Rev. Brian M. Abshire, Ph.D.
Feb. 18, 2002
It
is amazing that so many
well-read, highly educated,
obviously intelligent and
articulate Christians can
be so easily scammed by charlatans,
quacks and con-men when it
comes to health issues. One
might think that the critical
thinking skills so often used
to expose theological error
would have some crossover
value in other areas of life.
Yet, nevertheless, hardly
a month goes by without some
friend, colleague, or reader
sending me the latest "holistic," or "naturopathic" treatment.
They will GUARANTEE these "alternative" treatments
will ease my aches, clear
up my allergies, restore my
vigor, increase my intelligence,
remove my warts, trim my waistline,
restore the hair on the crown
of my head and turn me into
a regular stud-muffin in the
bedroom.
Sadly, when I ask these obviously
sincere people how they KNOW
that this herb, vitamin, hormone,
or whatever will do what it
purports to do, they will
offer me glowing testimonials
from various people that THIS
treatment really works! Even
more sadly, six months or
a year later, these same friends
will be touting a NEW panacea
and this time, they KNOW it
really, REALLY works. And
the cycle goes on ad infinitum.
Perhaps these intelligent,
sincere and otherwise respectable
people do not understand,
nor perhaps they have never
dealt with the implications
of epistemology on alternative
medicine. Epistemology is
that aspect of philosophy
that concerns how we know,
what we know.
The
genius of Van Til, (and
his greatest student, the
late, great Dr. Bahnsen) was
to demonstrate that we can
know, only because God knows.
Christian Theism is true,
because it is the only worldview
that is consistent and coherent
within itself. Every other
worldview argues either inconsistently
from its own presuppositions,
or makes arbitrary statements
that cannot be verified. For
example, have you ever argued
with a pagan who insisted, "There
are no absolutes"? But
wait a minute; he just made
an absolute statement! Therefore,
he is inconsistent with his
own presuppositions. Almost
invariably when you point
out this logical contradiction,
the pagan will turn around
and say, "Well, there
are no absolutes EXCEPT the
statement, 'there are no absolutes!" But
now he is just being arbitrary!
How does he know there are
no absolutes, except this
one? How does he know anything?
That is the quandary of the
man without God.
The Christian however, has
as his most basic presuppositions,
the reality of the Living
Triune God who spoke authoritatively
in His Word the Bible. We
can know true things, because
God Himself, who cannot lie,
told us those things, in Scripture.
But
although Scripture is true,
it is not exhaustive. Because
God created the world as
a reflection of His own
immutable nature, there
are things we can learn
by studying that creation.
This knowledge is not inspired,
and cannot turn over the
revelation of God Himself.
But on the other hand, we
can learn certain "truths" from
a systematic study of the
way that God has ordained
His creation to work.
The scientific method is
uniquely a product of a Christian
theistic worldview. We believe
that God created all things,
and since He is a God of order,
and not chaos, a systematic
study of the way His providence
governs creation can give
us true knowledge about that
creation. The materialist,
naturalist and scientist can
discover true things about
God's creation only by thinking
inconsistently with their
own presuppositions about
the ultimate nature of reality.
Now,
think with me for a moment;
what we think we "know" about
creation MAY be true, or false,
depending upon the accuracy
of our observations. For example,
two hundred years ago, spontaneous
generation of life was widely
assumed in the scientific
community. It was obvious;
leave some meat out and in
a few days, maggots would
be all through it. Obviously,
life spontaneously came from
non-life. This was the universal
consensus till one bright
boy wondered what would happen
if he kept the meat separate
from flies and other contaminants.
Surprise, surprise; when flies
cannot get to meat, no maggots.
Today, the only time one ever
hears of spontaneous generation
is when evolutionists need
to fall back on it as an explanation
of the origins of life. But
everywhere else, we now KNOW
that life must proceed from
life.
Therefore, sincere men may
study the creation, and arrive
at incorrect conclusions.
The scientific method is an
attempt to make our observations
more rigorous by clarifying
just exactly what it is we
are studying. We then propose
certain tests to determine
if what we think we know can
be actually verified by direct
repeatable observations.
Now, what has all this to
do with alternative medicine?
Well, first, let me give a
caveat; I am no friend of
modern, American technological
medicine. I believe (we'll
talk about the importance
of belief in a moment) that
Westerners have been sold
a suspect bill of goods. I
would argue that modern medicine
doesn't KNOW anywhere near
what they THINK they know
about diseases and cures.
Yet,
even so, Western medicine
is sometimes wonderfully effective
because it is based on the
scientific method, itself
possible only with Christian
presuppositions. As doctors
and researchers study diseases,
they develop theories, test
them with various drugs and
therapies, and use good statistical
analysis to determine whether
the treatment really does "cure" the
disease or not. Over time,
as these studies are replicated
and clinical trials conducted,
they develop a body of information
that appears to meet the rigorous
standards of controlled observation.
For example, say a doctor
postulates that if a person's
body does not produce a particular
hormone, all sorts of nasty
things will happen. The doctor
can then TEST that hypothesis
by giving a number of people
with the disease a hormone
replacement. If the sample
size is large enough, he can
then see if a statistically
significant number of people
improve. If they do, he may
be onto something.
But for the experiment to
be verified, there needs to
be a control sample of people
with the same disease who
did NOT get the same treatment.
Then, THEIR recovery rate
needs to be compared with
the group that got the medicine
(yes, yes, I know, big ethical
problems here, and it is a
little more complicated than
the way I explained it, but
this is just an illustration).
For sometimes, NO treatment
will give the same results
as SOME treatment.
Medical
science is complex, the
experiments difficult and
the nuances often hard to
distinguish. Sometimes,
they do not get it right.
But over time, there does
grow a body of knowledge that
can be verified by direct,
sustained and repeatable observations.
However, all the above is
NOT true of the claims of
alternative medicine. As noted
earlier, when people are asked "how
do you KNOW?' your "cure" works,
almost universally, their
only evidence is testimonials
of various people (including
themselves) of how well the
treatment worked for them.
OK,
but how do you know it was
the TREATMENT that made
the difference? Though I
am neither a physician,
nor a research scientist
(statistics makes my head
hurt) I do happen to "know" that within
any population group with
certain symptoms, if left
alone, some people will get
better, some people will get
worse and some people will
stay the same. Furthermore,
as someone trained in psychology
and sociology, I also "know" the
very powerful effects that
a placebo can have; if someone
THINKS something is doing
him good, it often WILL do
him some good, even if the
treatment is inert in and
of itself. Thus, if you give
a bunch of sick people snake
oil, and 30% get better, how
do you determine whether the
snake oil actually made them
better, as opposed to spontaneous
remission, the placebo effect
or some other factor you never
even considered? And sadly,
it is just this kind or rigorous
research that is often missing
in alternative medicine. Where
are the sustained, systematic
studies that demonstrate that
their herbs, vitamins, massages,
aromatherapy, etc., actually
work? And if they do not exist,
you do not KNOW anything,
you are just hoping.
Let
me see if I can put it another
way. Say I make a claim
that I have a wonderful
herb growing on my five
acres of land that will
treat all sorts of problems.
If you send me a hundred
dollars, I will send you
a year's supply of this
wonderful herb (maybe I
will put an ad in the Chalcedon
Report and call my miracle
herb "Theonomine" or
something). Now with the herb,
I may also say something like, "This
herb will only work if you
reduce the amount of sugar
and refined carbohydrates
in your diet, eat more fresh
vegetables and walk at least
fifteen minutes a day. If
you take my herb and do these
things, most of your symptoms
will disappear, you'll feel
better, have more energy,
and be better able to resist
colds, flues and other diseases.
I guarantee it!"
Now
if a thousand people respond
to my ad, two things are
going to happen; first,
I am going to be very happy
making an extra hundred thousand
dollars this year. Secondly,
since I "know" that
in any given population some
people get better, some get
worse, and some stay the same,
a number of people WILL get
better even if they had done
nothing. If say only 30% of
the people who buy my herb
get better, I can claim a
30% cure rate! But it is also
easy to ignore all the people
who didn't get better, and
fill my web page (WWW.Thereisoneborneveryminute.com)
with glowing testimonies.
After all, if you read 300
testimonials from people about
my marvelous herb, wouldn't
YOU be likely to believe the
claims?
Furthermore,
if you do take my herb and
follow my advice, guess
what? You WILL feel better!
You see I also happen to "know" that
many diseases and symptoms
are caused by over-eating,
under-exercising and not
dealing properly with stress.
So, if you follow my instructions
to eat better, and exercise
just a little, you will
feel better, lose weight
and reduce the biochemical
problems caused by stress.
But did my herb actually
make anyone better? No, probably
not. But I can claim it did,
point proudly to all the glowing
testimonials on my web page
and more people will buy it.
A few of them will get better
and THEY will attribute it
to my herb, further building
my reputation. After a while,
I could start my own school
of alternative medicine, become
a health guru and buy that
island in the Pacific!
Do you see the danger here?
Again and again, the validity
of alternative medicine rests
not on objective, verifiable
and statistically significant
experiments but on personal
testimonials; testimonials
that prove NOTHING. A person
who insists that he knows
something JUST by quoting
anecdotes is inherently and
implicitly making a religious
statement! For if there are
two ways of knowing, revelation
which is received by faith,
and knowledge obtained by
sustained and systematic observation
of the creation, if a man
cannot point to rigorous research
that verifies his opinion,
he does not KNOW anything,
only BELIEVES something.
His
belief may be right, or
it may be wrong. But it
is a religious statement
and needs to be recognized
as such. And since God is
the God of truth, we must
be very careful in making
statements that says something
like "such
and such is TRUE" if
we do not in fact KNOW that
it is true.
Why
then do so many sincere
Christians make these kinds
of fundamental errors in their
thinking about medicine? Well,
let me offer several possible
explanations. First, in my
experience, people who are
drawn to Christian Reconstruction
tend to be "scholarly" rather
than "scientific." They
like to read books on history,
theology, economics, etc.,
none of which require a working
knowledge of statistics to
appreciate. If they have any
training in the scientific
method of observation, it
came about during one or two
college classes, conveniently
isolated from every other
discipline. Few people take
statistics for the "fun" of
it and those who do seldom
relate it to philosophy. Thus,
in one sense, we have all
been victimized by the humanists "multi-versity" system,
which offers no over-arching
truth that affects every area
of life.
Secondly,
to be Theonomic and Reconstructionist
means that someone has had
to think "outside
the box." Theonomy requires
a person whose predisposition
is to go against current cultural
trends. Mainstream evangelicalism
hates the Law of God, has
a pessimistic eschatology
and no real answers for cultural
and social issues. It takes
a certain kind of person,
willing and able to think
in a certain way to resist
the pressure to conform to
cultural norms. Therefore,
people who adopt some form
of Reconstruction are more
likely to distrust the establishment
(in fact, are there not a
lot of people who are drawn
to Reconstruction just because
it is anti-establishment?)
and willing to look at other
alternatives. Since modern
medicine IS the flagship of
humanism, many Christians
believe, (rightly so) that
there must be a more "Christian" way
to do medicine. Some of the
alternative types of medicine,
at least on the presuppositional
level, appear to be valid
forms of study. Many Christians
therefore rightly say, "There
must be a better way!"
And
there may well be. But before
we jump on the latest diet,
herbal, hormonal remedy
fad that comes along, let
us all be a little more skeptical
and analytical in our thinking.
Let us not make claims that
have not been verified. Let
us learn to love the TRUTH,
and not simply hearsay. And
if YOU have some long-standing
medical problem that hasn't
responded to traditional medicine,
I have this wonderful herb
in my back yard
The Rev. Brian M. Abshire, (B. A., M. A., Th.M., Ph.D.) is an old friend of Chalcedon
who settled in Spokane to pastor Faith-PCA. He has been married to Elaine for
24 years and has six children. He can be contacted at abshire@qwest.net.
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