1 Spirituality and Health: An Overview

This is the work of compassion: 

to embrace everything clearly 

without imposing who we are 

and without losing who we are.  

                                                                                               – Mark Nepo

This first chapter explores the connection between spirituality and health, with an emphasis on individual reflection about the nature of spirituality and its role in health promotion and restoration. To begin, you are invited to spend some quiet time with the above image and each of its words. If you wish, note in some way any questions, insights, thoughts, feelings, memories, resources, or anything else that comes up within you. You may wish to further explore these experiences at the end of the chapter … or to simply remain mindful of them as you read on.

Universal Spiritual Needs 

The concept of ‘universal spiritual needs’ was introduced within nursing by Judith Fish & Sharon Shelly (1988).  Of course, wisdom traditions (time honoured faiths or worldviews) have offered related teachings throughout history (Scott Barss, 2012).  For example, many First Nations’ sacred teachings speak to these fundamental human needs (Stonechild, 2016). If these needs are unmet or out of balance, our well-being (and maybe that of others) is negatively impacted (Stonechild; Fish & Shelly).  Therefore, tending to our own and others’ spiritual needs is central to caring for our spirits.

Of course, doing so in a compassionate manner is vital. Yet we too often struggle to do so, as is abundantly evident in the prevailing divisions and conflicts we witness daily, both locally and globally. In an effort to help address this reality, religious historian, Karen Armstrong has led a related initiative:

Home : Charter for Compassion

This website’s resources, along with the Charter itself, may support you and others in related personal and professional pursuits. In the shorter term, they offer helpful reminders to approach your exploration of this and subsequent chapters in a spirit of compassion. Without compassion, our very need for interconnection is quite likely to be disrupted, as are other closely-related spiritual needs.

 

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The Spiritual Dimension of Health Care Copyright © by Karen Scott Barss is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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