Treat the Patient as A Living Soul - Not Treat the Disease.
by lim ju boo
Continuing with my thoughts on how Jesus managed to instantly healed a list of incurable diseases by today standard here:
Beyond Medicine
https://scientificlogic.
Here's what I believe.
Jesus must have treated the sick as a person, one that has a living soul, not as some machine that requires "oiling" when it gets sick and rusty.
What is the best way to treat a body when it is ill? Should we use pharmaceuticals that are actually chemicals made from petroleum introduced by John D Rockefeller to change the chemical pathology of the body and silence its cries (symptoms of discomfort). If this is a chronic lifestyle disease, it often may lead to another linked disease - such as high blood pressure leading to stroke, kidney problems, and diabetes, or shall we be kind to it by removing the root causes first, rest it, then stimulate and nourish it gently to help the body to use its own inbuilt healing mechanisms to recover on its own? There is a difference between treating the disease and treating the patient.
The patient is a living body with a body, mind and soul. It is not a machine that requires oiling when it gets rusty or makes frictional noises. This is similar to "oiling" a patient when it gets sick, especially chronic diseases due to damaging lifestyles of all kinds by using chemicals under the hidden and glorified name as "medicines" The Canadian physician Sir Willian Osler, the Father of modern medicine one of the foundering professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital reflect his wisdom in medicine when he quoted: "the good physician treats the disease, the great physician treat the patient who has the disease" I think the body is fearfully and wonderfully made as given in Psalm 139:14, and to treat it with drugs that are actually chemicals, we are only altering its chemical pathology and diverting it elsewhere into other emerging linked diseases. It is like diverting the continuously flowing water of a polluted river elsewhere or damning it up somewhere else till the dam bursts to flood even more polluted all over the surrounding areas. This analogy is similar trying to use chemical drugs to treat a chronic lifestyle disease when the root cause at the source was never treated Often this is the case with allopathic medicine practised in hospitals using drugs to control the disease and or to shut up its cries (symptoms, swelling and pains) to be given the same medicine at higher doses or other similar substitutes.
The patient never got cured because we are treating the chemistry of the disease, not the patient with his health-damaging lifestyles - the root causes In short, we aggrieved and insult the ailing body with chemicals under the gloried hidden names as "medicines" to shut up its cries (symptoms) and ask the patients to come back again for more of the same "medicines" in the next appointment, instead of removing the root cause(s) first, rest it, stimulate it gently using massage, acupuncture, using a combination of low doses of botanical medicines acting gently and synergistically in all direction, using dietary approaches, giving love, care and encouragement to the patient for the body to revert to its own slower healing mechanism already programmed there.
“Treating the Living Soul, Not Just the Disease: A Reflection on True Healing”
Let me rewrite this in another way after being Inspired by the Healing Ways of Jesus and the Wisdom of the Body
What Is the Best Way to Treat the Body When It Is Ill?
When illness strikes, the question we must ask is not merely what drug to prescribe, but rather: How do we treat the human being, this living soul, with dignity, kindness, and wisdom? Should we silence the cries of a suffering body with synthetic chemicals? Or should we listen compassionately, search for the root causes, and gently encourage the body to activate its own God-given healing mechanisms?
In the world of modern medicine, particularly allopathic medicine, the prevailing model is to treat the symptoms of disease, often with chemical pharmaceuticals that alter the body’s biochemistry. Many of these drugs are derived from petrochemical sources, popularized through the influence of industrial tycoon John D. Rockefeller, who helped reshape medicine to rely heavily on synthetic pharmaceuticals, sidelining traditional natural remedies in the process.
These medicines may bring temporary relief, but when it comes to chronic lifestyle diseases, such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular conditions, this approach often creates a cascade of interconnected pathologies. A drug prescribed to reduce blood pressure may burden the kidneys; another to manage inflammation may stress the liver; yet another to control blood sugar may alter hormonal balance. Thus begins a downward spiral, where one disease feeds another, and the patient becomes trapped in an endless cycle of medication.
A Machine or a Living Soul?
The human body is not a mechanical engine that needs “oiling” when it gets rusty, nor a malfunctioning machine requiring new parts or suppressive chemicals. It is a living, breathing soul - a sacred creation that houses body, mind, and spirit in profound unity.
“I will praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; marvelous are Your works.”
— Psalm 139:14
Yet, modern treatment protocols often treat the body mechanistically, giving the same drug to every patient with a given disease label, without regard for the patient’s individual constitution, emotional state, lifestyle, environment, or spiritual needs. This is akin to damming a polluted river rather than purifying its source. Sooner or later, the dam bursts, and the toxins spread even further.
Just as you cannot fix a river by blocking its flow, you cannot heal the body by simply silencing symptoms. The symptoms are not the disease, they are the body’s cries for help, signals from within that something has gone wrong.
True Healing: Kindness to the Ailing Body
True healing begins by honoring the body, not assaulting it. Instead of prescribing stronger chemicals or higher doses of suppressive drugs, we might ask:
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What is damaging this person’s health, physically, emotionally, spiritually?
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Can the body heal if we remove the root causes, poor diet, stress, toxic habits, sedentary lifestyle?
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Can we nourish and stimulate the body's innate ability to repair itself through natural means?
These questions reflect a radically different approach to healing, one that resembles how Jesus treated the sick.
Jesus did not administer chemical substances. He healed with a word, a touch, or simply by being present. His healings were instantaneous, not because of any medical procedure, but because He treated the person as a whole, body, mind, and soul.
“The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease.”
— Sir William Osler, Father of Modern Medicine
The Allopathic Trap: Silencing the Cry Without Listening to the Pain
All too often, allopathic medicine shuts down symptoms without addressing their origin. The same drug is repeated, the dose increased, side effects appear, new drugs are added, and yet the root cause remains untouched.
It’s like ignoring a fire alarm and silencing it without putting out the fire.
Eventually, the patient returns, not cured, but dependent, tied to a system that manages disease rather than promotes healing. In this process, we often aggrieve and insult the body, which only wanted to be heard, to be rested, and to be gently encouraged to recover.
A Better Way: Healing the Person, Not Just Treating the Illness
A more humane and holistic approach might include:
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Identifying and removing root causes: poor diet, toxins, stress, trauma, sleep deprivation.
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Resting, and restoring the body through sleep, sunlight, silence, and spiritual peace.
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Gentle stimulation: massage, acupuncture, hydrotherapy, breathing exercises, mild movement.
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Synergistic botanical medicine: herbs in low doses, working together across multiple pathways.
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Nourishing the soul: love, care, prayer, encouragement, forgiveness, and faith.
These are not merely alternative methods, they are the original design of how the body heals itself. They do not override the body but work with it, honoring the sacred programming already written into our being by the Creator.
Conclusion: Let the Body Speak, Let the Soul Heal
The body speaks through pain. The soul speaks through discomfort. The wise healer listens to both, not just with knowledge, but with compassion and reverence.
We do not truly heal by “fighting” disease with chemicals. We heal by listening to the cries, removing the burdens, and loving the person behind the diagnosis. In this sacred task, let us follow not only the science of medicine but the heart of the Healer—Jesus Christ, who came not only to cure, but to restore.
Historical and Medical References:
1. Sir William Osler, Johns Hopkins Hospital:
“The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease.”
(Attributed to Osler in many medical philosophy texts and lectures.)2. The Rockefeller Influence in Modern Medicine:
Sources discussing how John D. Rockefeller influenced the shift to petrochemical-based pharmaceuticals and funded the Flexner Report to restructure medical education in favor of allopathic medicine.
(See: “Rockefeller Medicine Men” by E. Richard Brown, and articles from Health Impact News or GreenMedInfo.)
3. The Flexner Report (1910) – Sponsored by Rockefeller Foundation and Carnegie Foundation to standardize medical education around allopathy.
Often cited as a turning point where traditional medicine (botanicals, naturopathy, homeopathy) was marginalized.
4 Video Reference:
"A Town Called Allopath" (YouTube):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lllrm5_iGRY
— A creative commentary on the mechanistic, pharmaceutical-based model of medicine.
Sources discussing how John D. Rockefeller influenced the shift to petrochemical-based pharmaceuticals and funded the Flexner Report to restructure medical education in favor of allopathic medicine.
(See: “Rockefeller Medicine Men” by E. Richard Brown, and articles from Health Impact News or GreenMedInfo.)
3. The Flexner Report (1910) – Sponsored by Rockefeller Foundation and Carnegie Foundation to standardize medical education around allopathy.
Often cited as a turning point where traditional medicine (botanicals, naturopathy, homeopathy) was marginalized.
4 Video Reference:
"A Town Called Allopath" (YouTube):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lllrm5_iGRY
— A creative commentary on the mechanistic, pharmaceutical-based model of medicine.