Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Schoepflin, Rennie B

Title Christian Science on trial : religious healing in America / Rennie B. Schoepflin
Published Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003

Copies

Description 1 online resource (301 pages) : illustrations
Series Medicine, science, and religion in historical context
Medicine, science, and religion in historical context.
Contents The world of Christian Science healers. Mary Baker Eddy: patient, healer, teacher -- Becoming a practitioner and teacher -- "Occasions for hope": patients and practitioners -- Separating "true" Scientists from "pseudo" Scientists -- Christian Science healers and the world. Physicians debate Christian Science -- Therapeutic choice or religious liberty? -- Public health and the protection of children -- Century of promise, then peril
Summary In Christian Science on Trial, historian Rennie B. Schoepflin shows how Christian Science healing became a viable alternative to medicine at the end of the nineteenth century. Christian Scientists did not simply evangelize for their religious beliefs; they engaged in a healing business that offered a therapeutic alternative to many patients for whom medicine had proven unsatisfactory. Tracing the evolution of Christian Science during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Christian Science on Trial illuminates the movement's struggle for existence against the efforts of organized American medicine to curtail its activities. Physicians exhibited an anxiety and tenacity to trivialize and control Christian Scientists which indicates a lack of confidence among the turn-of-the-century medical profession about who controlled American health care. The limited authority of the medical community becomes even clearer through Schoepflin's examination of the pitched battles fought by physicians and Christian Scientists in America's courtrooms and legislative halls over the legality of Christian Science healing. While the issues of medical licensing, the meaning of medical practice, and the supposed right of Americans to therapeutic choice dominated early debates, later confrontations saw the legal issues shift to matters of contagious disease, public safety, and children's rights. Throughout, Christian Scientists revealed their ambiguous status as medical practitioners and religious healers. The 1920s witnessed an unsteady truce between American medicine and Christian Science. The ambivalence of many Americans about the practice of religious healing persisted, however. In Christian Science on Trial we gain a helpful historical context for understanding late-twentieth-century public debates over children's rights, parental responsibility, and the authority of modern medicine
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 221-292) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Christian Science -- History
Medicine -- Religious aspects -- Christian Science -- History
Medical care -- Law and legislation -- United States
RELIGION -- Christianity -- Christian Science.
Christian Science
Medical care -- Law and legislation
Medicine -- Religious aspects -- Christian Science
Christian Science.
Paranormale geneeswijzen.
United States
Verenigde Staten.
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0801877679
9780801877674
0801870577
9780801870576