Affluent Savvy
Photo: Kindel Media
Sergent suggested that the Israelites were poisoned by hemlock seeds that the quails had ingested. He was able to reproduce an experimental poisoning in dogs that were fed Algerian quail that had eaten hemlock seeds. However, in no case was the illness fatal.
Minimum 10% Investment Rule According to this thumb rule, investors should begin by investing at least 10% of their current salary and raise it by...
Read More »
Scorpio might be the most misunderstood zodiac sign, says Sesay, because the sign “rules over death, rebirth, and transformation, and those are all...
Read More »
The simple yet scientifically proven Wealth DNA method laid out in the report allows you to effortlessly start attracting the wealth and abundance you deserve.
Learn More »
Here are seven flexible and in some cases high-paying side hustles you can do to earn more money and supplement a day job. Tutor English online....
Read More »
Many of the billionaires come out of the same industry, so let's take a look at them. Finance. 15% of the world's billionaires work in finance. ......
Read More »
The simple yet scientifically proven Wealth DNA method laid out in the report allows you to effortlessly start attracting the wealth and abundance you deserve.
Learn More »Other authors have puzzled over this story. Sergent suggested that the Israelites were poisoned by hemlock seeds that the quails had ingested. He was able to reproduce an experimental poisoning in dogs that were fed Algerian quail that had eaten hemlock seeds. However, in no case was the illness fatal. More recently, on the Greek island of Lesbos, Ouzounellis described a severe human disease that followed the ingestion of quail. This illness was accompanied by massive muscle destruction and myoglobinuria, followed in turn by acute renal shutdown. Noting that in patients who were physically fatigued at the time of ingestion, the disease developed within 90 minutes and had the most severe effects, he proposed that the Israelites wandering in the desert would have been likely victims. He further postulated that an inborn error of enzyme metabolism may have been present in the victims and predisposed to a fatal outcome. Turning for the next medical episode to the Lamentations of Jeremiah, Chapter 2, verse 11, we hear a prophet of that era express his grief and emotional distress over Jerusalem's misery and the bad times on which it had fallen. The most poignant simile with which Jeremiah could express his sadness was to compare it to an epidemic of jaundice, perhaps viral hepatitis. At about the same time in history, the Greeks coined the word melancholy (i.e., black bile), thus revealing that they too were aware of the association of mental depression and obstructive biliary disorders. "Mine eyes do fail with tears, my bowels are troubled, my liver is poured upon the earth...." It would be difficult to describe more classically the scleral icterus, keratitis sicca, acholic stools and bile-stained urine of the obstructive phase of chronic hepatitis. Unfortunately, theologians never like to leave things alone. In this they resemble physicians and only differ in the length of time it takes to undergo change. In a modern English translation of the Bible, the so-called Revised Standard version, they construct this passage in the far less accurate or pithy medical manner as: "My eyes are spent with weeping; my soul is in tumult; my heart is poured out in grief." At the expense of offense, I would characterize such a translation as medical pap. The preoccupation of the Biblical authors with medical illness and disease and their scanty reference to the well developed surgical skills that they also observed during the Egyptian sojourn were probably based on diverse factors. The fear of pandemics and great pestilence that often threatened to wipe out the whole race undoubtedly loomed more awesome in the minds of the prophets and seers than sporadic trauma in single individuals. The Jews, as well as the Arabs, the Chinese, the Japanese and many other races, incorporated multiple public-health measures into their formal religion. These rules were based on empiric observations of the natural course of disease and included the isolation of contagious patients, the washing of hands and clothing on frequent occasions (such as before prayers), and the avoidance of foods that were commonly contaminated with parasites. The regulations in Hebraic law on the quarantine of persons suspected of being leprous were so clearly defined that the cities of medieval Europe were still using the same regulations nearly 4000 years later. Finally, sickness, because of its mysterious origin, was generally attributed to sin. This attitude put medical illness directly into the province of organized religion and assured its detailed inclusion in written accounts of rabbinical law. A striking change takes place in the Biblical view of disease when one turns from that portion of the Bible referred to as the Old Testament to the New. The dual role of Jesus as a teacher and a physician-healer immediately gave increased emphasis to the treatment and cure of disease rather than simple diagnosis and control. This role is nowhere more evident than in the references to leprosy. Indeed, the frequency with which lepers are discussed in the Gospels may be far out of proportion to the actual incidence of the disease at that time. Many reasons for this emphasis exist. The physical signs of both the nodular and the anesthetic forms of the disease were widely evident and generally produced both rejection and loathing in the eyes of the viewer. Leprosy seemed to confirm the prevalent theory of that time that disease was a manifestation of sin. Only occasional persons who were exposed to its contagion actually came down with the disease — so that some other factor appeared necessary. What more likely cause than sin? Another reason for the overdiagnosis of leprosy was probably clinical error. Misdiagnoses unquestionably occurred. Such diseases as pityriasis rosea, ecthyma and desert sore were easily confused with leprosy. Moreover, the term "leprous" was probably used as an adjective to describe any white or atrophic lesion, much as we use the term "acneform" today to describe most red and nodular eruptions. Its principal contribution as a Biblical disease, however, was to permit the Gospel writers to portray the ability of Jesus to heal a whole man rather than a man's simple physical affliction. Let us turn to Luke 17:12 for illustration. ...as he entered into a certain village there met him ten lepers, which stood afar off:...And when he saw them he said... Go shew yourselves unto the priests. And it came to pass... that they were cleansed. And one of them when he saw that he was healed, turned back... And Jesus... said, Were there not ten cleansed?... where are the nine? Arise, go thy way: thy faith hath made thee whole.
Stocks and Mutual Funds Many millionaires and billionaires made their money — at least in part — by investing in the stock market, or by owning...
Read More »
10: Trigger's Broom In this classic scene, Trigger claims that he's had his road sweeper's broom for 20 years. But then he adds that the broom has...
Read More »
The simple yet scientifically proven Wealth DNA method laid out in the report allows you to effortlessly start attracting the wealth and abundance you deserve.
Learn More »This clear portrayal of total healing of one of the lepers as opposed to physical cure of the other nine has little counterpart today. In our modern culture we have few reminders of such seeming anachronisms as guilt. Instead of calling for expiation or remorse, current mores attempt to justify errors and to rationalize misbehavior as a consequence of social pressures. It is also interesting that leprosy was the first disease singled out by name in the New Testament. In a separate reference to an encounter of Jesus with a leper, additional features became evident. For one thing, He touched the leper. Although it was known that a single physical contact usually did not transmit the disease, this symbolic gesture carried at least three implications: 1) His love and concern extended to immoral (leprous) persons as well as to moral ones; 2) He showed disdain for the fear and helplessness commonly manifest toward physical disfigurement; 3) the act of healing accompanied a laying-on of hands — a gesture that still has its counterpart during hospital rounds by occasional contemporary physicians who reach out and touch their sick patients as a gesture of reassurance. Finally, it should be noted that the act was performed within the rituals laid down by the Hebraic law of that time. The leper was referred back to his priest for purification rites and an appropriate gift of thanksgiving. The actual frequency of leprosy in Asia Minor during this era can only be estimated. Most small villages of that period averaged about 1000 inhabitants. That was a size that could be supported conveniently from the agriculture that lay within easy walking and hauling distance. The "ten lepers, which stood afar off..." probably represented all the active cases of that particular community, or an incidence of about 1 per cent. Curiously enough, that number has been only modestly reduced. It is estimated that about five million active cases currently exist throughout the world. These are mostly in Asia and Asia Minor and lie in a geographic belt between 15° north and south of the Tropic of Cancer. This area embraces a population of something less than one billion people or an incidence of around 0.5 per cent. Strong evidence that it was no more prevalent than that during Biblical times can be drawn from a final reference. In Matthew, there is a description of Jesus visiting the house of "Simon the leper," while in Bethany. Simon was a very common Jewish name of that time and place. If the incidence of leprosy had been 1 or 2 orders of magnitude higher, as many have suggested, this appellation would have been a nonsequitur. In conclusion, what can we as physicians of the late 20th century take from an analysis of events such as these? For some they mean little; for others much. However, the Bible offers keen rewards if only for its stark history and its elegantly expressive prose. As a storehouse of medical heritage, it is unparalleled. I recommend it for your active years as well as for retirement. If you are as incorrigible an insomniac as I, it is also useful for midnight sedation. Unlike barbiturates, it permits one to awaken refurbished for another day. Much more could be said about these randomly selected stories. Infinitely more episodes could be reviewed whose medical influence and teaching directly affect us some 2000 years later. One wonders if any of the current sociologic worries and medical-economic dissensions and governmental controls of clinical medicine that rain down on us in a spate each day will similarly survive the test of time. Or will they become mere quips and forgotten anecdotes when another century has passed? Let us resolve to protect our culture from too quick a trip over the canvas of life by returning to the more basic aspects of medicine. Before we exercise ourselves in vast agitation over contemporary trends, let us carefully sift out any truths of lasting value that they possess. Let us further resolve to set our medical commitments only on the basis of their benefit to the sick to whom we minister. Compassion of man for man will long outlive contemporary regulations, economies and governments. Let us be certain that medicine continues to set moral standards and codes that will remain of the type befitting an immutable profession. The first person whose actual name was ever recorded in written history was neither a conqueror nor a king, but a physician-architect. He was named Imhotep, and he was the chief adviser to Egyptian King Zoser, circa 2950 B.C. If our profession continues to endure, let us hope that the last name in history similarly will be that of some physician, devoting his life to the needs of others.
25 Ways to Develop a Growth Mindset Acknowledge and embrace imperfections. ... View challenges as opportunities. ... Try different learning...
Read More »
Tips for following the golden rule. Let's recap: The golden rule is don't spend more than you earn, and focus on what you can keep. Maybe it sounds...
Read More »
The simple yet scientifically proven Wealth DNA method laid out in the report allows you to effortlessly start attracting the wealth and abundance you deserve.
Learn More »
How Can I Make an Extra $2000 a Month? Invest in the Stock Market. Investing in the stock market is one of the best decisions you can make in...
Read More »
The simple yet scientifically proven Wealth DNA method laid out in the report allows you to effortlessly start attracting the wealth and abundance you deserve.
Learn More »
Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy is considered an epic masterpiece and a foundational work of the Western canon. We offer this short guide to...
Read More »