Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Metaphysical technology
Metaphysical technology
Mar 10, 2026 8:04 PM

In this week’s Acton Commentary, Dave Phelps looks at the case of Susan Torres, a woman who gave birth while reported to be brain dead. The case was considered by some to be a miracle. Others with a more material bent looked at her as merely a corpse, kept alive by advanced medical technology to incubate the child.

mentary points out that a great many physicians, schooled in the sciences, retain a belief in God. A “surprising” poll indicates that doctors attend church more regularly than most Americans and a majority believe in some sort of afterlife.

Should we really be surprised? Religious faith is capable of making room for God-given talent such as medical healing, as St. Basil the Great pointed out in the fourth century in his Long Rules:

Each of the arts is God’s gift to us, remedying the deficiencies of nature, as, for example, agriculture, since the produce which the earth bears of itself would not suffice to provide for our needs … The same is true, also, of the medical art. In as much as our body is susceptible to various hurts, some attacking from without and some from within by reason of the food we eat, and since the body suffers affliction from both excess and deficiency, the medical art has been vouchsafed us by God, who directs our whole life, as a model for the cure of the soul, to guide us in the removal of what is superfluous and in the addition of what is lacking …

So then, we should neither repudiate this art [medicine] altogether nor does it behoove us to repose all our confidence in it; but, just as in practicing the art of agriculture we pray God for fruits, and as we entrust the helm to the pilot in the art of navigation, but implore God that we may end our voyage unharmed by the perils of the sea, so also, when reason allows, we call in the doctor, but we do not leave off hoping in God.

Read the full text of “Miracles of God and Miracles of Science.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Soylent Green takes place in 2022, which is nice
Is this sci-fi classic starring Charlton Heston a prophetic look at our day or a despairing look at the filmmakers’ own? Read More… According to an old monplace, nothing can beat the plot of a good sci-fi film when es to predicting the future. Many of the promotional taglines that pany these features assure us that, should we invest in a ticket, we’ll be “entertained” and “educated,” or even “enlightened,” by a product that “presciently signifies the all-but-inescapable fate of...
Out of the Past is where small-town America meets big city vice
Two clashing Americas emerge in this film noir classic starring Robert Mitchum. Can a down-on-his-luck private eye save one of them? Read More… Classic film noir wanted to reveal to America the depth of the problem of ambitious men in a democracy through crime stories—detectives, criminals, and victims caught in the quest for justice after the quest for happiness leads to catastrophe. Vengeance often turns out to be more reliable than love. I’ve already talked about The Maltese Falcon and...
Put on the seamless garment of paschal love
The Lenten fast is not an end in itself but an opportunity to unite with the poor, to work with an eye toward the needs of others, and to anticipate along with our brothers and sisters the feast e—not only on Easter Sunday but also in the Kingdom e. Read More… Before beginning his earthly ministry, our Lord Jesus Christ, “led up by the Spirit” (Matt. 4:1), wandered in the desert for 40 days, fasting, praying, and finally being tempted...
Should you bet on Bitcoin?
Cryptocurrency provides an exciting alternative to national currency as a decentralized alternative to fiat notes, but it’s no silver bullet. Read More… For those who’ve heard the word a lot but are still not sure what it means, cryptocurrency is a digital asset used to make purchases. It operates using puter network, often a blockchain, a shared ledger that acts as a mechanism to transfer value from one person to another and that records and stores information in chains of...
Leo Strauss, Spinoza, and an enlightened faith
The political philosopher and classicist Leo Strauss continues to stir debate among Orthodox Jewish scholars as to just how Judaism can light the way in seeing the connection between faith and reason. Read More… Love him or hate him, it’s almost impossible to ignore the philosopher Leo Strauss (1899­–1973). Few individuals have drawn out so thoroughly some of the implications of philosophy for a range of political positions while simultaneously exploring perennial issues such as the meaning of the Enlightenment...
Reform higher education through tradition and honest personal connections
As the academic world returns to in-person operations, the Scala Foundation is making the case for beauty and wisdom on a practical level. Read More… A great deal of ink has been spilled over the declining character of American higher education. From critical theory to extremism among college student bodies, many issues have reached temperatures that leave those inside the collegiate world deeply concerned for its future. Thinkers mentators lament a rise in “illiberalism”—a phenomenon in the academic world of...
To boycott or not to boycott Disney, that is the question
The answer, however, depends on what role Disney and its products play in your life. Read More… Disney, world famous entertainment and media conglomerate, is now at the center of controversy—in all kinds of ways. The state of Florida recently enacted the Parental Rights in Education bill, which has proven to be orders of magnitude more controversial than its name implies. It monly derided by opponents as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. It contains several parts, one of which mandates...
The SEC’s proposed new rules for activist investors should be rejected
The attempt to undermine investor activism is a thinly veiled ploy to maintain the status quo and inhibit investors’ ability to increase shareholder value. It’s a gift placent boards and underperforming executives. Read More… In July 2020, then–presidential candidate Joe Biden stated that “it’s way past time we put an end to the era of shareholder capitalism.” What precisely he meant by that was not entirely clear from the context of his remarks. But if now-President Biden meant that shareholders...
Be grateful in spite of your suffering
Jordan Peterson, writer, psychologist, and Joe Rogan fave, is working Bible stories into his talks, seeking to flesh out his ideas of what it means to grow up. So why does he want us to e more childlike? Read More… I settled into my seat just a few rows back in the mezzanine and surveyed the crowds surging across the performance hall. As I had expected, the audience posed largely of young adult males, though there was a substantial number...
Identity politics is killing Hollywood, and the academic presses
A new book about Jewish identity in Hollywood films inadvertently highlights much that is wrong in cultural criticism today. Unfortunately, it is too great an example of the problem to be much help in offering a solution. Read More… Literary Hub is one of the most widely read websites devoted to literature and the arts. Recently, pleted a poll of the nation’s academic presses. Its aim was to find out which of the books they’re putting out they are proudest...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved