Medicine:
med'-i-sin, med'-i-s'-n (gehah, teruphah, rephu'ah): These words are used in the sense of a remedy or remedies for disease. In Pr 17:22 the King James Version, a merry heart is said to do good "like a medicine." There is an alternative reading in the King James Version margin, "to a medicine," the Revised Version (British and American) "is a good medicine"; the Revised Version margin gives another rendering, "causeth good healing," which is the form that occurs in the Septuagint and which was adopted by Kimchi and others. Some of the Targums, substituting a waw for the first h in gehah, read here "doeth good to the body," thus making this clause antithetic to the latter half of the verse. In any case the meaning is that a cheerful disposition is a powerful remedial agent.
In the figurative account of the evil case of Judah and Israel because of their backsliding (Jer 30:13), the prophet says they have had no rephu'ah, or "healing medicines." Later on (Jer 46:11), when pronouncing the futility of the contest of Neco against Nebuchadrezzar, Jeremiah compares Egypt to an incurably sick woman going up to Gilead to take balm as a medicine, without any benefit. In Ezekiel's vision of the trees of life, the leaves are said (the King James Version) to be for medicine, the Revised Version (British and American) reads "healing," thereby assimilating the language to that in Re 22:2, "leaves of the tree.... for the healing of the nations" (compare Eze 47:12).
Very few specific remedies are mentioned in the Bible. "Balm of Gilead" is said to be an anodyne (Jer 8:22; compare Jer 51:8). The love-fruits, "mandrakes" (Ge 30:14) and "caperberry" (Ec 12:5 margin), myrrh, anise, rue, cummin, the "oil and wine" of the Good Samaritan, soap and sodic carbonate ("natron," called by mistake "nitre") as cleansers, and Hezekiah's "fig poultice" nearly exhaust the catalogue. In the Apocrypha we have the heart, liver and gall of Tobit's fish (Tobit 6:7). In the Egyptian pharmacopoeia are the names of many plants which cannot be identified, but most of the remedies used by them were dietetic, such as honey, milk, meal, oil, vinegar, wine. The Babylonian medicines, as far as they can be identified, are similar. In the Mishna we have references to wormwood, poppy, hemlock, aconite and other drugs. The apothecary mentioned in the King James Version (Ex 30:25, etc.) was a maker of perfumes, not of medicines. Among the fellahin many common plants are used as folk-remedies, but they put most confidence in amulets or charms, which are worn by most Palestinian peasants to ward off or to heal diseases.
Written by Alexander Macalister
Medicine: General Scriptures Concerning
Pro 17:22; Isa 1:6; 38:21; Jer 8:22; 30:13; 46:11; 51:8, 9; Eze 47:12; Luk 10:34; Rev 22:2
Medicine: References Concerning
See DISEASES; PHYSICIAN
Medicine:
Egypt was the earliest home of medical and other skill for the region of the Mediterranean basin, and every Egyptian mummy of the more expensive and elaborate sort involved a process of anatomy. Still we have no trace of any philosophical or rational system of Egyptian origin; still medicine in Egypt was a mere art or profession. Compared with the wild countries around them, however, the Egyptians must have seemed incalculably advanced. Representations of early Egyptian surgery apparently occur on some of the monuments of Beni‐Hassan. Those who have assisted at the opening of a mummy have noticed that the teeth exhibited a dentistry not inferior in execution to the work of the best modern experts. This confirms the statement of Herodotus that every part of the body was studied by a distinct practitioner. The reputation of Egypt's practitioners in historical times was such that both Cyrus and Darius sent to that country for physicians or surgeons. Of midwifery we have a distinct notice (Exodus 1:1) and of women as its Practitioners, which fact may also be verified from the scriptures. The scrupulous attention paid to the dead was favorable to the health of the living. The practice of physic was not among the Jews a privilege of the priesthood. Any one might practice it, and this publicity must have kept it pure. Rank and honor are said to be the portion of the physician, and his office to be from the Lord (Ecclesiasticus 38:1; 38:3; 38:12). To bring down the subject to the period of the New Testament, St. Luke, "the beloved physician," who practiced at Antioch whilst the body was his care, could hardly have failed to be convenient with all the leading opinions current down to his own time. Among special diseases named in the Old Testament is ophthalmia (Genesis 29:17) which is perhaps more common in Syria and Egypt than anywhere else in the world; especially in the fig season, the juice of the newly‐ripe fruit having the power of giving it. It may occasion partial or total blindness (2 Kings 6:18). The "burning boil," (Leviticus 13:23) is merely marked by the notion of an effect resembling that of fire, like our "carbuncle." The diseases rendered "scab" and "scurvy" in Leviticus 21:20; 22:22; 28:27, may be almost any skin disease. Some of these may be said to approach the type of leprosy. The "botch (shechin) of Egypt," (Deuteronomy 28:27) is so vague a term as to yield a most uncertain sense. In Deuteronomy 28:35 is mentioned a disease attacking the "knees and legs," consisting in a "sore botch which cannot be healed," but extended, in the sequel of the verse, from the "sole of the foot to the top of the head." The Elephantiasis graecorum is what now passes under the name of "leprosy;" the lepers, e.g. of the huts near the Zion gate of modern Jerusalem are elephantissiacs. SEE [LEPER, LEPROSY]. The disease of King Antiochus (2 Maccabees 9:5‐10, etc.) was that of a boil breeding worms. The case of the widow's son restored by Elisha (2 Kings 4:19) was probably one of sunstroke. The palsy meets us in the New Testament only, and in features too familiar to need special remark. palsy, gangrene and cancer were common in all the countries familiar to the scriptural writers, and neither differs from the modern disease of the same name. Mention is also made of the bites and stings of poisonous reptiles (Numbers 21:6).
Among surgical instruments or pieces of apparatus the following only are alluded to in Scripture: A cutting instrument, supposed a "sharp stone," (Exodus 4:25) the "knife" of Joshua 5:2. The "awl" of Exodus 21:6 was probably a surgical instrument. The "roller to bind" of Ezekiel 30:21 was for a broken limb, and is still used. A scraper, for which the "potsherd" of Job was a substitute (Job 2:8); Exodus 30:23-25 is a prescription in form.
An occasional trace occurs of some chemical knowledge, e.g. the calcination of the gold by Moses (Exodus 32:20) the effect of "vinegar upon natron," (Proverbs 25:20 compare Jeremiah 2:22) the mention of "the apothecary," (Exodus 30:35; Ecclesiastes 10:1) and of the merchant in "powders," (Solomon 3:6) shows that a distinct and important branch of trade was set up in these wares, in which, as at a modern druggist's, articles of luxury, etc., are combined with the remedies of sickness. Among the most favorite of external remedies has always been the bath. There were special occasions on which the bath was ceremonially enjoined. The Pharisees and Essenes aimed at scrupulous strictness in all such rules (Matthew 15:2; Mark 7:5; Luke 11:38). River‐bathing was common but houses soon began to include a bathroom (Leviticus 15:13; 2 Samuel 11:2; 2 Kings 5:10).
Disease: Sent from God
Lev 14:34
Disease: As Judgments
Psa 107:17; Isa 3:17
Disease: Instances Of
Upon the Egyptians,
see PLAGUES;
upon Nabal,
1Sa 25:38;
David's child,
2Sa 12:15;
Gehazi,
2Ki 5:27;
Jeroboam,
2Ch 13:20;
Jehoram,
2Ch 21:12-19;
Uzziah,
2Ch 26:17-20.
Disease: Threatened As Judgments
Lev 26:16; Deu 7:15; 28:22, 27, 28, 35; 29:22
Disease: Healing Of
From God,
Exd 15:26; 23:25; Deu 7:15; 2Ch 16:12; Psa 103:3; 107:20.
Disease: In Answer To Prayer:
Of Hezekiah,
2Ki 20:1-11; Isa 38:1-8;
David,
Psa 21:4; 116:8.
Disease: Miraculous Healing Of
A sign to accompany the preaching of the word,
Mar 16:18.
See MIRACLES
Disease: Physicians Employed For
2Ch 16:12; Jer 8:22; Mat 9:12; Mar 5:26; Luk 4:23
Disease: Remedies Used
Pro 17:22; 20:30; Isa 38:21; Jer 30:13; 46:11;
poultices,
2Ki 20:7;
ointments,
Isa 1:6; Jer 8:22;
emulsions,
Luk 10:34.
Disease: Of the Sexual Organs
Lev 15; 22:4; Num 5:2; Deu 23:10.
See CIRCUMCISION; MENSTRUATION; GONORRHEA.
Treatment of fractures,
Eze 30:21.
See AFFLICTION
Disease: Figurative
Psa 38:7; Isa 1:6; Jer 30:12
Disease: Various Kinds Of:
See ABORTION; AGUE; ATROPHY;
BLAIN; BLEMISH; BLINDNESS; BOIL;
CONGESTION; CONSUMPTION;
DEAFNESS; DEMONS; DROPSY; DYSENTERY; DYSPEPSIA;
EPILEPSY;
FEVER;
GONORRHEA; GOUT;
HEMORRHAGE; HEMORRHOIDS;
INSANITY; ITCH;
LAMENESS; LEPROSY;
MURRAIN;
PARALYSIS; PESTILENCE;
SCAB; SCALL; SCURVY; SPERMATORRHEA; STAMMERING; SUNSTROKE;
TUMOR;
WORM
Disease: Of The Bowels
See BOWELS
He is a cross pendant.
He is engraved with a unique Number.
He will mail it out from Jerusalem.
He will be sent to your Side.
Emmanuel
Bible Verses About Welcoming ImmigrantsEmbracing the StrangerAs we journey through life, we often encounter individuals who are not of our nationality......
Who We AreWhat We EelieveWhat We Do
2025 by lntellectual Reserve,Inc All rights reserved.