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

Happy Halloween. And Happy Reformation Day as well.
Martin_luther
   Halloween also happens to be my birthday. It’s an odd time of year to be born – a time when people joke about graveyards and death, not the exultation of birth. I loved, as a child, hosting birthday parties where everyone dressed up. As I got older, the day seemed less entertaining – especially when adults popped up at the door holding out beer mugs for drinks.
   The anniversary I now like to honor on this date is Reformation Day, which began October 31, 1517 when Martin Luther posted his 95 theses on the door of Wittenberg Cathedral calling for reforms and an end to abuses in the Catholic Church. It was the founding of the Protestant movement. Perhaps more important, it was a celebration of the role of independent thinking in the face of authority…

   Catholics now agree that their church of the time needed to be reformed. Periodically, those that have held sway over us across a long time can become corrupt in the same way that long time rulers can become abusive with their power.
   This is what has happened in many American hospitals. The effort to operate healthcare along better business principles, originally well-intentioned, has now led to a period of bloated CEO salaries, boards obsessed with the bottom line instead of mission, and a medical-industrial complex so enchanted with technology they sometimes lose sight of the humanity of those they treat.
   On the 490th anniversary of Reformation Day, perhaps we can consider launching a new Reformation – one that returns Love to the face of healthcare and helps all of us recall that the alternative to Love is, well, very spooky.

-Erie Chapman

Posted in

3 responses to “Halloween & Reformation Day”

  1. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Mom recalls that as a child she felt very mischievous as she and ghoulish friends rang neighbors’ doorbells, then swiftly ran away. It was on Thanksgiving that they delighted in going door-to-door to ask, “Anything for Thanksgiving?” She fondly recounts, “We were thrilled to receive an apple, a penny, or a bit of candy.”
    On this special day of your birth, may the seeds of Loving Care that you have generously planted in the hearts of so many caregivers flower endlessly in beautiful bouquets for the benefit others! Happy birthday, Erie!

    Like

  2. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    Yes! Happy birthday, Erie!
    I like that reformation day immediately preceeds All Saints’ Day. I’m sure that is no coincidence.

    Like

  3. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    At the end of May of this year, I attended the graduation of two of my nephews from the UT College of Medicine in Memphis, TN. The interim chancellor is Hershel Wall. I was struck by his words to the graduating class of MD’s. He reminded them to take are of themselves – and actually encouraged this during their time in medical school by inviting them to join him on the banks of the Mississippi River on Sunday afternoons for a time of reflection. He became choked up as he prayed for peace and the future of these new physicians. I meant to write him after that graduation weekend to thank him for his understanding of care of self and others. I have not, unfortunately. But this meditation reminds me that the reformation is happening. Perhaps in small pockets. But isn’t that how it always happens?
    Happy birthday dear Erie. Thank you for your leadership and courage in this movement of Loving Care.

    Like

Leave a reply to Diana Gallaher Cancel reply