[A few days after this blog was written, political pundit Ann Coulter posted a terribly offensive rant--probably no surprise if you know her style--about this topic that has stirred up a well-deserved backlash. She criticized Brantly and other Christians for going to " disease-ridden cesspools" like Liberia when they could have stayed here and done more good. It's hard to know whether to view her post as culturally arrogant, ridiculously nationalistic, or just plain racist. In any case, I'll let my comments below remain a partial answer as to why Christians should serve the poor and suffering, and why objections are clearly not Christ-like.]
Dr. Kent Brantly trained at one of the top Family Medicine residencies in the country at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth. He could have worked anywhere he wanted to go and made a profitable living caring for patients in the comfort of American upper middle class life. He chose instead to serve as a medical missionary with Samaritan’s Purse in one of the poorest areas of the world. When the Ebola virus struck people in the area he was serving, he could have returned home with his family and no one would ever have blamed him. But he chose to stay, working tirelessly to do whatever he could to save lives and relieve suffering. It is what he felt his faith called him to do. It is what he felt his medical training prepared him to do. It is what he felt his commitment as a physician required of him. If Dr. Brantly had not contracted the disease, most of us probably would never have heard of him (just as we can’t name the many other doctors who have been doing the same thing without any fanfare).
Dr. Kent Brantly trained at one of the top Family Medicine residencies in the country at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth. He could have worked anywhere he wanted to go and made a profitable living caring for patients in the comfort of American upper middle class life. He chose instead to serve as a medical missionary with Samaritan’s Purse in one of the poorest areas of the world. When the Ebola virus struck people in the area he was serving, he could have returned home with his family and no one would ever have blamed him. But he chose to stay, working tirelessly to do whatever he could to save lives and relieve suffering. It is what he felt his faith called him to do. It is what he felt his medical training prepared him to do. It is what he felt his commitment as a physician required of him. If Dr. Brantly had not contracted the disease, most of us probably would never have heard of him (just as we can’t name the many other doctors who have been doing the same thing without any fanfare).
When the news broke that he had become sick, everyone was
amazed by his story, praising his incredible self-sacrifice. He was suddenly an
American hero…until the announcement came that he was being brought to Atlanta
to one of the best places in the world to treat this kind of disease. Now the
hospital is getting hate mail, the Internet is flooded with fear and anger, and
the news media is questioning the wisdom of the decision. Even though many medical
experts say that America is not at risk of an Ebola breakout from Brantly’s
treatment in this facility, many Americans seem unwilling to accept any
possibility of any remote risk associated with treating Brantly in a facility
designed to do just this. Sooner or later, it seems to me, this disease will
surely find its way outside West Africa. The questions we have to ask
are: Will we support those trying to fight the disease there? What
will we do if they get sick? And, How will we respond when someone here in America does get
sick?
I’d like to offer two
reasons why Christians should believe that bringing Brantly home is
unquestionably the right thing to do.
When the plague struck Carthage in
the Roman Empire in the 3rd century, people abandoned their dying relatives and
friends in the streets and even fled the city to save their own lives. But
Christians, led by Bishop Cyprian, stayed in large numbers to treat the sick
and dying, putting their own lives at risk to take care of, not just their own
family members, but anyone who needed their mercy and care. Dionysius, another
Bishop at the time, wrote this about the Christian response to the crisis:
Most of our brother Christians showed unbounded love and loyalty, never sparing themselves and thinking only of one another. Heedless of danger, they took charge of the sick, attending to their every need and ministering to them in Christ, and with them departed this life serenely happy; for they were infected by others with the disease, drawing on themselves the sickness of their neighbors and cheerfully accepting their pains. Many, in nursing and curing others, transferred their death to themselves and died in their stead…The best of our brothers lost their lives in this manner, a number of presbyters, deacons, and laymen winning high commendation so that death in this form, the result of great piety and strong faith, seems in every way the equal of martyrdom.
Second, and more important, ask yourself one simple question: If Brantley
were your brother or son or father or friend, what would you be saying? Would
you say, “He chose to go—it’s noble—but we shouldn’t take any risk whatsoever”?
Or would you say, “We should do whatever we can to help someone who has risked
so much to serve others?” Would you say we should leave him there to receive
whatever care they can give, or we should bring him home to receive the best
care we can offer? You know the answer to that question.
We have a name for offering Brantly the care
we would want for our own loved ones: we call it “The Golden Rule.”
8 comments:
Not only was it the right thing to do .... Being in Atlanta and close to CDC his recovery may provide hope for others and a future healing serum !! Praying for Full recovery and God's peace and comfort!!
It is a good action. With the isolation facilities at this hospital, the risk is not at all like being in a less equipped hospital. The equipment to study the disease and to develop a treatment plan is much better. And family can be nearby to love and encourage, which is always a big part of recovery. Tell Dr Brantly and his family I am praying for him and his family, also for those in West Africa, both workers still there and the citizens. I am also bringing them up to other believers for prayer whenever I can.
Thanks for saying it! Well said!
Well said, and I completely agree. It boggles my mind that anyone would raise even the slightest objection but say, "Of course we'll bring him here to give him the best possible care and the greatest chance of recovery."
Your example of the 3rd Century plague and the Christians' response, from a purely sociological point of view, is one of the reasons early Christianity experienced such phenomenal growth. And we wonder why Christianity is shrinking today and seen by more and more as being irrelevant!?!
Jesus and Mother Teresa never shrunk back from helping lepers and other very ill people. How can anyone call himself or herself a Christian and not do what Jesus did!!!???!!!
And now Donald Trump has said we should not even help the people in Africa, Sad and sickening.
Thanks to all for the kind words. June, I don't know Dr. Brantly personally, though my brother does. I'm sure they all appreciate your prayers.
I agree, Neil. Trump is indeed a sad example of our culture's self-centeredness. I don't know if he considers himself a Christian, but he sure doesn't sound like Jesus.
I wonder why people are not in a panic over all the illegal aliens that are being forced upon us in cities throughout the country??? These people can easily and are bringing diseases to us right in our own backyard. No, there has not been any news about Ebola through this route, but you never know!!!!
I trust first in my Savior and Lord as He is ultimately in control of all things. Secondly, I do think that the CDC does an awesome job when you consider all that they deal with and the risk they themselves take on by monitoring so many deadly diseases.
Praise the Lord, that Dr. Brantley is back on US soil in the best of hands.
Rob, You post correct in many ways. Dr. Brantley was in our prayers last week in Guatemala at Clinica Ezell, a place where he went several years ago. "Fear not..."
Quinton Dickerson
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