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New
Age Paranoia Being a natural medicine practitioner and being a Christian can be hazardous.
Regardless of how orthodox your Christian beliefs may be, you regularly
get called a "New Ager," something akin to being of a minority
race and having a racial epithet hurled at you. Many Christians are really
stirred up about how most everything, including health care, is being
taken over by New Age beliefs. Unfortunately, a lot of these "New
Age witch hunters" write books, speak on Christian radio, and are
on the Who's Who list of the Christian community. It is a battle . . .
one I've found myself in the middle of. "There is a growing movement of Christian practitioners of wholistic health, and of Christians who turn to such treatments for their physical maladies. Perhaps the most articulate and vigorous spokesperson for this movement is Monte Kline, Clinical Nutritionist . . . " I'm not sure if that's a compliment or not. I'm kind of thorn in the side of the New Age witch hunters - since I'm more doctrinally orthodox than most of them are, I stand in the way of their broad brush painting all natural medicine practitioners as "New Age." As a former pastor once told me: You're nobody till somebody hates you! In this article I want to delineate the difference between a biblically-sound natural medicine approach and the New Age ideology. NEW AGE THOUGHT One of the results of the current paranoia is that some Christians are running around saying this and that are "New Age," yet they don't really understand what the New Age philosophy is. Doug Groothuis in Unmasking the New Age lists six fundamentals of New Age thinking: 1. All is one Excuse me, but as a Christian, I don't believe any of that, nor do other Christians involved in natural medicine. Yet a lot of people and practices are being labeled "New Age" that in no way embrace a New Age philosophy. PRACTICE OR PRACTITIONER? Let me pose a question: Can a particular health practice, such as applied
kinesiology (muscle testing) or electro-dermal testing, as done at my
clinics, be "New Age," or can only a person be "New Age"?
Methods do not have beliefs - only people do. Thus I believe that the
epithet "New Age" can only be applied to a person who holds
such beliefs. The methods, the practices are basically neutral. GUILTY BY ASSOCIATION? Natural medicine practices frequently are judged with a "guilty
by association" reasoning. Let's take acupuncture, as perhaps the
best known area of "energetic medicine." The reasoning of the
critics goes like this: (1) Acupuncture was founded in China; (2) People
in China practiced a false religious system out of which this was developed;
and therefore (3) Acupuncture is false and Christians shouldn't have anything
to do with acupuncture. "FLAT EARTH" CHRISTIANITY Christians tend toward paranoia with anything outside their realm of
knowledge, including certain aspects of natural medicine. Regrettably,
the Church has historically rejected new truth in favor of old traditions.
For centuries, with the full support of the Church, the world was considered
flat. Those suggesting the world was round were considered heretics. Though
some may have cited literalistic interpretations of passages referring
to "the four corners of the earth" as contradictory with anything
other than a flat earth, for most people a round earth was just offensive
to their traditions. RELIGIOUS SUPERSTITION? I'll bet you thought religious superstition went out with the Middle Ages? No, it's alive and well with the New Age Witch Hunters and their victims. Christopher S. Deatherage, N.D. writes: A review of church history shows us that the lowest points in any age are those that have been remembered for their religious superstition. Those who are religiously superstitious are those who have an unreasonable, unbiblical state of paranoia about spirits and suspect evil spirits and black magic everywhere . . . GLORIFYING SATAN? The New Age witch hunters cite demonic power for everything from homeopathic
medicine to acupuncture to applied kinesiology to chiropractic to even
Christian psychology. Let me ask this: Who gets the glory when we're constantly
looking for Satan behind every bush? Nowhere in the Bible does it tell
me to search for Satan, but it repeatedly tells me to search for the Lord.
IS CHRIST'S LORDSHIP ADEQUATE? Isn't it enough to receive Christ, submit to His Lordship, have the
Scriptures and let Him lead your life? Must we have our modern day, man-mad
Talmud of Christian books on top of all that to tell us what we can and
cannot do? Whatever happened to the discernment God's Spirit gives? For
that matter, whatever happened to common sense? POT vs. KETTLE The usual pattern of the New Age witch hunters (after condemning most natural medicine practices as satanic) is to recommend conventional medicine, saying nothing of its occultic history and humanistic teachings. Conventional medicine is based on evolution as its foundation, not God's creation of the body. Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine, was a priest in a Pagan temple. The Hippocratic Oath, previously taken by all M.D.'s begins with these words: I swear by Apollo the Physician, and Aesculapius and Hygeia, and Panacea, and all the gods and goddesses . . It is an absolute, crystal clear violation of Scripture (Ex. 20:2-3; Matt. 5:34-37) for a believer to take the Hippocratic Oath. So where are the New Age witch hunters on this? Their inconsistency is pathetic! DEALING WITH "NEW AGE PARANOIA" 1. Ask for Scripture - Ask a New Age witch hunter for specific scripture
that contradicts some natural medicine practice. In the vernacular this
is called "put up or shut up."
DISCLAIMER:
The information contained in this publication is for educational purposes
only. It is not intended to diagnose illness nor prescribe treatment.
Rather, this material is designed to be used in cooperation with your
nutritionally-oriented health professional to deal with your personal
health problems. Should you use this information on your own, you are
prescribing for yourself, which is your constitutional right, but neither
the author nor publisher assume responsibility. |
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