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Jesus’ Nazareth Manifesto as a basis for healthcare mission

Autor: Peter Saunders
Fecha: 07.10.2010
Category: Asociación, Ministerio en el Ámbito Laboral, Justicia Social

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Publicado originalmente en inglés

This paper outlines a biblical basis for the agenda and priorities of prihealthcare mission based on Jesus’ Nazareth manifesto of Luke 4:18,19: preaching, healing, deliverance and justice.

Jesus Christ’s dynamic entry into first century Palestine was marked by miraculous healing of many illnesses for which even today there are no known treatments. But along with his compassion to restore health he brought the gospel message of healing of broken relationships - between human beings, between human beings and the planet and most crucially between human beings and God.

Luke, probably the first ever Christian doctor, tells us that Jesus sent his followers out ‘to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick’(Luke 9:2). Right from the beginning ministry to the spirit and ministry to the body have gone hand in hand.

For the last 2,000 years, Christian doctors and nurses, inspired by the example and teaching of Jesus, have been at the forefront of efforts to alleviate human suffering, cure disease, and advance knowledge and understanding.

Many of medicine’s pioneers were men and women who had deep Christian faith: Pare, Pasteur, Lister, Paget, Barnado, Jenner, Simpson, Sydenham, Osler, Scudder, Livingstone and many more.

In the 21st century, whiles some avenues for missionary work are closing, others are opening wide. Christian health professionals, and particularly doctors, have a passport to limited access and creative access countries that those of many other professions do not. But what is their mandate and what should be their priorities in playing the part in fulfilling Jesus’ great commission?

This paper outlines a biblical basis for healthcare mission based on Jesus’ Nazareth manifesto of Luke 4.

We are told that when standing to read in the synagogue on the Sabbath in his home town, he was handed the scroll of the prophet Isaiah and ‘found the place where it is written’:

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour (Luke 4:18,19)

The Jews listening would have recognised this quote from Isaiah 61, which actually ends, ’And the day of vengeance of our God’ (Isaiah 61:1,2). Jesus didn’t read these words but stopped mid-verse presumably to illustrate that redemption and judgment were going to be separated in history. Judgment would be delayed in order to allow people to repent. The Jews didn’t understand God’s mercy in delaying judgment, his love or the scope of his redemptive plan.

The manifesto starts, ’The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me’. Elsewhere Jesus says, ’As the Father has sent me, I am sending you... Receive the Holy Spirit’ (John 20:21,22)

The same Holy Spirit who anointed Christ and empowered the apostles was to be given to every believer. Many Christians fail to understand the power that has been given to them to resist temptation, to obey God and to serve others. The God who does all these things lives in them by his Spirit. The Christian life is still a fight – we still wage war against the flesh, the world and the devil – but we have living in us by his Spirit the very God who created the world, rescued his people from Egypt, empowered the prophets and raised Jesus from the dead!

Palabras clave: healthcare, medicine, preaching, healing, deliverance, justice

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PhContributeBy
Responder Señalizar 0 Pulgares arriba Pulgares abajo Mariusbrand (0)
Sudáfrica

Community farms:

 4 land & wealth redistribution, to evangelise the community: To train, educate, work,  live and have a base from where to launch missionaries into the community. A community farm is where the Christians in the community corporately owns the property. Our corporately finances provide cost of the farm, infrastructure & accommodation for those working on farms.  Investors, invest directly in the crops to secure food for the people. Thousands of jobs will be created where people could be evangelise, reconciled, unity restored and worldviews changed to Biblical. Farms will act as a place of employment, a basic income, a missionary training School, an orphanage and launching pad to send trained missionaries.

Three legs:

 1.   Accommodation and employers Lodges/Hostels on farms with infrastructure:

2.   Education, “Skills” development, Discipleship training & orphanages.

3.   Agricultural projects – investment arm. (Project financing). Outside investors.

 Shammah Foundation: Marius Brand: Cell 082 9210 275, e-mail - mariba@zsd.co.zawww.koevoet4christ.co.za


18.10.2010
PhContributeBy
Responder Señalizar 0 Pulgares arriba Pulgares abajo SFouch (0)
Reino Unido

Thanks for this Peter. I think it is helpful to be reminded of the scale of human spiritual and physical suffering in the world, and that we have the solution to this in the gospel of Jesus - but that we have to be the hands that take that gospel in practice as well as words.

A very topical, contentious, but important point is to get the issue of global terrorism into context. While an issue, it is not THE issue, and while 9/11 was an atrocity, it is but one of many that happen daily, either as a result of war, terrorism, natural disaster, or above all, the grinding day-to-day horror of poverty that such a large proportion of the world live with. The danger is that we in the West see our problems as the only real ones, or the most important.  They are not, we need this bigger perspective.


07.10.2010

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