01 Apr

Healing the body by tending the spirit

By Jude Keller

Sometimes just a moment is all we need to be inspired, to find peace, or to experience a new understanding. In 2015, Healing Arts, a program integrated with CREATION Health, provided over 50,000 of these moments to patients, families and visitors at our Adventist hospitals in Denver, Colorado.

Healing Arts is designed to intentionally integrate the arts into healthcare, creating an environment that doesn’t just treat illness, but provides an inspiration for living. Our program is funded solely by community donations to each Adventist hospital foundation and uses visual arts, music, nature, and community outreach to touch and inspire the spirit and heal the body.

Every day, we see how Healing Arts creates meaning, inspiration, and healing in the lives of our patients, families, and staff. How therapeutic bedside music profoundly touches our spirits; how a gentle hand or foot massage reduces the anxiety of a patient facing surgery; the delight of a concert in the lobby, and the inspiration that comes from an emotional connection to beautiful artwork in our hospital galleries.

Lynn, who was visiting her mother, recalled: “Gale, the harpist, stopped in my momma’s room today to ask gently if she could play for us. Our blessing came for our family by singing hymns together. We thank her and the hospital for the gift of music at this time of my momma’s dying days.”

Laurie, another visitor made a similar comment: “I was visiting a friend in ICU when I met the harpist. She was wonderful. While listening to her, my friend immediately fell asleep and I was reassured he was in good hands.”

“The art gallery is such a great way to spend a few relaxing minutes away from the stress of the day. It gives so much joy,” said Diana. One of the nurses commented, “When the flutist comes to the floor to play music, the patients smile, the mood lifts and the stress seems to dissipate. Thank you!”

An artist who created a quilted art piece for Parker Adventist Hospital Cancer Care Center said it beautifully: “My art piece, ‘Healing Winds’ was born from my own experience of caring for my father and a dear friend during their cancer battles. While talking to many others about their own journeys, the words ‘frayed at the edges’ kept coming to the surface, along with their hopes, dreams and fears. This piece embodies many months of hand stitching, praying for those who would see it and longing for the God who created them to lovingly touch people’s lives and bring wholeness.”

Jude Keller is director of the Healing Arts Program at the Rocky Mountain Adventist Healthcare Foundation in Denver, Colorado.

01 Apr

GHI celebrates ten years of impacting global health

A small orthopedic surgery team left Colorado one cold January morning in 2006 to start what has become a strong and growing movement to improve Christ’s healing ministry around the world. Stephen King, senior vice president for mission and ministry at Centura Health, had a vision of what the Adventist hospitals in Colorado needed to do to support health care in developing countries. “Our church has a legacy of providing health care through hundreds of Adventist hospitals and clinics around the world,” comments Pastor King. “Unfortunately many of these ministries in developing countries have been neglected and are no longer viable operations. They need help and support, and who better to provide that support than our Adventist hospitals here in the United States.”

With that mandate, Global Health Initiatives was launched in an effort to strengthen Adventist hospitals in the countries of Nepal, Rwanda, and Peru, and to provide medical mission opportunities for hundreds of Colorado- based volunteers. Medical teams were formed which partnered with doctors and nurses in the host country to provide care to thousands of the most needy patients.

During the first ten years, more than 2,000 surgeries and 40,000 primary care visits were given free of charge through GHI’s programs.

While the one-on-one care given to individuals is important, GHI doesn’t stop there. The goal of strengthening Adventist mission hospitals has included additional activities such as clinical and administrative training, both here and abroad, provision of medical equipment and supplies, and upgrading facilities. “These are the core activities which help foster long-term change,” adds Greg Hodgson, GHI director. “I am very proud of the accomplishments we have seen over these past ten years,” Hodgson continues. “We want to celebrate the victories that have been achieved. But our vision is to become even more effective in the next ten years. Our plan is to develop even stronger training programs and staff exchanges. We are working to design more meaningful monitoring and evaluation systems. And we want to focus on activities which lead to lasting change.”

A significant part of GHI’s tenth anniversary celebrations includes a capital campaign the will fund improvements at the three partner hospitals. Plans are now being finalized for a new women’s health center in Nepal, a new surgery center in Rwanda, and new medical imaging capabilities in Peru.

Christ’s ministry on earth highlighted the importance of physical care. GHI seeks to build on that foundation, and looks forward, by God’s grace, to another ten years of extending the healing ministry to those in areas of greatest need. [RMCNews].

01 Apr

Learn and teach

By Carol Bolden

Four teams made up of two students each head to HMS Richards School from Campion Academy each week to give Bible studies to seventh and eighth graders. These seventh and eighth graders, in turn, give Bible studies to the fourth through sixth graders.

The Campion students are members of Joe Martin’s junior Bible class where they have been studying the 28 Fundamental Beliefs since the beginning of the school year. After studying one of the beliefs, Martin has his students choose the even Bible verses on that topic that are clearest to them—which they can use in their studies with the younger students. They create their own Bible studies.

“Although for many of these juniors, giving Bible studies is out of their comfort zone, this group is thoroughly enjoying sharing their faith and praying with the kids, many of whom have never prayed before with strangers, says Martin. They are “enhancing their walk with God by sharing their faith,” he concludes.

All 43 of Martin’s junior Bible class students will have the opportunity to give Bible studies. In turn, all 14 of the seventh and eighth graders at HMS will have the opportunity to receive studies and then to give them to the 22 fourth through sixth graders at HMS.

Ashley Halvorson, a 14-year-old eighth grader at HMS, has enjoyed receiving Bible studies from Campion students. “They did a really good job giving them to us,” she states. “They had a lot of Bible verses for us to look up” [on] the Second Coming and what happens when you die,” she shares. “I think it’s fun to tell other people about our beliefs and to see God work through us.”

Christine Eagan-Foster, a 12-year-old sixth grader at HMS, received Bible studies from two girls in seventh and eighth grades, one on baptism. “It’s really fun that we can get taught about these teachings and interact about them. We even learn more than we learned at home. It’s nice to get a kid’s perspective on it,” she shares.

“By the time the HMS students have experienced this [give and take of beliefs] for a couple of years, they will be ready for baptism,” states Davin Hammond, principal of HMS Richards School. “We want every seventh and eighth grader to recognize that they can give Bible studies,” he adds.

Junior Bible students Cassie Carr and Natalie Boonstra, both raised in pastoral homes, believe the things they are learning in the class strengthen what their parents have taught them.

“The Bible class with Pastor Joe has helped me to know God on a more personal level,” shares Natalie. “Bible class has helped me develop in my Christian walk and to prove my faith.”

“We mark our Bibles with several verses to support each topic and cross reference them,” says Cassie. “This gives us the tools to share with whomever we come into contact with. The junior class is coming closer to God because of this class and it is noticed all over campus.”

Carol Bolden is RMC administrative assistant for communication.

01 Apr

Church-hopping in europe

By Katie Morrison

As a foreign student in Europe, you can be sure I’m eating my way through both the culture and the gelato. As a Christian in Europe, you might think my interest in ancient religious artifacts and famous churches would be off the charts. Italy especially is overflowing in historical religious richness. Field trip after field trip, our group shuttles into churches, each one more daunting and impressive than the last; and I overhear my classmates say, “All this is fine, but I’m sick of churches!” Unfortunately I have found myself in the same boat. I was bored. How could these structures inspire me without my thoroughly researching their history in advance like a complete nerd?

One of my Italian classes actually helped quite a bit.

During the first quarter, I took a course on the relation between state and church, beginning with the Roman Empire and continuing until current relations. The facts I learned were not new but they sounded fresh and poignant considering where I was re-learning them.

I learned about the original birth of Christianity, the split between Eastern and Western Europe and religion’s role in those power swings. I learned about toleration and persecution, about revolutions and religious reformations. I learned about Italy—especially, about the constant unbreakable bond between the state and religious powers. Despite Italy’s relatively recent separation, or more aptly dubbed “cooperation,” of church and state, their national  budget still dedicates eight percent every year to the Catholic Church.

Knowing some history of the politics, I started viewing the churches a little differently. I would see the intricacies and grandeur and wonder who paid for it all. I would think about who sat in those wooden pews and prayed for peace. I would imagine these churches in their prime, before the cordoning ropes and “do not touch” signs, and how the walls themselves told stories that didn’t need to be explained on Wikipedia.

At the end of January, we visited Ravenna, a city filled to bursting with mausoleums, museums, churches and mosaics. My favorite was the Basilica of San Vitale, finished  in 548 A.D. The vaulted dome ceiling is painted with muted colors, depicting nature and angels supporting a crown containing the Lamb of God. The presbytery, illuminated by two levels of three-pane windows, is coolly colored. The gold and teal mosaic catch the light and shimmer. Outside the basilica was the Mausoleum of Galla Placidia. One room and dimly lit, every inch of that structure glistened in faint candlelight. It was entirely made of mosaic detail, something unheard of in American churches.

And that is the main difference I see between American and European churches. Everything here is physically dramatic and distracting. Your eyes can never rest in a European church. They are drawn from paintings to sculptures to vaulted ceilings. It’s overwhelming! Yet despite the churches having historical status and importance, they still function as places of worship. It’s always refreshing to see worshippers in the middle of such a visual production: a young man with hands clasped, an elderly couple huddled together on a pew, spiritually renewing and quietly living.

That’s something I will try to bring home with me, the attitude of slowing down and appreciating things. Yes, I will notice the glaringly obvious beauty of a church, which is many centuries old or the beauty of a nice day. But instead of just seeing and moving on, I will try to imagine the his- tory. I hope to see the slower things, the softer beauties in life and focus on those.

Katie Morrison writes from Florence, Italy. She was RMC communication intern in 2015.

01 Apr

Sweet scent of ego

By Rajmund Dabrowski

If you are a writer, you can sense when a story will write itself. Such a moment came when I reached page 37 of Tom Rachman’s fascinating true-to-life novel The Imperfectionists. The story immediately began in my head—and was put to paper just a little later with my favorite Faber-Castell pencil.

Here’s the scenario: A reporter is sent to interview a once well-known and now-elderly author to prepare her obituary. Facts about her life were sparse. Reflecting on her own impending encounter with death, she describes the absurdity of remaining enthralled with ambition.

“It’s like being a slave all your life, then learning one day that you never had a master, and returning to work all the same. Can you imagine a force in the universe greater than this? Not in my universe. You know, even from the earliest childhood it dominated me. I longed for achievements, to be influential—that, in particular. To sway people. This has been my religion: the belief that I deserve attention, that they are wrong not to listen, that those who dispute me are fools. Yet, no matter what I achieve, the world lives on, impertinent, indifferent—I know all this, but I can’t get it through my head. It is why, I suppose, I agreed to talk to you. To this day, I’ll pursue any folly to make the rest of you shut up and listen to me, as you should have from the start!”

And she continues, “Here is a fact: nothing in all civilization has been as productive as ludicrous ambition. Whatever its ills, nothing has created more. Cathedrals, sonatas, encyclopedias: love of God was not behind them, nor love of life. But the love of man to be worshipped by man.”

This is one slice of our common folly. My folly certainly fits in this picture. Yet, there may be many good examples of self-denial, pursuit of oneness with nature, being engulfed in acts of compassion and generosity, as well as deeds to give back that which I took that make an appearance in my life, too. This is what Christianity is made out of.

But how often do such reflections enter my thinking, I ask myself?

My former boss had an uncanny way of bringing me back to earth. Once, my chest was bursting with pride as I shared one of my team’s great achievements and how happy we were to be recognized for it. “Aren’t we wonderful,” he said, and walked on. It was a moment to forget, I thought at the time. My treasure trove of life’s experiences brought that moment back to me again as I read the words— “ . . . the belief that I deserve attention.”

Frankly, I admit creating lots of madness in my own life. Sometimes lessons come, and they are forgotten rather instantly in the fog of pursuing praise.

A masterpiece in life is decided by the reactions of others. They will tell you when they see it.

In the words of Scriptures, “Don’t indulge your ego at the expense of your soul,” (1 Peter 2:11, The Message).

Rajmund Dabrowski is RMC communication director.