Evidence of Church Unity for Global Health

Q4 Medicine
H. Larson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This issue completes eight years of publishing the Christian Journal for Global Health.  At the beginning hardly anyone would have predicted that global health would become first in the minds of the majority of the earth’s population or that an infectious calamity would become the focus of global attention.  In fact, health in a global sense is testimony to the unity of the human race at a time when fractionation is a strategy for political hegemony.  The Christian understanding of humans, made in the image of God and called to steward the creation, is a fundamental basis for this unity. The editors see the journal as a way to join this understanding with a vision of health for all nations. The journal editors have issued a call for papers on Vaccinations and Christian Social Responsibility which we anticipate publishing early in 2022.  As a foretaste of that, this end-of-year issue has a commentary by Professor Steffen Flessa on Vaccination Against COVID-19 as a Christian Duty? A Risk-Analytic Approach  He analyzes the decision-making process for getting vaccinated, a process that involves probabilities and risk-analysis, as well as consideration of the greater good.  Two original research articles are included in this issue.  Jorge de Andres-Sanchez with his colleagues from Universitat Rovira i Virgili in Catalonia, Spain, find that belonging to a religious community together with an intact family structure afford protection against unhealthy tobacco and cannabis use.  Syeda Saniya Zehra and Elizabeth Schwaiger from Forman Christian College in Lahore, Pakistan, provide evidence of a unique advantages of attachment to God and a collectivist family culture on reducing perceived stress, among Christians who are a minority of the country’s population. Personal travel gives me opportunity for access to Wi-Fi networks in homes of family and friends and thus acquaintance with creative SSID labels.  One of the more meaningful ones was “readmorebooks”.  In pursuance of that advice, this issue has two book reviews that we think deserve the attention of readers.  The first is a review by Arnold Gorske of a two-volume handbook entitled Health Promoting Churches, published by the World Council of Churches and authored and edited by Dr. Mwai Makoka.  As Dr. Gorske comments, these books, “have more lifesaving, health and healing potential than anything else I have read,” except the Bible.  The second is Dr. William Newbrander’s review of All Creation Groans:  Toward a Theology of Disease and Global Health, edited by Daniel O’Neill and Beth Snodderly.  The essays included in this book create a comprehensive multidisciplinary survey of the theological grounds for church involvement in global health and the spiritual and behavioral aspects of disease origins. Dr. Newbrander’s review provides a helpful introduction to these important and often unexplored issues.  The editors are pleased to receive poetry submissions from time to time and we are grateful for our poetry reviewer to help us evaluate them.  I Will Never See a Full Moon the Same is a moving reflection on the death of a young patient, but death with a perspective of hope. As of the middle of this December, the coronavirus pandemic is still very much with us with surges in case numbers in a variety of countries, and with several variant strains.  The deployment of vaccines, their future development and the means to expedite their uptake around the world continue to be fertile subjects for research, policy, ethics and theology.  We urge and look forward to publishing other submissions in response to this call for papers and other subject early in the new year.  The glory the angels revealed to the shepherds at the birth of Christ, He has given to His people, whom He desires to be unified to reflect that glory (John 17:22).  For those strengthened by beholding each other’s work and faith, may your communities experience a very merry Christmas and peaceful new year.
教会团结促进全球健康的证据
本期完成了《基督教全球健康杂志》八年的出版工作。一开始,几乎没有人会预测到全球健康将成为地球上大多数人口心目中的第一位,或者传染病灾难将成为全球关注的焦点。事实上,全球意义上的健康证明了在分裂是政治霸权战略的时代,人类的团结。基督教对人类的理解,是按照上帝的形象建立的,并被召唤来管理创造,是这种团结的基本基础。编辑们将该杂志视为一种将这种理解与所有国家的健康愿景结合起来的方式。期刊编辑们呼吁撰写关于疫苗接种和基督教社会责任的论文,我们预计将于2022年初发表。作为对这一点的预测,这期年终刊有Steffen Flessa教授关于接种新冠肺炎疫苗是基督教的职责的评论?风险分析方法他分析接种疫苗的决策过程,这个过程涉及概率和风险分析,以及对更大利益的考虑。本期收录了两篇原创研究文章。Jorge de Andres Sanchez和他在西班牙加泰罗尼亚Rovira i Virgili大学的同事们发现,属于一个宗教社区,加上完整的家庭结构,可以防止不健康的烟草和大麻使用。巴基斯坦拉合尔福尔曼基督教学院的Syeda Saniya Zehra和Elizabeth Schwaiger提供了证据,证明在该国人口中占少数的基督徒中,依恋上帝和集体主义家庭文化在减少感知压力方面具有独特优势。个人旅行让我有机会在家人和朋友的家中访问Wi-Fi网络,从而熟悉富有创意的SSID标签。其中一个更有意义的是“自述书”。根据这一建议,本期有两篇书评,我们认为值得读者关注。第一份是Arnold Gorske对世界教会理事会出版、Mwai Makoka博士撰写和编辑的一本名为《促进健康教会》的两卷本手册的评论。正如戈尔斯克博士所评论的,除了《圣经》,这些书“比我读过的任何其他书都更有拯救生命、健康和治愈的潜力”。第二本是William Newbrander博士对Daniel O'Neill和Beth Snodderly编辑的《所有创造Groans:走向疾病与全球健康神学》的评论。本书中的文章对教会参与全球健康的神学基础以及疾病起源的精神和行为方面进行了全面的多学科调查。Newbrander博士的评论为这些重要且经常未被探索的问题提供了有益的介绍。编辑们很高兴不时收到诗歌投稿,我们感谢我们的诗歌评论家帮助我们对其进行评估。《我再也见不到满月了》是对一位年轻患者死亡的感人反思,但死亡带有希望的视角。截至今年12月中旬,冠状病毒大流行仍在我们身边,许多国家的病例数激增,并出现了几种变异毒株。疫苗的部署、未来的发展以及在世界各地加快疫苗接种的手段,仍然是研究、政策、伦理和神学的丰富主题。我们敦促并期待在新的一年早些时候发表其他意见书,以回应这一论文和其他主题的呼吁。天使在基督诞生时向牧羊人展示的荣耀,是他赋予他的子民的,他希望他们团结起来,以反映这种荣耀(约翰福音17:22)。对于那些因看到彼此的工作和信仰而变得坚强的人,愿你们的社区经历一个非常快乐的圣诞节和和平的新年。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Christian Journal for Global Health
Christian Journal for Global Health Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
8 weeks
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