Illness, the Problem of Evil, and the Analogical Structure of Healing: On the Difference Christianity Makes in Bioethics

Christian Bioethics 1 (1):102-120 (1995)
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Abstract

A Christian bioethic needs to place the medical approach to sickness, suffering, and death within the context of redemption and the renewal of humanity in the image of God. This can be done by accounting for the way in which the disruptions of the human life-world that attend the illness experience manifest the structure of the problem of evil and point toward an answer that transcends the individual and the medical community. Further, the disease-oriented approach to medicine, when understood in the context of the analogia entis, can be taken as an analogy for a deeper spiritual healing, and can thus become a vehicle through which one can minister to the disruptions of a patient's life-world. An appreciation of the analogical structure of healing provides the basis for a Christian ethic of care

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George Khushf
University of South Carolina

Citations of this work

Importance of Begging Earnestly.Christopher Tollefsen - 2000 - Christian Bioethics 6 (3):267-280.
Non-Ecumenical Ecumenism.Christopher Tollefsen - 1999 - Christian Bioethics 5 (3):238-245.
Christian Bioethics and the Church's Political Worship.Robert Song - 2005 - Christian Bioethics 11 (3):333-348.

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