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The Christian Medical Fellowship: Uniting & equipping Christian doctors & nurses to live & speak for Jesus Christ.
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Christian Medical Fellowship
  • About
    • About
      • the Christian Medical Fellowship unites and equips Christian doctors and nurses to live and speak for Jesus Christ. We were formed in 1949. We currently have 4,000 doctors, 500 medical and nursing students, and 450 nurses and midwives as members.
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        A letter to our fellow resident doctors

        December 12, 2025
        Read more
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/Dear-fellow-Residents.-1.png 1440 2560 christianmf https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png christianmf2025-12-12 17:55:582025-12-13 18:23:30A letter to our fellow resident doctors

        the trouble with opt-outs

        December 1, 2025
        Read more
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/organ-donation.jpg 240 400 Trevor Stammers https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Trevor Stammers2025-12-01 08:00:492025-11-27 13:23:42the trouble with opt-outs

        Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?

        August 12, 2025
        Read more
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/AdobeStock_1252305052-scaled.jpeg 1440 2560 Dr Rick Thomas https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Dr Rick Thomas2025-08-12 08:00:412025-08-08 10:29:05Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?
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      • Current Month

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        10feb12:00 pm1:30 pmFeaturedRepeating EventGlobal Training Modules 2025-6

        Event Details

        Are you working in Global Health and Mission? Are you a generalist? CMF Global is hosting a series of interactive online training modules. These will be collaborative, with teaching, questions and

        Event Details

        Are you working in Global Health and Mission?

        Are you a generalist?

        CMF Global is hosting a series of interactive online training modules. These will be collaborative, with teaching, questions and feedback. The tutorials are led by General Practitioners and Specialists with experience in working with limited resources in a rural context.

        Date Time Topic
        Tuesday 9 September 2025 12.00-13.30 Managing Hypertension & Diabetes in LMICs
        Tuesday 14 October 2025 12.00-13.30 Paediatric Neurology – with a focus on epilepsy and spina bifida
        Tuesday 11 November 2025 12.00-13.30 Where there is no Orthopaedic Surgeon
        Tuesday 13 January 2026 12.00-13.30 Treating Malnutrition when resources are limited
        Tuesday 10 February 2026 12.00-13.30 Rheumatology for the generalist – This needs to be rescheduled due to clinical commitments
        Tuesday 10 March 2026 12.00-13.30 Update on TB & HIV
        Tuesday 12 May 2026 12.00-13.30 Schistosomiasis
        Tuesday 9 June 2026 12.00-13.30 Common urological problems

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        Time

        February 10, 2026 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        Future Event Times in this Repeating Event Series

        march 10, 2026 12:00 pm - march 10, 2026 1:30 pmmay 12, 2026 12:00 pm - may 12, 2026 1:30 pmjune 9, 2026 12:00 pm - june 9, 2026 1:30 pm

        02mar(mar 2)7:30 pm23(mar 23)9:30 pmSaline Soultion Course

        Event Details

        Every Christian health professional has a unique opportunity to improve their patients’ physical and spiritual health, but many feel frustrated by the challenge of integrating faith and practice within time

        Event Details

        Every Christian health professional has a unique opportunity to improve their patients’ physical and spiritual health, but many feel frustrated by the challenge of integrating faith and practice within time constraints and legal obligations.

        However, the medical literature increasingly recognises the important link between spirituality and health and GMC guidelines approve discussion of faith issues with patients provided that it is done appropriately and sensitively.

        Christians are called to be ‘the salt of the earth’. Saline Solution is a course designed to help Christian healthcare professionals bring Christ and his good news into their work. It has helped hundreds become more comfortable and adept at practising medicine that addresses the needs of the whole person.

        Monday 2, 9, 16, 23 March, 7.30-9.30pm online

         

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        Time

        March 2, 2026 7:30 pm - march 23, 2026 9:30 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        11apr10:00 am4:30 pmDublin Day ConferenceBringing Faith into Healthcare

        Event Details

        We are delighted to announce that bookings are open for the first CMF Day Conference in Dublin. On Saturday 11 April we will be gathering at Grosvenor Baptist Church for

        Event Details

        We are delighted to announce that bookings are open for the first CMF Day Conference in Dublin. On Saturday 11 April we will be gathering at Grosvenor Baptist Church for a day helping Christian healthcare professionals bring Christ and his good news into their work.

        We will be using the Saline course, which equips you to recognise opportunities to encourage colleagues and patients to take one step closer to God, sharing the gospel with sensitivity, respect, and genuine care.

        All healthcare professionals are welcome. There will also be plenty of time to connect with others who share your heart for Christ and healthcare in Ireland. We’d love to see you there!

        Bookings close at 12pm on Tuesday, 7 April 2026

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        Time

        April 11, 2026 10:00 am - 4:30 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        07may(may 7)3:30 pm08(may 8)5:00 pmNAMfest 2026Dressed in Christ and ready for work

        Event Details

        Dressed in Christ, ready for work Thursday 7 - Friday 8 May 2026, Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre, Staffordshire, 

        Event Details

        Dressed in Christ, ready for work

        Thursday 7 – Friday 8 May 2026,

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre, Staffordshire, ST15 0NL

        It’s seven o’clock, so it’s time to get changed. He pulls his lanyard over his head, unpins his name badge and stuffs them both in his rucksack as he heads home. She ties up the drawstrings of her scrub trousers and slips on her Crocs before heading onto the ward for handover. These are their end and beginning rituals, of putting off and putting on.

        The apostle Paul encouraged Christians in the early church to change their attire, too. He instructed them to doff their old self, and their former way of life, and to don their ‘…new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness’. (Ephesians 4 :24b)

        What impact would it have if we stepped into Christ’s changing room and took off old garments that weigh heavily and hinder us? Could we see a shift change in toxic workplace cultures, too, as we clothe ourselves distinctly in his love? As we gather together at NAMfest, we’ll be asking God for changeover. May he renew our minds and break through in our workplaces.

        Cost:

        £95 for full NAMfest (£75 for students)

        £45 for a Friday day ticket only; includes lunch

        Bookings close on 7 April 2026

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        Time

        May 7, 2026 3:30 pm - may 8, 2026 5:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

        Location

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NL

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

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        25sep(sep 25)5:00 pm18mar(mar 18)5:00 pmGlobal Track 2026-28

        Event Details

        Join CMF’s 18‑month Global Track, running from September 2026 to March 2028! The track is designed for medics, nurses, midwives and allied health professionals who are exploring or preparing for work

        Event Details

        Join CMF’s 18‑month Global Track, running from September 2026 to March 2028!

        The track is designed for medics, nurses, midwives and allied health professionals who are exploring or preparing for work in global health and mission.

        We especially welcome students in the final three years of their course, as well as graduates in the early stages of their careers, as the programme is structured to fit comfortably alongside ongoing studies, placements or work commitments.

        This will be our sixth cohort, building on years of experience delivering the programme.

        What’s Included
        • Residential & In‑Person Training: An introductory weekend residential with teaching, five Saturday training days at CMF HQ led by global health mission speakers, and a cross‑cultural training day in the UK.
        • Online Learning: Four two‑hour Wednesday evening webinars, and two assignments to help you reflect and apply your learning.
        • CMF Global Summer Mission Conference: Your place includes conference access with lectures, practical skills sessions, and workshops on healthcare in resource‑poor settings.
        • Mentoring: You’ll be paired with a mentor experienced in overseas missions for personalised support throughout the programme.
        • Vision Trip: Join one of three short‑term mission vision trips. If you can’t make these dates, we can consider your elective or another short-term mission trip instead.
        Course Fee

        £500

        Please note that this fee doesn’t include your travel, accommodation or extra days at the Global Summer Mission Conference, or the costs connected with your vision trip.
        We can provide a support letter if you’d like to invite prayer or financial support from your church, family, or friends.

        How to Apply
        Applications for the Global Track are now open, and close on Monday 30 March at 5:00 PM BST.

        To apply, email globaltrack@cmf.org.uk to request the application form.

         

        In Partnership With:

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        Time

        September 25, 2026 5:00 pm - march 18, 2028 5:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

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The birth of modern medical mission

to China, Edinburgh, and the ‘ends of the earth

CMF was founded in 1949, and 2024 will be its 75th Anniversary. However, its roots go back much further, and there is plenty to learn from the people and organisations that came before it. This is the second of a series of articles featuring some of the main highlights.Mark Pickering looks at the roots of the modern medical mission movement and how they fed into the founding of CMF

In my last article, [1] I outlined the birth of the Christian Medical Association in 1854, which led to the Medical Prayer Union in 1874. These associations of Christian doctors contained many who were great supporters of medical missionary work. But how and when did medical mission begin? This article will sketch out some of the main features of this incredible movement.

The first beginnings

Catholic Jesuit missions experimented with healthcare projects in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, particularly in Japan and the Philippines. [2] During this period, European Protestants were understandably preoccupied with establishing the Reformation in Catholic countries. However, by the early eighteenth century, a few were beginning to reach out further, such as the Danish-led missions to South India from Halle in Germany. Caspar Schlegelmilch, the first physician sent out by this mission in 1730, sadly died of dysentery after less than three weeks! [3] Mission was a risky business in those early days.Better known to many evangelicals is William Carey, who founded the Baptist Missionary Society (BMS) in 1792 and became a pioneer missionary in West Bengal, India. Less well known was his mission partner, Dr John Thomas, who was actually the BMS’s first missionary (Carey was appointed second). Thomas had been converted as a naval surgeon with the British East India Company (EIC). He had done independent missionary work in Calcutta before returning to England, meeting Carey, and convincing him to go with him to India instead of his original planned destination of Tahiti! [4]

Other early pioneers included John Scudder, an American doctor who went to work in South India in 1819. He was the first of several Scudders who continued his work, including his granddaughter Ida, who founded the famous Christian Medical College at Vellore, which still exists today. [5]

Medicine as a multiplier of mission

Many of the early intersections between medicine and mission were sporadic. This began to change in the 1820s as some realised the immense strategic value of medical practice to the spread of the gospel message itself. Karl Gützlaff was a German missionary who worked in Thailand and China. Although not formally trained in medicine, he had some basic medical knowledge, which he used to great effect. He realised that compassionate, physical healing often communicated far more than words, opening the way for many to listen to the Christian message. Gützlaff promoted the concept of medical mission and inspired great medical missionaries such as David Livingstone and Hudson Taylor, who founded the China Inland Mission. [6] He was also very influential on Peter Parker in his early years in China. [7]Many other changes were happening in the world at that time. With the expansion of trade and empires, many Western nations were coming into much greater contact with those of other nations and cultures. Western scientific medicine was making great strides and, in many cases, had a real opportunity to reduce suffering.

Revolution in China

In God’s providence, several key people and factors coincided in southern China in the 1830s, resulting in a significant gear-change for medical missions. At this time, Western trade with China was limited to just two locations centred around the Pearl River delta – the city of Canton/Guangzhou, and the Portuguese island colony of Macao at its mouth. Several Western nations had trading outposts there, including the EIC, amongst whose employees was a young Christian surgeon named Thomas Colledge.Colledge had trained at St Thomas’ Hospital in London before taking up this role. The EIC’s generous salary enabled him to devote time, resource, and energy to relieving disease in the local population. He quickly realised that surgical skills were particularly limited in China, and his own proficiency in ophthalmology meant he could make a dramatic impact by performing surgery for cataracts and other eye conditions. He opened a small eye hospital in 1827 in Macao before moving upriver to Canton in 1828, where he set up a similar hospital.

The next significant factor was the arrival of Peter Parker, a young American who was apparently the first anywhere to obtain dual training in theology and medicine with the deliberate aim of being a ‘medical missionary’. He arrived in Canton in 1834, where he soon teamed up with Gützlaff, Colledge, and others.

Over the next few years, they developed their ideas further until, in 1838, they formed the Medical Missionary Society in China (MMSC) – the world’s first medical missionary organisation. Remarkably far-sighted, they aimed to attract many others to follow their example, producing printed appeals in the UK and USA particularly, and calling mission agencies to send other ‘pious physicians’ to do the same. [8] God’s timing, again, was remarkable. The setting up of the MMSC owed much to Thomas Colledge, and its final establishment in 1838 occurred just weeks before he left Canton forever. He did, however, remain its honorary President until his death in 1879. [9]

Problems are opportunities in disguise

The international trade that had brought the gospel to China also brought darker forces. Western nations wanted many of the exotic goods that China could supply. Yet China wanted little of European goods, creating a problematic trade deficit. However, there was one lucrative product the West could export to China – sadly, that was opium, grown in India and sold in China. Chinese authorities resisted this, sometimes by force, in what became known as the Opium Wars.The First Opium War was in 1839-1842, ending with the Treaty of Nanking, which ceded Hong Kong Island to the British Government. [10] The fighting made Parker’s medical work impossible, forcing him to leave in 1840. But far from ending his influence, this flung it worldwide. In some ways, it was like the Apostle Paul’s imprisonment in Acts, which caused him to write many of the letters we know and love from the New Testament today. Parker returned temporarily to the USA but also spent time in the UK and France, spreading the cause of medical missions and the work of the MMSC. He met many notable Christians in London and Edinburgh in the summer of 1841. This catalysed the birth of two medical mission organisations with very similar origins but very different outcomes.

The Syrian Medical Aid Association

Parker’s visit to London helped stimulate the launch of the Syrian Medical Aid Association (SMAA) in 1841. Two of the chief organisers were Thomas Hodgkin (discoverer of Hodgkin’s Lymphoma – a Quaker who was a pathologist at Guy’s and then St Thomas’ Hospitals and who became a good friend of Parker) and Culling Eardley Smith (who went on to help found the Evangelical Alliance in 1846).The SMAA got off to a quick start, recruiting a missionary doctor to go to Lebanon and later another to go to Damascus. Sadly, it did not last and had completely evaporated by early 1847, leaving Hodgkin saddled with personal debts. Despite lofty ambitions and wealthy backers, the SMAA went too far, too fast, overcommitting itself to complex situations that it had not understood properly. When complications came, and early enthusiasm waned, there was little solid base on which to stand. [11]

The Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society

It was a different story when Parker visited Edinburgh, also in 1841. Local Christian doctors formed a committee, which soon became known as the Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society (EMMS). Instead of making the mistake of the SMAA and committing themselves early to send out their own missionaries, the EMMS promoted the concept of medical mission, especially amongst students, and raised awareness and funds for the work of the MMSC in China, and the SMAA in Syria. [12] They also found time to encourage Dr Golding Bird in 1853, spurring on his early efforts to found the Christian Medical Association (see the previous article in this series). [13]This slow and steady approach must have been frustrating to some, but it clearly paid off in the long run, as 180 years later, EMMS is still going strong! [14] During that time, hundreds of medical missionaries have given service totalling thousands of years in dozens of countries – their inspirational stories would take a lifetime to tell!

Just one well-known story is that of Dr Kaloost Vartan, an Armenian doctor who trained in Edinburgh under the EMMS and was inspired by this to go to Nazareth in 1861, founding the Nazareth Hospital. This incredible institution is still a beacon of light and hope to the local region today, supported by the Nazareth Trust, now independent of EMMS International. [15]

William Burns Thomson

Back in the slums of Edinburgh, a local Christian doctor started a dispensary in 1853, providing free medical care for the poor people of the area. This gradually became more closely associated with EMMS and, by 1861, was their official ‘training institution’, relocated to the Cowgate area of Edinburgh. Medical students could live in the EMMS Hostel under the watchful eye of the Superintendent, Dr William Burns Thomson. In this supportive, mission-minded environment, they were trained in ‘home medical mission’, both providing free medical care to the population and sharing the gospel with them. Through this strategic arrangement, many students went on to serve as medical missionaries all over the world; both sent directly by EMMS and by other mission agencies.Dr Burns Thomson was a force of nature for the cause of medical missions. Originally planning to be a non-medical missionary, he was on a pastoral visit in the tough slums of Edinburgh when a woman mistook him for a doctor. Her demeanour instantly changed. She listened intently and gladly received his prescription of gospel truth along with the castor oil he had suggested for her ailments! Sensing a strategic opportunity, he applied for medical training. Although he never worked overseas as a medical missionary, Thomson had incredible influence, training students in the Cowgate, publishing and circulating inspiring stories from his contacts around the world in the Medical Missionary Journal and championing the cause of ‘home medical mission’. The mission dispensary he ran in Edinburgh gave rise to many others based on its model – in Aberdeen, Glasgow, Birmingham, Liverpool, and London, to name a few. The London Medical Mission was foundational to the birth of the Medical Prayer Union and the Medical Missionary Association in the 1870s. [16]

Dr Burns Thomson later retired to London, where he lived on the compound of the Mildmay Mission Hospital, working as a chaplain to support the Mildmay nurses, many of whom also went out to mission hospitals all over the world. [17]

To the ‘Ends of the Earth’

The middle decades of the nineteenth century saw the medical mission movement begin in earnest, slowly gain traction, and then finally begin to grow exponentially. More and more people grasped medical mission’s immense strategic importance for relieving suffering and multiplying gospel influence holistically, much as Jesus himself went about ‘proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness’. (Matthew 4:23)As we look back from our current vantage point, however, the movement is not without its controversies. The key players in the early decades were virtually all white men from Europe or the USA. ‘This is less surprising when we realise that it was not until 1849 that the first woman was permitted to qualify as a physician in the USA, and 1865 in the UK. Also, the vast waves of missionary nurses who have contributed so much to the movement mostly came a little later, as mission hospitals became more established and the modern nursing profession was codified. [18] Hundreds of female missionary doctors also served as medical training opened up and as the need became clear to reach the many women secluded in the harems and zenanas (female domestic quarters) of South Asia and the Far East. This prompted entire missions and training centres as part of the Zenana medical missionary movement. [19]

We also see how so much of the early medical mission movement was mixed up with colonialism and the expansion of the military and trade networks of Western empires. Many indigenous physicians and other local assistants were crucial to the projects led by Western pioneers whose names are better known. Most Western missionary physicians had a genuine, deep desire to serve indigenous populations who were equally made in God’s image. But despite this, it was sometimes hard to avoid (or even recognise) implicit feelings of cultural superiority that can jar painfully in today’s globalised, multicultural world. These underlying assumptions are quite rightly being reappraised by contemporary thinkers, but in doing so, we must take great care not to swing too far the other way. Genuine humility, careful listening and equal partnership are always vital in any cross-cultural situation. The CMF Global team are wrestling with the challenging contemporary implications through our ‘Western Saviours?’ working group.

What can we learn from the early medical mission movement?

This brief survey of a complex and fascinating movement can teach us numerous lessons for today:

  • It was a product of its age – rapid changes in medicine, trade, and empire brought great opportunities but also many complications. We should always be willing to reappraise Christian history through a biblical lens.
  • God’s amazing providence is evident throughout – chance meetings, difficult people, even wars – the Lord uses them all to accomplish his purposes!
  • The importance of training students early is shown to great effect by the example of the EMMS.
  • The contrasting stories of the SMAA and EMMS remind us that steadily building something that lasts is better than growing fast and then fading away – see the parable of the sower! [20]
  • Medical mission was once ‘new’ and ‘strange’ and took decades to become well established. We should never be afraid to try something new that has not been thought of before – it might just change the world!

Author details

  • Mark Pickering

    Mark Pickering is CMF Chief Executive and a prison GP

    View all posts

Related Publication


  • Triple Helix – Autumn 2022

Key Points

  • Medical mission has ancient, deep roots but did not intentionally marry a strategic concern for health and wellbeing with the proclamation of the gospel until the 1820s.
  • Empire, trade, and war created the pathways for medical missions to go into Asia and Africa in the mid-to-late nineteenth century.
  • While engaged and committed overseas, many of the most impactful and long-lived medical missions also looked to take care of the health and spiritual needs of Britain’s own urban poor.

Related Articles


  • Bangladesh to East Sussex

  • Bonus online content: Global mission

  • Child Witch Accusations

  • Moving between healthcare systems

  • Double harvest

  • Training health workers through war and instability

  • Resilient discipleship in healthcare

References

Accessed 12/9/221. Pickering M. Golding Bird and the Christian Medical Association. Triple Helix. Spring 2022. cmf.li/3AK9834

2. Grundmann C. Sent to Heal! Lanham. University Press of America, 2005: 22-29

3. Grundmann 31-35

4. Carey SP. William Carey. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1923: 96-105

5. Ida S. Scudder. Wikipedia. bit.ly/3Rd13es6. Grundmann 51-567.

Grundmann 63-64

8. Medical Missionary Society in China. Internet Archive. bit.ly/3cF3O9n9. A fascinating biography of Thomas Colledge has recently been written by his great-great-grandson. See Colledge R. Medicine and Mission. Malvern. Aspect, 2020.

10. First Opium War. Wikipedia. bit.ly/3TzVmJ9

11. Kass A. The Syrian Medical Aid Association. Medical History. 1987, 31: 143-159. bit.ly/3B8am9L

12. Lowe J. Medical Missions — Their Place and Power. Edinburgh: John Menzies, 3rd ed, 1890: 201-205

13. Pickering 2022

14. EMMS International. emms.org

15. The Nazareth Trust. nazarethtrust.org/about/our-history

16. These will be further outlined in a future article in this series.

17. The Mildmay Mission Hospital will feature in a future article in this series.

18. The Christian roots of modern nursing will feature in a future article in this series.

19. A good example is Interserve, formerly the Zenana Bible and Medical Mission — interserve.org/our-story

20 Matthew 13:1-23

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The Christian Healthcare Leadership Network (CHLN) is an initiative of the Christian Medical Fellowship (CMF). To be eligible to join the network, you need to be registered with CMF as a Member/ Associate Member or CMF Friend. If you are not already registered as any of the above, please sign up to a member or a friend of CMF before proceeding with your application to join CHLN.
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