A Major Correction in the Mainstream of Christian Theology

By Brian Lowther

I am currently studying the transcript of a speech Ralph Winter gave in 1999 at a gathering of the Presbyterians for Renewal.The Presbyterians for Renewal gave the Winters the 1999 Bell-Mackay Prize recognizing life-long devotion to the mission of Jesus Christ in the world. This prize was named after Nelson Bell a medical missionary and father-in-law to Billy Graham, and John Mackay who was both a former professor to Winter at Princeton and a president of the World Council of Churches. The prize came along with a $5,000 gift.

The main thrust of Winter’s address was to explain why he and Roberta had decided to use the $5,000 gift as seed money for a new endeavor he called the Institute for the Study of the Origins of Disease (ISOD). This was his initial conception of what would later become the Roberta Winter Institute. He described this new project as a “major correction in the mainstream of Christian theology.”

He then described how John Mackay was familiar with both the values and the limitations of all particular streams of Christian belief. This fact served as a segue for him to say that he was not going to be speaking about a major correction in just one stream—such as the Evangelical stream from which he came—but rather, “an urgent Biblical insight lacking in all of them.”

One reason this correction is needed, he explained, is that our whole way of understanding God and the Bible was hammered out by people like Calvin and Luther centuries before we had any knowledge of microscopic forms of life such as disease germs, and that—amazingly—our theological sensitivities have not yet been updated to account for this new knowledge.

I wonder just now if Winter was correct. I’m sure he ran into people who disagreed with him on this topic, though I never heard him say so. But in my experience, when I’ve stood before an audience and said, “Our theology has not been updated to include germ theory,” I get a lot of blank stares.

I’ll venture a guess and say that a lot of the people are thinking, “Wait a second. Can it be true that our theology has just stayed the same since Luther and Calvin, with no regard for the scientific discoveries since then?” Certainly there has been a lot of theological reflection about other scientific discoveries such as Galileo’s heliocentrism, not to mention the raging theological debate about scientific theories such as evolution. Is it possible that microbiology has been untouched by theological reflection?

This notion made me curious so I did just a tiny bit of research and came across a 2004 paper entitled The Bible and Microbiology by Adventist and Biochemist George J. Tavor. In it he lists thirty terms in the Bible with direct links to microbial activity.

So it appears that there is some theological reflection occurring. There must also be plenty of serious pondering happening in groups like the American Scientific Affiliation, but I have yet to spend significant time combing through their archives.

I suppose the issue at hand here is not whether there has been any theological reflection about microbiology, but that we, as Winter put it, “do not commonly accuse Satan for destructive germs,” and that we “have no mission theology for destroying such germs.” When clarified in this way, this sentiment does seem to represent an empty space in the middle of our theology that no one has significantly ventured into yet. 

Posted on April 9, 2012 and filed under First 30.

Links: Does God Cause Disasters? 60 Minutes on the Gates Foundation; TED Talk by Polio Campaign Director; Easter

By Brian Lowther

According to this Christianity Today Poll a majority of evangelicals believe God causes disasters.

Here is a 60 Minutes report on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Though it starts as a personal interest story, with tidbits here and there about their AIDS vaccine and their Malaria eradication plans, it ends dramatically in a Polio Ward in Dehli. Quoting Bill Gates, "We'll take the diseases of the poor, where there is no market, and we'll get the best scientists working on those diseases."

Dr. Bruce Aylward, head of the polio eradication programme at the World Health Organization, gives this TED talk where he lays out the plan to continue the scientific miracle that ended polio in most of the world.

See this blog entry that describes how Easter is the defining moment in God's plan to defeat evil and redeem and restore not just humanity, but all creation. It's short, but very weighty.

Posted on April 5, 2012 and filed under First 30.

Three Types of People in the World

I think there are three types of people in the world. (1) People who believe in God despite all the suffering in the world. (2) People who don’t believe in God because of all the suffering in the world. And (3) People who believe in God, are confused by all the suffering in the world, but have faith that scripture and the revelation of the Holy Spirit will provide better explanations. 

Posted on April 2, 2012 and filed under Top 10, First 30.

Why Did Jesus heal?

One day four prominent evangelicals met for breakfast with a secular journalist. The journalist was writing a story about faith and disease. She posed this question: “Why did Jesus heal? After all, healing people doesn’t get them into heaven. But Christ sure used up a lot of his time healing. Why?”

Posted on March 30, 2012 and filed under Top 10, First 30.

Links: Dr. Foege; Eradicating Ten Tropical Diseases by 2020; George Washington

By Brian Lowther

First check out this four minute interview of Dr. Bill Foege of the Gates Foundation. Dr. Foege is a devout believer and an American epidemiologist who is credited with devising the global strategy that led to the eradication of smallpox. In this interview Dr. Foege discusses lessons learned from the smallpox campaign, and what can be done to eradicate other diseases that have vaccines, such as pneumonia. Among other things, he mentions the Gavi Fund, a public-private global health partnership committed to increasing access to immunization in poor countries.

Next check out this article that details the new WHO campaign to eradicate at least 10 neglected tropical diseases by 2020. WHO Director-General Margaret Chan hopes this plan will finally end “the vast misery caused by these ancient diseases of poverty."

Lastly check out this article from the New England Journal of Medicine, which gives a great summary of infectious disease.  It gets fairly technical in certain places but also provides interesting details about infectious disease in the life of President George Washington. Did you know that he died of an acute infectious disease believed to have been bacterial epiglottitis, was scarred by smallpox, survived multiple debilitating bouts of malaria, suffered wound infections and abscesses, nursed his brother on a tropical island as he died of tuberculosis, and even had an influenza pandemic named after him (the Washington influenza of 1789–1790)? These details about Washington frame a historical perspective of infectious disease and show the remarkable progress that has been made since his day.

Posted on March 29, 2012 and filed under First 30.