Friday, July 6, 2007

Is Holistic Non-Christian?

by Dr. Gene Clerkin


This past weekend, my colleagues, Jennifer and Brenton, and I headed down to the Alive Expo with a box full of business cards, flyers, brochures and signs in tow. We were to spend the weekend stationed at our booth imparting information about holistic health and wellness, and, of course, sharing information about the Center for Holistic Health.

Even though the hours of the Expo were long, I felt extremely energized throughout the weekend. Teaching people simple concepts about how they can improve the quality of their lives really lights me up. It's also very interesting to hear the different perspectives, ideas and beliefs that the general public has about holistic health and wellness. I feel compelled to share a few stories to illustrate how individuals perceive the intersection of their religious views and wellness, and to ultimately illustrate how the pursuit of wellness and faith do not pose conflicts in thought or practice.

I was sharing the concept of getting more in tune with the wisdom of the body with a woman who had some health challenges. When I asked her what she thought about what I had said, she replied that she gets her healing from scripture. She felt that if she was more diligent about reading her scripture it would help her transcend her health challenges. Out of curiosity, I had to ask, “Why are you attending a health and wellness expo, if you believe that you are to get that from scripture?”

Several years ago, I had a woman walk into the office looking for a quick adjustment to get her out of pain. Apparently, she had been receiving quick fixes for years. I agreed to take a look and see what I could do. This poor woman had the most rigid spine I had ever felt. I couldn't even get her to relax enough to turn her head. When I suggested using focused breath to try and introduce some ease into her system, she became very concerned that I was teaching a “new age” concept and that it would conflict with her religious views.

Why do we think that using breath and movement is evil while putting synthetic poisons in our bodies is as natural as can be? There is something wrong with this picture.

Just the other day I had a client call to say she was going to discontinue care because she was a Christian. She had come in for a couple of visits and was actually experiencing a change in her body. Since she just couldn't understand how such a light touch could cause these changes, she became suspect of it, so I inquired as to what exactly didn't jive with her religious beliefs.

Her concern was that the healing energy used in Network Spinal Analysis might be coming from an evil force. While Network practitioners do not actually use outside healing energy, their system does assist the brain in locating tension, or energy that has been stored in the body. When this tension is released, one can experience the feeling of energy flowing through the body. It's not good energy, or evil energy, its just energy that's no longer stuck.

I was raised in a Christian faith and have had the opportunity to study teachings of Jesus. Never have I come across any Christian teachings that conflict with concepts of holistic health and wellness. In fact, the concepts are really the same. They are actually just concepts of life, and they would work no matter what your religion or belief systems are.

It seems sad to me that people would deny themselves an opportunity to experience more ease and peace in their lives because they are fearful of something with which they are unfamiliar. Each time I've encountered this type of resistance, I've asked the person where s/he perceives there is a conflict, and s/he is unable to come up with anything that's truly non-Christian or against the teachings of any other religion. In conversations, I've come to realize that people are just expressing fear based upon someone else having told them that holistic is non-Christian.

Since love is basically the opposite of fear, and God is about love, it's ironic that fear would stand in the way of people learning about methods to increase their level of wellness and enhance their experience of life. It's simply not logical that a religion would want anyone to be denied strategies to help them get out of a stressed physiology, especially when doing so would actually help them to have a more fully developed experience God.

5 comments:

Unknown said...

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Dr. Gene Clerkin said...

Thanks for the comment Comfy. "At the risk of sounding like a spammer"? If it looks like a duck and sounds like a duck... that's ok though.

I might, however, call it natural pain relief instead of holistic pain relief.

Good luck with your squid pillows.

Anonymous said...

New Age Medicine is not founded upon Christian beliefs & Christians should flee from it. Do your research!!!

Dr. Gene Clerkin said...

Hello Anonymous,

Who said anything about doing "New Age Medicine"? Not me.
However, being open minded is definitely an aspect of holistic health and raising one's consciousness which may in fact be a non-christian thing.

Anonymous said...

I am taking NSA myself and while the SRI modality of the treatments are cyclical and could be reminiscent of new-age sentiments, I see nothing wrong with the system I am using. I am only worried about the effects it could have on my menstrual cycle since I am TTC and there is so much pressure on both of us to preserve the family line. I am hoping for medical science to come along and reverse menopause in the future when I do reach that age so I can have more children and peace of mind. It is a bit rich coming from the church to call something that helps me evil and can you not pray to God during the SRI exercises when the church itself endorses things that the Bible prohibits such as eating pork and shellfish. Honestly, I would like someone with a voice of reason to talk to me and give me advice on what to do here. I don't care what the church says. What does the BIBLE say about this method? The church screws up on everything, even their calendar is wrong and their tithing system feeds the institution when it was merely a land tax for the land of Israel to support the needy and rabbis supported themselves with a trade for centuries. I can take their advice with a pinch of salt.