Foundational Principles

In addition to our Statement of Faith, the
following principles guide those who work together in the ministry of Grace
Family Medicine.
1. Commitment to Christ (Ephesians 2.1-10)
As a result of experiencing Christ’s redeeming love in the midst of life’s
trials and being "born anew," all of us who have become associates of
the ministry share a common faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Moving on
to develop a deep, Spirit-led commitment to follow Him in every aspect of our
private and public lives, we have been called to give our lives in service to
others in His Name. Our personal commitment to Christ is nurtured through
regular devotions in prayer and study of God’s Word, committed worship and
fellowship in a local church, and reaching out in daily life to bear witness to
God’s love in word and deed.
2. Working Together in Harmony (John 17.20-23; Ephesians 4.1-7)
Along with His Branches and its staff we seek to model a form of contemporary family
medical practice where believers in the Lordship of Jesus Christ can be mutually
supportive in ministering professionally to the afflicted in the Name of the
Lord without fear of discrimination for the full expression of their shared
faith. Three aspects of the support we offer are: celebration of our unity in
the Body of Christ across denominational boundaries of doctrinal emphasis
(Messianic, Pentecostal, Evangelical, Liturgical), mutual respect for each other’s
personal and professional calling, and a humble assessment of our own worth as
God’s associates in meeting the needs of the afflicted. Whenever we share our
faith with one another, even in questioning ways, it is for the purpose of
upholding, strengthening, and learning more about God and each other. We see our
work as a team effort, with Christ as the Head and each of us contributing our
special gifts and skills to the whole. We are careful to value one another
personally and materially, counting each one as at least as worthy if not more
worthy than ourselves.
3. Loving our Neighbors (Ephesians 3.14-21)
We strive in all of our dealings with patients and the community to reflect a
positive witness of the Lord Jesus, influencing those things in the lives of our
patients and society which we are called to address and learning to prayerfully
release those things which are beyond our control. We offer our services to as
many as we are able, without discriminating against any individual or group on
racial, ethnic, lifestyle or socioeconomic grounds. We have chosen to locate
ourselves so that we are easily accessible to the poor. Our aim is to spend
quality time with each patient and family while honoring our commitments to
patients who are waiting to be seen. Quality time means that we relate to
patients as whole persons by addressing not only their physical needs but their
psychological, interpersonal and spiritual concerns as well. Our goal is to draw
close enough during each patient encounter that we may be able to share
meaningfully with them in faith-related inquiry and prayer, seeking together
with others in ministry to strengthen them in their personal faith and church
participation. We envision becoming a growing ministry, used by the Lord to meet
the service needs of the community by expanding into several locally sensitive
neighborhood offices which are small and personal enough to be accessible in
scale as well as accountable in management.
4. Talent and Wealth (1 Chronicles 29.10-19; 1 Timothy 6.6-11)
We believe that anything we have that is of any value is an unearned gift
of God’s grace, which has been entrusted to us to share with others
according to His plan. We are, therefore, no more than stewards of any talent
or possessions that may be at our disposal and will ultimately be judged
accordingly. While recognizing that it is one of our primary responsibilities
to ensure that God’s provision for our needs and those of our families comes
in part through our labors, we have personally rejected any motivation to
accumulate private wealth at the expense of godly service to others. We see
medical practice as an ethical profession that is, of necessity, an amalgam of
both business and human service ministry. However, in our view, the ministry
of medicine is primary with godly business management providing only a
supportive function.
5. Advocacy for Human Life (Deuteronomy 30.19; Psalm 139.13-16)
In all of our interactions with patients and the broader community we are
committed to being advocates for the protection and preservation of human life
from conception to natural death, avoiding any complicity with the methods or
referral to the practices of those who participate in offering abortifacient
services, assisted suicide or euthanasia. Both publicly and privately we
earnestly support choosing life over unsupported or unnatural death in any
discussion involving beginning or end of life decisions.
6. Pro-Family Orientation (Ephesians 5.21-6.4)
We believe that God instituted the nuclear family as the basic building
block of healthy, stable societies, and that faithful heterosexual marriage is
the greatest protection the family has against the many attacks it is
undergoing in our culture today. For these reasons, we support and respect
sexual abstinence outside of marriage, faithful monogamy within marriage and
legitimate parental authority.
7. The Science and Art of Medicine
We believe that Western scientific inquiry, which seeks to describe and
codify the material world and discern the laws which underlie its operation,
is a philosophical outgrowth of the Judeo-Christian understanding of the
universe as the created work of an orderly God. Since contemporary allopathic
medicine is a discipline subject to verification by the scientific method, we
have a measure of confidence in its findings and therapeutic approach. We do
not have the same confidence in other, alternative therapeutic disciplines
based on non-scientific speculations (such as homeopathy, naturopathy, applied
kinesiology, reflexology, iridology, rolfing, magnetic therapy, or
chiropractic) or the philosophical or spiritual tenets of other religious and
cultural systems (such as Ayurveda, Sidda, therapeutic touch, shaitsu or
acupuncture).
While science may illuminate many aspects of medical diagnosis and
treatment, we believe that the art of medicine remains crucial to its healing
power. In this regard we place our ultimate confidence for restoring and
maintaining wholeness, not in the scientific tools of our profession but in
the quality of our communion with the living God and our communication with
others. Through faith, prayer and study we continually seek to become more
sensitive, compassionate and genuinely gifted and knowledgeable human beings
who are able to relate to our patients and their problems with grace, truth
and wisdom.
8. Whole Person vs. Wholistic Medicine
We believe that what has come to be called "wholistic medicine"
usually amounts to augmenting or replacing traditional medical diagnosis and
treatment with an eclectic assortment of alternative therapies. We also
believe that the apparent efficacy of many wholistic approaches can be traced
more to the quality and quantity of time spent with patients than to the
particular therapies being prescribed. The comprehensive approach we have been
led to espouse, which we prefer to call "whole person medicine" or
"Christ-centered family care," complements contemporary allopathic
family medical care with quality time spent in faith-related inquiry,
biblically sound counseling and prayer in such a way that the physical,
psychological and spiritual needs of patients are all addressed along with
lifestyle issues such as interpersonal relationships, healthy nutrition,
exercise, and stress management and coping strategies. As a general rule, we
do not advocate unusual nutritional or megavitamin therapies, chelation
therapy, proprietary dietary or herbal supplements or strenuous purgative
regimens.
9. Community Oriented Primary Care
We believe in a broad-based focus of care that includes the neighborhoods
and communities in which we and our patients live as well as those individuals
and families who seek our care. We sense a particular call to underserved
neighborhoods and to networking with others in the community who are assessing
the resources, addressing the needs, and providing services in these areas.
10. Teaching and Research
Working together with others in the faith and medical communities, one of
our primary functions as a ministry is to serve as teachers and mentors for
students in the health professions who wish to pursue their careers as an
expression of their Christian faith and who desire to learn how to integrate
their faith with their clinical practice in seamless and practical ways. We
are also committed to growing in our knowledge of Christian medical practice
through ongoing study and research and sharing what we have learned wherever
it may be helpful.
11. Missionary Work
We consider what we do to be home missionary work and are very supportive
of those who sense a call to outreach, evangelism, and medical missions, both
at home and abroad. We desire to organize ourselves so we may participate in
similar missionary work in other locations as the Lord opens opportunities. In
addition, we desire to remain supportive of students who have been called to
the mission field after spending some of their training time with us.