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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
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      • 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
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        the trouble with opt-outs

        December 1, 2025
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        Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?

        August 12, 2025
        Read more
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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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Should Christians care about physical health?

Rebecca Horton considers the value of human bodies

the debate: why is this contentious?

‘Practising medicine is simply a means to bring salvation to people’s souls.’

This statement immediately feels incorrect, outrageous even… but how do we know that? What is our rationale for healing bodies that will die anyway and be resurrected? What if Jesus’ healing ministry was all about drawing crowds in? If we could get alongside people in a different way, would we? How much does the physical body matter? What is the absolute value of healthcare today?

These initial thoughts are not too far removed from the ‘original’ mission paradigm. ‘You’re not strictly speaking a missionary’ (1) was the attitude when medical work was first proposed as a part of global mission. This was perhaps due to an extrapolation of the dichotomy believed to exist between body and soul: a concept that is partially true (2) but does not mean that man is wholly dichotomous and can be separated into a physical and spiritual form. To put it plainly, we are neither ensouled bodies or embodied souls: but whole people who are greater than the sum of these parts. This understanding is important. If mankind was regarded as a soul that needed saving with the body almost irrelevant, there would indeed be no absolute reason to practise medicine other than to gain entry to preach the gospel or as some way of demonstrating God’s love.

The whole story of the Bible affords dignity, respect and honour to physical human bodies. This begins in Genesis, continues throughout the Old Testament, is made abundantly clear in Jesus’s ministry and is revealed fully in biblical descriptions of the new heaven and new earth. It is indeed true that healthcare can be a means of demonstrating God’s love and through this some may be brought to faith. But this is not where all the value lies. The Bible gives compelling reasons to treat physical humans with the utmost care and dignity: the eternal, physical nature of human beings is at the core of this. Considering the Bible as the true story of the entire world (3) explains to us what we instinctively know: physical health matters.

created: physically

‘The Lord God formed a man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.’ (Genesis 2:7)

Although created for a different purpose to animals, man is of the same continuum, made in unity with the physical universe. Physical human bodies are made of the dust of the earth, heavenly bodies from heavenly material. (4) Each have their own glory. Man is not, therefore, simply a spiritual being trapped in an earthly body. The created ‘living being’ (5) is a unified body, soul, mind and spirit and this is also the pattern for the resurrection, (6) where we will be fully resurrected with our mortal bodies becoming immortal as well as our souls.

God asserts the importance of his physical creation (‘and it was very good’, [Genesis 1:31]) and gives man special responsibility over it, known as the Creation Mandate. ‘God blessed them and said to them, “be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.”‘ (Genesis 1:28) Man is distinguished from the rest of creation by his relationship with God, but not to the exclusion of his physical body. Man is described as a ‘living being’: encompassing body, mind, soul and spirit into one seamless being. The stewardship commanded over the earth extends to stewardship over the bodies of ourselves and others. In caring for bodies, we also play an important part in God’s restoration; the coming of the new (perfect!) creation.

The story continues when physical brokenness enters with the fall. (7) Critically, this mandate to care for the earth is not revoked. A new day is promised when evil will be defeated, and the world restored, but in the meantime man and woman are to continue their role of stewardship. The later promises of re-creation are not a contradiction to the importance of caring for the physical world now, but rather encourage us to work to restore broken physical bodies as we play a part in foreshadowing God’s restoration. The promised re-establishment of peace (in Hebrew, shalom) refers to wholeness and reiterates the creation of man as mind, body, soul and spirit, beautifully intertwined. Neither the story of creation, nor the promise for restoration of God’s people, present an argument for humans being merely embodied souls.

The hygiene and cleansing parts of the Law (8) primarily demonstrate God’s holiness, and the holiness of his people as a nation set apart. But they also protect (and certainly do not jeopardise) their physical health. God does not command practices that harm physical health, but he protects the bodies he’s made. He shows his concern for physical needs through providing food for his wandering nation in the desert, (9) so his people can be sure he will provide for them. A wonderful example of God’s personal, holistic care is found in 1 Kings 19. Elijah is distraught, he ‘came to a broom bush, sat down under it and then prayed that he might die’ (1 Kings 19:4). The Lord reacts with gentleness and first cares for Elijah’s physical needs by providing sleep, bread and water before meeting his emotional and spiritual concerns.

God did not ‘give up’ on his physical creation after the fall, and indeed is still sustaining it. The mandate in creation that we too should care for the physical beings of this world still stands.

Jesus healed: physically

‘Which is easier: to say to this paralysed man, “Your sins are forgiven”, or to say, “Get up, take your mat and walk”? But I want you to know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins.’ So he said to the man, ‘I tell you, get up, take your mat and go home.’ (Mark 2:9-11)

1. not just to draw the crowds

Healing forms a huge part of Jesus’ ministry. Although he is clear that heavenly matters are paramount, (10) we ‘do not have a high priest who is unable to feel sympathy for our weaknesses’. (Hebrews 4:15) Jesus himself has a physical human body. As he heals the woman who is bleeding, (11) weeps with Lazarus’s sisters (12) and gives back the sight to the blind man, (13) Jesus demonstrates that his healing is out of love, not simply to draw crowds to hear his name. His tears for Lazarus proclaim that suffering and death matter. Caring for the physical health needs of others is an outpouring of godly love. More than that: it is part of the restoration promised, as we get a glimpse of this heavenly restoration in Christ’s ministry.

2. command to care physically

Whether or not the miraculous healings seen in Acts are to be expected today is widely debated. (14) But the command to care for those who suffer, and specifically for their physical health needs, is not a matter of debate. Our attitudes towards the physical needs of others reflect our attitude towards God. If we tell people the gospel without attending to their suffering, can we really claim to love them? ‘For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was ill and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me’ (Matthew 25:35-36). Christ loves and cares for the physical needs of his people so much, that when we care for them, it is as though we are caring for him personally.

3. inwardly groan for physical restoration

Christ attending to both spiritual and physical needs is demonstrated in the story of the paralysed man. (15) We’re not told why this man was paralysed, or even much about him. Jesus attended to his spiritual needs first, making it clear that our sin is more serious than our physical sufferings now. Jesus first forgives his sins. But, as Jesus also cares about this man’s physical suffering, he then tells him to get up and walk. He came to bring us into relationship with God. But this doesn’t mean that he thinks our physical suffering is unimportant. We should also consider what this doesn’t say about healing. First, we know from the rest of Scripture that physical sickness is not always a result of individual sin (16) that will disappear when sins are forgiven. Physical healing is not promised to everyone who comes to faith, (17) nor is it only given to people who have come to faith: natural and supernatural healing can happen to saints and sinners alike. Additionally, the Bible demonstrates that physical healing can happen miraculously, but it is not guaranteed before heaven.

That longing for final healing is captured by Paul as he ‘groan(s) inwardly’, awaiting ‘redemption of our bodies.’ (18) Healing is promised in the new creation where there will be ‘no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away’. Sickness and death will no longer be the order of the day. Although in God’s grace we see a foreshadowing of this healing now, a correct theology will help keep us from stumbling when we do not always see the healing that we groan for on this earth.

4. incarnation demonstrates dignity

Finally, Jesus being himself fully human proclaims the importance of physical bodies. In Jesus’s incarnation, God bestows his own glory on the human body and this alone is enough to tell us that all human bodies should be treated with honour, respect and dignity.

we will be recreated: physically

‘Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you!” Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here, see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it in my side. Stop doubting and believe.” Thomas said to him “My Lord and my God!”‘ (John 20:26-28)

Far from being a reason to ignore our physical bodies, Jesus’s resurrection in human form is an endorsement of the physical body, the ‘final yes’ to the pinnacle of his creation. (19) If physical matter was just to be done away with in the new creation, something we would no longer see, then the argument for its value is lessened. ‘But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep’ (1 Corinthians 15:20) and we will also have physical resurrection bodies.

As God asserted that the physical body was ‘very good’ at creation, he now demonstrates that it is good enough for the new creation. Our physical bodies will ‘be changed – in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable’ (1 Corinthians 15:52) with a physical new creation.

concluding thoughts: how does this affect us practically?

How we consider the human form has implications for us as doctors and nurses. The Bible, throughout its story, affords a great deal of dignity and respect for the human form. Yes, the eternal souls of mankind deserve the deepest outpouring of our hearts. But this eternal significance of our souls does not diminish the respect our bodies deserve. Indeed, we were created whole, redeemed whole in Christ, and will be restored whole on that final day. In all these states physical matter plays a part. It is easy to dismiss the human body when what we see daily is its weakness. We yearn for the time when ‘the new is here’ (2 Corinthians 5:17). Let’s rejoice in the beauty of wholeness. Let’s delight when we see a glimpse of restoration now. And let’s look forward to when the physical world is made new, asserting now the utmost respect for the human body, knowing that God himself has indeed given it the ‘final yes’. (20)

Author details

  • Rebecca Horton

    An FY1 in Oxfordshire

    View all posts

Related Publication


  • Nucleus – Spring 2020

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References

  1. Inchley V. Rendle Short Lecture 2002: The Theology of Medical Mission. Triple Helix Winter 2003;(22):12-14. bit.ly/2VOFRic
  2. Mark 8:36
  3. For more on this idea, see John Wyatt’s talks at CMF Student Conference 2019. bit.ly/2f7Csrh
  4. 1 Corinthians 15:48
  5. Genesis 2:7
  6. 1 Corinthians 15:51-54
  7. Genesis 3:16-19
  8. For example, Leviticus 14
  9. Exodus 16:35
  10. Mark 8:36
  11. Matthew 9:20-22
  12. John 11:33
  13. John 9:1-12
  14. Fergusson A. Does God heal miraculously today? Nucleus May 2019;49(2):12-15
  15. Mark 2:1-12
  16. John 9:3
  17. Romans 8:18-25
  18. Romans 8:23
  19. This concept is drawn from a lecture entitled Artificial Intelligence: Hopes and Fears, given by Prof John Wyatt at Norwich Cathedral, 3 October 2018
  20. Ibid

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Join CHLN

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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