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Occupational Therapists For Christ
is an association of occupational therapists, followers of Jesus
Christ, organized for the purpose of glorifying God.
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”So shall My word be which goes
forth from My mouth; It shall not return to Me empty, Without
accomplishing what I desire, And without succeeding [in the
matter] for which I sent it.”
Isaiah, 55: 11, NASB
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2003 - Spring (Vol. 7, No. 1)
International Occupational
Therapists For Christ
Newsletter: Volume 7, Number 1, Spring, 2003
A publication of International Occupational Therapists for Christ, PO Box
3291, Greenville, NC 27836
www.otforChrist.org, E-mail:
otfc@otforChrist.org
IOTFC Update
IOTFC Meets at Global Missions Conference
An enthusiastic and committed group of occupational therapists met
on Friday evening at the Global Missions Conference in Louisville, KY
on Nov. 1 & 2, 2002. Support for IOTFC was strong and excellent
assistance was offered. Carol Stevenson’s contribution to this
Newsletter and to the web site are fine examples of that support. The
conference itself was an outstanding opportunity for exposure to many
of the Lord’s outstanding servants and their medical and other mission
activities. Many, who would not otherwise do so, are coming to Him as
a result of their excellent professional skills, dedication,
commitment and sacrifices.
IOTFC Web Site is Under Way
The IOTFC web site (www.otforChrist.org) has been operational since
fall 2002. Organizational information, recent Newsletters and
educational information related to the relationship of spirituality
and moral behavior to health and other information relevant for
Christian occupational therapists is posted. Visit the site and
encourage others to do so as well. Also consider contributing material
for the site. Well documented factual materials on issues of interest,
book or article reviews, accounts of personal experiences and many
other materials would be welcome. Contact us by e-mail at
otfc@otforChrist.org.
Affiliate with IOTFC by completing & Mailing the Enclosed Form
Because of costs and other factors, the Board may have to reduce
mailings to individuals who have not maintained recent contact with
IOTFC. Please complete the enclosed information form to update your
information and indicate your continued interest.
The Christian Heritage of
Occupational Therapy
By Carol S. Stevenson, MS, OTR
Sections on specific founders have been omitted and only original
references are included here. The complete text is available on the
IOTFC web site, otforChrist.org. (Ed. note)
When I went back to school, in preparation for a new career, my
prayer was that I would be able to integrate my Christian faith into
all that I did. That it would not be just something tacked on to the
end of it all, like an exclamation point. I wanted it to truly
permeate all that I am and all that I do. My prayer has been answered,
both during my school years and later, while working as a mental
health professional in a psychiatric hospital and then as Director of
Human Services for the Salvation Army. Occupational Therapy has been a
field of study and practice, which meshed well with my Christian
values, interests and beliefs. I soon found out why, as I delved into
the history of OT.
I was thrilled to learn that the roots of occupational therapy are
rich with Christian overtones. My graduate school studies started me
on a grand adventure pursuing the meaning of Spirituality in
Occupational Therapy. I would like to share some of what I discovered,
as I developed my Special Project on that topic.
The values, interests, and beliefs of the founders shaped
the future of occupational therapy and had a profound influence on how
it is viewed today. In order to understand how the spirituality of
these individuals affected their emerging profession, one can simply
listen to the words they spoke and wrote.
One can also search for the
major spiritual influences that were placed upon them during that
period in history.
During the early years of occupational therapy, it was customary to
open the meetings with prayer. In preparation for the fifth annual
meeting of the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational
Therapy President Hall asked the Rev. Charles A. Hensel to give the
invocation (Archives of Occupational Therapy, 1922). It is quoted
below in its entirety so that the reader can get the full flavor of
what was going through the hearts and minds of this group of
professionals as a corporate body:
Direct us, O Lord, in all our doings with Thy most gracious favor,
and further us with Thy continual help, that in all our works begun,
continued and ended in Thee, and especially in the exercises of this
hour, may we glorify Thy Holy Name: Thou Who alone canst uphold the
minds of men, without Whose goodness and beauty our souls are unfed,
without whose truthfulness our reasons wither; Thou Who are the Author
of the world's joy, Bearer of the world's pain, make us glad that we
are Thine and that we have inherited the world's burden. Grant us we
pray Thee, the vision of Thy Being and of Thy Beauty, that in the
strength of it, we may labor without haste and without rest. Stay the
fever in our hearts by the revelation of Thine own eternity. We ask
Thee not to rid us of pain, but in Thy mercy, grant that our pain may
be free of waste, unsoiled by thought of ourselves, unfettered by
rebellion against Thy will, but purified by love of our kind and
devotion to Thy Kingdom, that all our pain and toil may be honored of
Thee Who hast honored us with Thy love and fellowship. Hold us back
when in our vulgarity we would go aside from the path and life of the
lowly and from things that men call common: as our Savior made the
carpenter shop and the daily tasks His school, and from them passed to
the perfection of Calvary, so may we keep ourselves close to the lives
of the great body of men, and pass through things common, into the
things infinite and eternal. We ask it all for the sake of Him Whose
Name is Love and Whose Kingdom is our hearts' desire, Thy Son, Jesus
Christ, our Lord. Amen. (p. 143).
The Creed of Occupational Therapy
The collective spiritual influence of the founders is seen in the
wording of the Pledge and Creed for Occupational Therapists adopted by
the Association in 1926. Mosey (1981) concluded that the individuals
who wrote this document were indeed influenced by the Hippocratic Oath
which brought doctors into their profession by having them pledge to
"keep holy both my life and my art" (p.64). The Creed reads as
follows:
Reverently and earnestly do I pledge my whole-hearted service in
aiding those crippled in mind and body. To this end that my work for
the sick may be successful, I will strive for greater knowledge, skill
and understanding in the discharge of my duties in whatsoever position
I might find myself. I solely declare that I will hold and keep
whatever I may learn of the lives of the sick. I acknowledge the
dignity of the cure of disease and the safeguarding of health in which
no art is menial or inglorious. I will walk in upright faithfulness
and obedience to those under whose guidance I am to work, and I pray
for patience, kindliness, and strength in the holy ministry to broken
minds and bodies. (Cited in Mosey, 1981, p. 65)
Although the founders came together with a variety of different
life experiences and professional backgrounds to share with one
another, they were all well educated, dedicated Christians. This
appears to be a common denominator. Their concept of spirituality was
based on a very strong Judeo-Christian heritage and heavily flavored
by fundamental Quaker beliefs. Writing upon writing of their works
gave evidence that the founders placed high importance on the
spiritual, not only in regard to their own lives, but in regard to the
lives and treatment of their clients.
With one exception, all of
the founders had a common bond with the reformer, Rev. Elwood
Worcester. Worcester founded a method of church sponsored healing
called the Emmanuel Movement. This movement focused on greater
individual control over emotional well-being through self-help
programs taught by religious leaders, using Christian ideals.
Worcester constructed a non-reductionistic
view of the person, which is much akin to the concept of client
centered therapy that is being applauded today. He employed a unique
concept of mind, body, spirit interrelationships in the healing of a
wide variety of human problems.
Worcester
felt that healing could require the services of physician, minister,
and patient alike. (McCarthy, 1984). Rev. Worcester believed that good
health was a spiritual matter. Worcester discussed at length in his
writings on the Bible, the role of Christ as a healer and the
importance of the healing tradition within Christianity" (McCarthy,
1984, p. 96).
Barton, a prominent architect, developed an interest in
occupational therapy while counseling with the Rev. Worcester. Barton
met Worcester while attending Emmanuelist classes at Clifton Springs
Sanitarium. Barton had contracted tuberculosis. He also suffered from
paralysis of his left side, had his left foot amputated, and
consequently had become very discouraged about his future occupational
outlook. After his encounter with Worcester, Barton was reported to
have "found new purpose in life" (Quiroga, 1995, p. 117).
Barton (1920) felt his role as an occupational therapist was to
help make a man "stronger physically, emotionally, and spiritually
than he was before" (p. 308). As Peloquin (1991a) pointed out, Barton
believed that a treatment plan could only be configured after
considering the patient's goals, strengths, and ambitions in all three
realms-physical, emotional, and spiritual. Barton went on to become an
arts and crafts advocate and the first president of the National
Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy.
During a speech to hospital workers in Boston, Massachusetts in
1914, Barton used the Bible and its collection of 66 books as an
example of the variety and diversity of healing occupations that need
to be employed in therapy. It was during this speech that the term
occupational therapy was first introduced (Hopkins, 1988). Barton also
suggested that the biblical Adam was given a prescription from God to
earn a living by hard work when he was cast out of the Garden of Eden.
He believed that man's prescription for health was the proper
occupation in the necessary proportion to produce the desired
physical, mental, and spiritual results (Peloquin). The depth and
strength of Thomas Bissnell Kidner's spirituality is readily apparent
from the literature. In his 1929 graduation address to the students of
Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital, Kidner (1929) impressed upon his
listeners the need for quality of service:
In your chosen field, a part of the noblest work of man- the care
and relief of weak and suffering humanity- may you realize in
increasing measure the value of certain spiritual things which are the
real making of life, but which we call by many common names. Kindness,
humility, decency, honor, good faith-to give these up under any
circumstance whatever would be a loss greater than any defeat, or even
death itself (p. 385).
Kidner (1929) in this speech, spoke about the successes of
early therapists who were men and women of "vision and faith" (p.
380). This statement indicates that these early therapists went beyond
their physical senses and called upon their spiritual resources.
Kidner used an analogy about the days of chivalry to inspire new
therapists to a higher level of care. In his analogy he proposed that
occupational therapists needed some of the same benevolent
characteristics that knights of old possessed. Among them were:
loyalty, a spirit of cooperation , and faith in themselves and their
work. He called the students to "realize in increasing measure, the
value of certain spiritual things which are the real making of life,
but which we call by many common names-kindness, humility, decency,
honor, good faith" (p. 380). Kidner closed his speech by wishing the
students Godspeed and success in their new profession.
Kidner was presiding as President of the American Occupational
Therapy Association at the time of the seventh annual meeting in late
October 1923. He called upon the Rev. F. G. Behner to pronounce the
invocation (Archives of Occupational Therapy, 1924). The reader may
note the strength and wisdom that these individuals hoped to derive
from their corporate plea:
...we thank Thee....that we have felt the call, and that our
interests are wrapped up in folk. In the approach of it, we think it
is well to invoke Thy blessing, for Thou doth know the human heart,
and the human frame better than any of us; Thy strength and Thy wisdom
will rest well in our hearts and our minds in our attempts to do the
work; be with us in these deliberations; bless these people who have
come together, and may their hearts be so unselfish and so full of
interest in humankind, that their efforts may be kindly, and as
helpful, and as true, even unto the measure of their capabilities.
Bless us with Thy presence, not only today but in our work day to day,
and Thine shall be the praise forever. Amen. (P. 145).
Kidner valued prayer enough to plan for it and to take time during
the proceedings to incorporate it into the agenda. It was not an after
thought. By his equating loss of spiritual things with loss of life
itself, Kidner gave an indication of his solid stance on the
importance of spirituality and the importance of occupational
therapists taking a role in its preservation and restoration in the
lives of individuals.
References
- Archives of Occupational Therapy (1922). The fifth annual
meeting of the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational
Therapy: First day, afternoon session, October 23, 1921, Author,
143.
- Archives of Occupational Therapy (1924). The seventh annual
meeting of the American Occupational Therapy Association: October
30, 1923, afternoon session. Author 145.
- Barton, G. E. (1920). What occupational therapy may mean to
nursing. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, 64, 304-310.
- Barton, G. E. (1920). What occupational therapy may mean to
nursing. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, 64, 304-310.
- Johnson, S. C. (1919). Occupational therapy, vocational
re-education, and industrial rehabilitation. Modern Hospital, 12,
221-223.
- Kidner, T. B. (1929). Address to the graduates. Occupational
Therapy and Rehabilitation, 8, 379-385.
- Meyer, A.. (1922). The philosophy of occupational therapy.
Archives of Occupational Therapy, 1, 1-10.
- Slagle, E. C. (1927) To organize an "O.T." department.
Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation, 6, 125-130.
- Slagle, E. C. (1937). Editorial: From the heart. Occupational
Therapy Rehabilitation,16, 345.
- Tracy, S. E. (1913). Studies in invalid occupation: A manual for
nurses and attendants. Boston: Whitcomb & Barrows.
Visit otforChrist.org, the IOTFC web site, for the complete text &
Meet with us informally at the AOTA conference.
”By this the love of God was
manifested in us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the
world so that we might live through Him."
1 John 4: 9 NASB
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