Our November Issue: An Ocean of Need

How can we care for the sick when we don’t have the cash?

Illustrations by Ileana Soon

My late wife endured a brutal chemotherapy regimen during her voyage with cancer, navigated by a compassionate staff of devoted nurses and technicians overwhelmed by an ocean of patients. Each week we’d enter the infusion room and wonder, Who doesn’t have cancer?

On one occasion, I overheard a nurse speaking with a patient just finishing her regimen, asking her how she planned to get home. Chemotherapy exhausts your whole body and mind, so patients need to arrange rides from family or friends for safety and comfort’s sake. The weakened patient replied she had no one to drive her and no money for a taxi or Uber, so she planned to take the bus. The nurse, nonplussed, pressed her for other options, but the patient demurred. She’d make do the best she could.

The pastor in me wanted to pivot and assist, but I didn’t have any cash on me and couldn’t abandon my own beloved. Didn’t the oncology center have travel vouchers? Weren’t volunteer systems or agencies available to come alongside cancer patients in dire situations? If so, the nurse didn’t mention any. I helplessly prayed, so wanting to do more, as the poor woman wobbled from the infusion room.

The costs of health care are staggering. I was blessed with ample insurance, so mind-boggling bills weightily descended upon me daily, only to then evaporate with my coverage into the ether. Economics, along with autonomy and availability, drives most every health care decision. Politics frame our decisions in binary terms of either human rights or consumer preferences. Health care policy features in every election cycle. Theologically, nothing transforms one’s prayer life like illness. Jesus cures some disease, but not all, pointing everyone instead toward the ultimate cure only resurrection provides.

In the meantime, Christians wrestle with ethics and earthbound economics. In this issue, Liuan Huska explores Christian responses and solutions to the morass of medicinal policy in America—from Obamacare and employer-based options to health care sharing ministries that try to pool faithful communities together to access care while controlling costs.

Among the chief Christian virtues is concern for the sick beyond ourselves and our own loved ones, and love for our neighbors and enemies. Huska challenges Christians to recapture a vision we once had for health care that contributes to shalom, the well-being of all society, not merely to our own good. Amid an oceanic pandemic, economic upheaval, turbulent politics, and sickening anxiety, we need calmed seas more than ever.

Daniel Harrell is editor in chief of Christianity Today. Follow him on Twitter @DanlHarrell.

Also in this issue

The costs of health care in America are staggering. Those blessed with the right insurance watch mind-boggling medical bills evaporate into the ether, as if by magic. But millions of others risk having their lives derailed by such bills, or they risk the life-threatening consequences of forgoing treatment because they could not begin to pay for it. The modern US system of insurance-based care began as a Christian invention to help the vulnerable, but today it often feels like a punitive system denying medicine to those who need it most. Our cover story this month asks: Can Christians once again find a better way?

Cover Story

Christians Invented Health Insurance. Can They Make Something Better?

Hope Is an Expectant Leap

News

Gleanings: November 2020

Paul’s Most Beloved Letter Was Entrusted to a Woman

Meet the TikTok Generation of Televangelists

Testimony

I Was a World Series Hero on the Brink of Suicide

We All Know Christ’s Dying Words. But Can We Define the ‘It’ That Is ‘Finished’?

News

At Purple Churches, Pastors Struggle with Polarized Congregations

News

Who Preaches on Politics? Most Pastors.

News

Churches Search for Sounds of Heaven

5 Books That Turn Our Grumbling into Gratitude

News

Creation Care Movement Takes Action with Solar Panels and Petitions

Editorial

Post-Election Civility Is Not Enough

Reply All

It’s Okay Not to Be Okay

Cultivating Chaos

Joy That Won’t Wither

How Churches Elevate and Protect Abusive Pastors

Review

A True Religion Does Three Things and Answers Four Questions

Review

Share the Gospel with Prisoners. Then Apply It to the System.

New & Noteworthy Fiction

View issue

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