Physicians
by Ellen White
AS THEY STRIVE TO KNOW AND FOLLOW GOD'S WILL, NOT A FEW TODAY ARE MAKING
INQUIRIES SIMILAR TO ONE EXPRESSED IN THE WORDS OF A MEDICAL STUDENT WHO IN 1893
WROTE TO MRS. WHITE TO ASK HER ABOUT THE USE OF DRUGS. IN HIS LETTER HE SAID:
"FROM OUR STUDY OF THE TESTIMONIES AND THE LITTLE WORK, WE CAN SEE THAT THE
LORD IS STRONGLY OPPOSED TO THE USE OF DRUGS IN OUR MEDICAL WORK. . . .SEVERAL
OF THE STUDENTS ARE IN DOUBT AS TO THE MEANING OF THE WORD 'DRUG' AS MENTIONED
IN HOW TO LIVE. DOES IT REFER ONLY TO THE STRONGER MEDICINES AS MERCURY,
STRYCHNINE, ARSENIC, AND SUCH POISONS, THE THINGS WE MEDICAL STUDENTS CALL
'DRUGS,' OR DOES IT ALSO INCLUDE THE SIMPLER REMEDIES, AS POTASSIUM, IODINE,
SQUILLS, ETC.? WE KNOW THAT OUR SUCCESS WILL BE PROPORTIONATE TO OUR ADHERENCE
TO GOD'S METHODS. FOR THIS REASON I HAVE ASKED THE ABOVE QUESTION."
Your questions, I will say, are answered largely, if not definitely, in how
to live. Drug poisons mean the articles which you have mentioned. The simpler
remedies are less harmful in proportion to their simplicity; but in very many
cases these are used when not at all necessary. There are simple herbs and roots
that every family may use for themselves and need not call a physician any
sooner than they would call a lawyer. I do not think that I can give you any
definite line of medicines compounded and dealt out by doctors, that are
perfectly harmless. And yet it would not be wisdom to engage in controversy over
this subject.
The practitioners are very much in earnest in using their dangerous
concoctions, and I am decidedly opposed to resorting to such things. They never
cure; they may change the difficulty to create a worse one. Many of those who
practice the prescribing of drugs, would not take the same or give them to their
children. If they have an intelligent knowledge of the human body, if they
understand the delicate, wonderful human machinery, they must know that we are
fearfully and wonderfully made, and that not a particle of these strong drugs
should be introduced into this human living organism.
As the matter was laid open before me, and the sad burden of the result of
drug medication, the light was given me that Seventh-day Adventists should
establish health institutions discarding all these health-destroying inventions,
and physicians should treat the sick upon hygienic principles. The great burden
should be to have well-trained nurses, and well-trained medical practitioners to
educate "precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little and
there a little" (Isa. 28:10).
Train the people to correct habits and healthful practices, remembering that
an ounce of preventive is of more value than a pound of cure. Lectures and
studies in this line will prove of the highest value.--Letter 17a, 1893. 2SM
278,279
The physician needs more than human wisdom and power that he may know how to
minister to the many perplexing cases of disease of the mind and heart with
which he is called to deal. If he is ignorant of the power of divine grace, he
cannot help the afflicted one, but will aggravate the difficulty; but if he has
a firm hold upon God, he will be able to help the diseased, distracted mind. 5T
444
The physician is almost daily brought face to face with death. He is, as it
were, treading upon the verge of the grave. In many instances familiarity with
scenes of suffering and death results in carelessness and indifference to human
woe, and recklessness in the treatment of the sick. Such physicians seem to have
no tender sympathy. They are harsh and abrupt, and the sick dread their
approach. Such men, however great their knowledge and skill, can do the
suffering little good; but if the love and sympathy that Jesus manifested for
the sick is combined with the physician's knowledge, his very presence will be a
blessing. He will not look upon his patient as a mere piece of human mechanism,
but as a soul to be saved or lost. 5T 445
Never should familiarity with suffering cause the physician to become
careless or unsympathetic. In cases of dangerous illness the afflicted one feels
that he is at the mercy of the physician. He looks to that physician as his only
earthly hope, and the physician should ever point the trembling soul to One who
is greater than himself, even the Son of God, who gave His life to save him from
death, who pities the sufferer, and who by His divine power will give skill and
wisdom to all who ask Him. 6T 232
While the physician uses nature's remedies for physical disease, he should
point his patients to Him who can relieve the maladies of both the soul and the
body. MH 111
A physician should attend strictly to his professional work. He should not
allow anything to come in to divert his mind from his business, or to take his
attention from those who are looking to him for relief from suffering. An
assuring and hopeful word spoken in season to the sufferer will often relieve
his mind and win for the physician a place in his confidence. Kindness and
courtesy should be manifested; but the common, cheap talk which is so customary
even among some who claim to be Christians, should not be heard in our
institutions. The only way for us to become truly courteous, without
affectation, without undue familiarity, is to drink in the spirit of Christ, to
heed the injunction, "Be ye holy; for I am holy." If we act upon the principles
laid down in the word of God, we shall have no inclination to indulge in undue
familiarity. PH066 38 (CH 341)
Drug medication is to be discarded. On this point the conscience of the
physician must ever be kept tender, and true, and clean. The inclination to use
poisonous drugs, which kill, if they do not cure, needs to be guarded against.
Matters have been laid open before me in reference to the use of drugs. Many
have been treated with drugs, and the result has been death. Our physicians, by
practising drug medication, have lost many cases that need not have died if they
had left their drugs out of the sick-room. PH144 10
Experimenting in drugs is a very expensive business. Paralysis of the brain
and tongue is often the result, and the victims die an unnatural death, when, if
they had been treated perseveringly with unwearied, unrelaxed diligence, with
hot and cold water, hot compresses, packs and dripping sheets, they would be
alive today. PH144 11
As to drugs being used in our institutions, it is contrary to the light which
the Lord has been pleased to give. The drugging business has done more harm to
our world and killed more than it has helped or cured. The light was first given
to me why institutions should be established, that is sanitariums were to reform
the medical practices of physicians. PH144 12
Shall physicians continue to resort to drugs, which leave a deadly evil in
the system, destroying that life which Christ came to restore? Christ's remedies
cleanse the system. But Satan has tempted man to introduce into the system that
which weakens the human machinery, clogging and destroying the fine, beautiful
arrangements of God. The drugs administered to the sick do not restore, but
destroy. Drugs never cure. Instead, they place in the system seeds which bear a
very bitter harvest. PH144 14
You are not justified in advocating one school above the others as if it were
the only one worthy of respect. Those who vindicate one school of medicine and
bitterly condemn another, are actuated by a zeal that is not according to
knowledge. With Pharisaic pride some men look down upon others who have received
a diploma from the so-called standard school. ... The use of drugs has resulted
in far more harm than good, and should our physicians who claim to believe the
truth, almost entirely dispense with medicine, and faithfully practice along the
line of hygiene, using nature's remedies, far greater success would attend their
efforts. There is no need whatever to exalt the method whereby drugs are
administered. I know whereof I speak. Brethren of the medical profession, I
entreat you to think candidly and put away childish things. . . . They resort to
drugs when greater skill and knowledge would teach them the more excellent way.
Extracts on Medical Work, pages 19-23. PH144 29
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