. ‘Jesus’ had found a reason to respect his enemy. ‘Jesus’ wants no wall between him and any fellow struggler in this life, even an adversary.

As a sign of this extraordinary covenant, ‘Jesus’ first asks, “Can you pray for your enemy? Can you seek God’s blessing for your enemy?” The rabbi in Fiddler on the Roof knew the limits most will tolerate. When asked, “Is there a blessing for the Czar?” the rabbi replies, “May God bless and keep the Czar . . . far away from us.” What familiarity do prayers today show with a Moses who five times interceded for the Pharaoh and the Egyptians who for four centuries had held the descendants of Joseph in slavery? What resonance do prayers today have with the prayer of ‘Jesus’ as he hangs dying on a cross -- “Forgive them for they do not know what they are doing”?

For a second indication of the ‘turn the other cheek’ spirit, ‘Jesus’ asks, “What will you do for your enemies?” The nearest parallel to ‘hate your enemies’ is found in the Dead Sea Scrolls’ instruction to “Love all the children of light and hate all the children of darkness.” Jewish wisdom warns, “Do not gloat when your enemy falls; when he stumbles, do not let your heart rejoice.” Instead, “If your enemy is hungry, give him food to eat; if he is thirsty, give him water to drink.” Rabbis in Jesus’ day did debate two texts in the Torah. One enjoins, “If you come across your enemy’s ox or donkey wandering off, be sure to take it back to him.” The textual parallel reads ‘brother’ rather than ‘enemy’. ‘Jesus’ reinforces the admonition to do good to an enemy. But who is remembered in Jewish scripture or Christian scripture for doing good to an enemy?

  • What about David’s good deeds for troubled King Saul? Perhaps, but David said he acted out of respect for the office of king.

  • What about the Apostle Paul and his co-worker Silas after the earthquake in Philippi? Perhaps, but the shaken jailer hardly remained a threat to them after the earthquake.

Joseph’s care for his brothers? Elisha’s intercession for the captured Arameans? Paul’s assisting the soldiers fighting a storm in the Adriatic Sea? These are perhaps more compelling examples.

Whether Galilean or American, hearers want to know -- What’s the point of swollen cheeks, empty closets, strained backs, closed-out bank accounts? In response, ‘Jesus’ makes no mention of waiting on divine vengeance as did the Psalmists, no mention of converting the foe into a friend by “heaping coals of fire on his head” as Paul did. Why love your enemies? ‘Jesus’ answers – because doing so is inseparable from the sort of person you are (i.e., “sons of the Father in heaven who causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous”).

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Seeing ‘Jesus’ from below #34

Interpreting such jolting statements as “turn the other cheek . . . love your enemies” is especially difficult because we are both the interpreters and the ones addressed by the text we interpret. With such power over a text, we can hardly resist the chance to defuse a text that is ready to explode in our lives. Wary of this temptation, I still must venture a few suggestions about what ‘Jesus’ does not mean:

  • ‘Jesus’ is not expecting us to like everything about our adversaries. The action word agape rather than the more intimate phileo indicates that good deeds -- not feelings -- are enjoined.
  • ‘Jesus’ is not instructing us to overlook evil with a smile or fold our hands in passive resignation. Moral farsightedness -- not cowardice -- led ‘Jesus’ to reject violent retaliation.
  • ‘Jesus’ does not want a slavishly literal application of his illustrations. When struck by a servant of the high priest, ‘Jesus’ himself questions the motive of the attack rather than turn the other cheek.

Far from this text being harmless after all, I hasten to add that ‘Jesus’ is not reversing his insistence that justice is the measuring rod of human integrity/behavior. The prophets ‘Jesus’ so often references related covenant fidelity to economic and political behavior. Victims of oppression, senseless injury, or exploitation in his hearing have no cause to doubt his alignment with/for them. Whip in hand, ‘Jesus’ drives away from the temple those who had turned the Temple into a den of robbers.

What then is ‘Jesus’ saying when he says -- “turn the other cheek . . . love your enemies”? ‘Eye for an eye’ compensation for inflicting injury had been a step forward in legal justice. ‘Tooth for a tooth’ guaranteed proportional compensation for the injured party while restricting unwarranted penalty for the offender. However, ‘Jesus’ leads us even further away from ever-escalating retaliation. He puts restraint in place of an in-kind response to injury or abuse. Listen to his hyperbolic visual aids:
  • “When insulted, facilitate a second blow.”

  • “When sued falsely, ask the plaintiff if he expects your garment as well.”

  • “When bent like a beast of burden with the baggage of a haughty Roman legionnaire, do more than you are commandeered to do.”

  • “When beggars grab for loose change, give expecting no return.”
It is hard to resist ‘hyperbole’ to explain the hard text we are considering. Before sighing with relief as if reassured that ‘Jesus’ is not serious, remember that a hyperbole is an exaggerated comment designed to put in bold print the utter importance of the point being made. The four exaggerated illustrations underline the painful disengagement from self-importance and material possession that finding the ‘blessed’ way of life ‘Jesus’ proposes necessarily entails. Those truly/fully ‘blessed’ know no spirit of retaliation or revenge seeking. Those who bear the imprint of ‘Jesus’ will be liberated from a weak self-image that depends on material things. Thus freed, they will surpass an ‘eye for an eye’/‘tooth for a tooth’ reaction to ridicule or theft. Their criteria for being blessed will not be threatened by insult or material loss. They will not deny in word or deed the vision of ‘Jesus’ for fear of damaged reputation. They will take the victory out of violence by the tactic of restraint. They will stand against injustice without blurring the distinction between the offense of exploitation and the redeemable worth of the exploiter/s. They will appeal to conscience in the midst of power politics. They will not judge an evil deed as an expression of all the offender is. They will be angry, but not sin. They will not find the model for their actions in the behavior of their adversary/ies. They will find the strength and courage to love those who languish in the irresponsible habit of doing unto others only what benefits self-interest. They will break rank with the dehumanizing march of destructive self-promotion.

Am I in that number? Do I want to be . . . really?

Monday, June 1, 2009

Seeing ‘Jesus’ from below #33



[March 2006 journal entry] I wrote the original draft of these reflections for a 1987 public lecture I was invited to deliver on the ‘turn the other cheek . . . love your enemies’ section (5:38-48) in the ‘Sermon on the Mount’ material found in The Gospel of Matthew. I have reworked the original draft (minus the introduction and first section) a couple of times since beginning in 1992. The reference in the first sentence to ‘this text’ is to the ‘turn the other cheek . . . love your enemies’ section in the ‘Sermon on the Mount’ material.
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I confess two reasons why I balk at this text. First, I am a participating member of a society that rewards self-promotion, coercion, power, intimidation; a society with values that promote a weak benevolence at best; a society driven by a ‘survival of the fittest’ economic ethic. Predictably, but lamentably, the roots of self-preservation, retaliation, and revenge continue to taint my attitudes and habits.

Language reveals the heart. How often have we heard/felt/said -- “sweet revenge”, “even the score”, “I’ll get you”, “serves him/her right”, “just wait”, “your time is coming”, “make my day”, . . . ? Have we learned to dehumanize an adversary? Do we draw demonic caricatures of adversaries? Do we start each day poised like a boxer? Do we justify resisting evil with evil of like kind? Do we even relish the kill? Are we not ready for ‘Jesus’ to say, “Don’t fight back”?

Second, I balk at this text because so many collisions in life test me. Every day people who sit by us, live by us, work by us, or drive by us put us on the defensive:

  • a couple walks out of a restaurant to find their car window smashed and possessions stolen;

  • a teenager is taunted by classmates for refusing to participate in their ‘fun’;

  • a local fisherman discovers that tourists have absconded with the prize fishing boat he lent them the night before;

  • a WWII veteran, still offensive to look at after nineteen operations to minimize the damage from being shot in the face, returns to Iwo Jima;

  • a Jewish physician, imprisoned by Soviet authorities for political reasons, has to do emergency surgery on a ruthless prison guard;

  • a grief-stricken mother views the mutilated body of her son, beaten to death in Mississippi for noticing a white girl;

  • a physician considers a counter-suit after three slanderous years weathering a frivolous lawsuit;

  • a husband’s marriage is threatened by a third party who is trying to rekindle in his wife an old romantic flame.
I wonder – does every key in my pocket that opens a lock silently object to the admonition of ‘Jesus’ not to resist an evil person?