Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

About

The most important things we believe are mystical, miraculous & invisible. What matters most cannot be seen.   -Erie Chapman

   It is the heart of truth. God, Love, is what matters most. God, by definition, is invisible.   
   This truth shakes contemporary notions of what is important. After all, we live in a world where business and technology are kings and the computer is queen. Science disdains what cannot be proved.   
Descartes100
   This is the centerpiece thought of the Age of Reason, the time of Descartes (see his image, left, on money) and the other great rationalists who sought to free humankind from the grip of the Catholic hierarchy of the time. It was the 15th and 16th centuries when thinkers rose up to challenge the overweening power of the church. That age has ruled for at least four centuries.
   But our generation is evolving toward a new truth.  In this new truth we discover what all true caregivers know: Love is what matters. And Love cannot be measured in cubic centimeters or milligrams…

   For more than a century, healthcare has been dominated by the notion that all the answers to illness live in the power of science. If an illness cannot be cured, science will one day unlock the answer.
   That this is only partly true has been lost. And lost, as well, has been the understanding of the power of something greater than science.This is the power of healing. This is Love.
   Healing is much larger than science. Healing reaches beyond science into the greater realm of the invisible.
Luncheonrenoir
    Who comprehends, other than, perhaps, artists like Renoir and poets like Neruda, what secret energy travels between those who love? Yet, we know that this Love is what matters most in our lives.
   Each of us, intuitively, knows that our largest problems can only be addressed, successfully, by an understanding that transcends the visible world of microscopes and MRIs. But the art of healing faces an enormous obstacle.
   Science has seduced and enchanted the world. Anyone who advances the role of healing must face the crossfire and abuse of those who idolize the world of what is visible only to the five senses.
   The least appreciated of the medical professions is psychiatry. Yet it is psychiatrists and psychologists and social workers and other counselors, including clerics, who are most likely to be in touch with the invisible yet powerful scars and sufferings of the soul. And they are also in touch with its greatest truths.
   The most important things in our lives have to do with who and what we love and hate. The objects of our love and hatred can be seen. But the energy which moves between us and our loved ones can never be measured by any technology.
   Love is the most powerful and most meaningful energy in the world. Love is beyond measure because it is beyond the senses.
   Love is as invisible as God. And it is miraculous.

-Erie Chapman

Posted in

4 responses to “The Invisible”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    One of the many blessings of hospice is that it embraces both medical science and the invisible forces of healing of the spirit. As we advance our profession deeper into the mix of acute care, we pray that our mission of healing will spread as well.

    Like

  2. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    Thank you for this inspiring affirmation of love and the importance of what we can’t see.

    Like

  3. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    I believe the most important thing we teach our pastoral psychotherapy interns is that it is the relationship that heals . . . the relationship that heals . . . it’s the relationship that heals. And now, after millenia of practice, contempory neuroscience is beginning to tell us that it’s the relationship that heals.
    Thanks for what you are doing, Erie.

    Like

  4. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    As I read today’s Loving meditation, I hear Diana’s voice reciting 1 Corinthians 13. “Though I speak with the tongues of men and angels, and have not Love, I become a noisy gong or clanging cymbal.” Medicine can move mountains to fix the body’s ills but without Love we are left incomplete and with our hearts untouched. When caregivers open and hollow themselves for Loves healing energy to flow and connect us, each comes away from the experience more healed and whole.

    Like

Leave a reply to Karen York Cancel reply