Holistic Health Care and Spiritual Self-Presence

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2016, Vol 7, Issue 1

Abstract

In this paper, I present evidence of the developing interest in spirituality in healthcare and treat three questions it raises: (1) what makes a person and a life spiritual so that a strictly medical model of health and care won’t do?; (2) what is the scope of healthcare?; and (3) what makes care in healthcare ‘spiritual’ precisely? In addressing the first question I attend to the etymological roots of “spiritual” and articulate how the notion of “spiritual” in Pauline biblical texts is being retrieved today in spirituality studies and research but in a way, also, that does not attach it strictly to religious affiliation. In addressing the second question, I highlight the holistic meaning of healthcare by first attending to the etymological roots of health. I then show that adequate healthcare also requires reflection on the notion of the good and illustrate what I mean by interpreting a biblical narrative. In addressing the third question, I draw on lived experience to illustrate how care-providers may need enhanced religious literacy to read and respond to care-seekers irrespective of their own personal beliefs. However, I also argue that what makes care distinctively spiritual in the first instance has less to do with the subject matter of the care—the what of the care—and more to do with how carers act, with, that is, the self-presence of the carers.

Authors and Affiliations

Michael O’Sullivan

Keywords

Related Articles

The Virgin Mary in the Early Modern Italian Writings of Vittoria Colonna, Lucrezia Marinella, and Eleonora Montalvo

The Marian writings of the Roman poet Vittoria Colonna (1490/92-1547), the Venetian polemicist Lucrezia Marinella (1579–1653)1, and the Florentine educator Eleonora Montalvo (1602–1659) present an accessible model of t...

Will God Make Me Rich? An Investigation into the Relationship between Membership in Charismatic Churches, Wealth, and Women’s Empowerment in Ghana

In recent decades, there has been an explosion in the growth of Pentecostal churches in Ghana, many of which preach that belief in God will translate into material wealth for both men and women. While some have argued...

Tantric Yoga in the Markan ¯ . d. eya Puran ¯ . a of Hinduism and the Jñan ¯ arn ¯ . ava of Jainism

This paper explores the Markan. d. eya Pura¯n. a, one of the earliest expositions of what become Tantric themes in Hinduism, and the Jñan ¯ ar ¯ n. ava, which provides an early template for the practice of Jaina Tantra...

Returning Home to the Advaitic Self: Svam ¯ ¯ ı Rama T ¯ ¯ ırtha and His American Audiences

A recurring theme in the Advaita Vedanta traditions is the necessity of empirical purification ¯ through means such as the cultivation of virtues, the study of the Vedas, and so on, even though the transcendental self...

Transcontextual Narratives of Inclusion: Mediating Feminist and Anti-Feminist Rhetoric

In seeking a path to mediating feminist and anti-feminist narratives, one must begin with a framework of the method of narrative analysis being used. Using the works of such thinkers as Paul Ricoeur and Richard Kearney...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25507
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7010010
  • Views 335
  • Downloads 22

How To Cite

Michael O’Sullivan (2016). Holistic Health Care and Spiritual Self-Presence. Religions, 7(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25507