The Meaning of ‘Spiritual’ as Integral Health: From Hippocrates of Kos to the Potamius of Lisbon
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Pneuma in Hippocratic Naturalism
3. Salus’ Ideal in the Pneumatic Medical School
4. The Empirical School’s Reaction
5. Hippocratic Reception in Christianity
5.1. The Salvation of the Deus Clinicus and the Religion of Healing
5.2. The Spiritualization of the Pneuma in Philo of Alexandria
5.3. Christianity as a Religion of Health
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- The Hippocratic principle of going beyond symptoms to the causes of suffering (Epidemics 6:3) will often be used by Church pastors and spiritual therapists. Maximus Confessor advises “to look for the causes that produce the disease, to find the remedy” (Chapters on charity II, 42; Patrologia Graeca (1857–1866) [PG] 90,1000; cf. Augustinus, In Evangelium Ioannis tractatus 25,16).
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- The Hippocratic principle that advises examining the disease from the causes and the whole (climate, quality of air and places, behavior, habits, age) is taken up by Christian authors (Lactantius, De opificio Dei, 4.16; SC 213, 124–130; John Damascene, Oratio in imagines II,7; PG, 94, 1288–1289).
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- The care and defense of life as a doctor’s duty (amicus medicus) who, therefore, sometimes cannot comply with the patient’s will to fight the disease (Augustinus, Sermones, 9.4; 40.6; 49.6; Clement of Alexandria, Quis dives salvetur, XX; SC 537, 150–152)
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- The analogy of the diagnosis that distinguishes the good doctor, as a “mirror” of the real situation of man, as the first step towards the cure of the disease (Clement of Alexandria, Pedagogue, I,9,88; SC 70, 264).
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- The doctrine of the four humors and the four elements and their role in psychosomatic pathologies (Gregory of Nyssa, De opificio Hominis, 14; 17; SC 6, 146; Augustine (Augutinus 1965, Letter 205, 3–4; De Genesi ad litteram, III,4,6; Nemesius of Emesa, On Human Nature, IV-V; Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae, IV,5).
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- The patristic authors take up yet more advice from Hippocratic therapy, applying it now to spiritual ascesis. Thus, the Hippocratic advice of “moderation in food and physical exercise” (Epidemics, VI,4,18) is adopted by Clement of Alexandria, recognizing that, “according to the doctor of Delos, the cause of the disease is the excess of food” applying it to the Christian life (Pedagogue, I,2,3; SC 70,112; Stromata, II,126,4; FP 10, 274) and the same happens with the baths (Pedagogue, I,9–10; SC 70, 124–128; Origen, Homiliae in Psalmos 37; SC 258).
6. The Hippocrates’ Reception by Potamius of Lisbon
6.1. Anatomy of the Trinity and Rhetoric of the Body: From Homo Imago to Imago Dei
“The knowledge of the Father and the Son is apprehended in the face of man, the Father and the Son being just as the shape of their face is imprinted on the human archetype made of clay, with which we are modeled, so that man could admire God from the beginning of the human being”.(Substantia 41)8
“Therefore, when God said: Let us make the human being in our image and likeness, He wanted to see what He is capable of, when in the human He revealed who He Himself was. He said “our” and a single face was formed, to indicate that the human being has the features of the Father and the Son”.(Substantia 43)9
Duo sunt oculi—sed unus aspectus est (44) | The eyes are two, but the vision is one (44) |
Sic et naribus… duae videtur esse personae—sed in ipso supercilio una probatur esse concretio (50) | Also the nostrils… look like two individualities—but because of their own external shape it proves to be one (50) |
Nam et oculis duae gemmas habere dicimus—sed unus est visus (51) | In the eyes there are two pearls, but only one vision (51) |
Genae ipsae… duae dextera laevaque videtur in facie—sed ne aliquid separentur… ut tota unius substantiae … nerretur (57) | The cheekbones themselves… appear on the face as being two—but so that they can in no way be separated… so that the whole reason of a single substance… makes itself known (57) |
Duae aures sunt—uno sibimet traducefibulatae (59) | There are two ears joined together by a single communication (59) |
Separati sunt digiti—sed protinus conexi (67) | Fingers are apart—but closely joined (67) |
“What one [ear] catches, immediately sends it to the other. And from this same one, which he had transmitted after retouching it, he quickly returns again to the other one. The breath immediately makes them both vibrate: one, what he caught, and the other, what he heard. Everything that one perceives, soon passes to the other. If you praise one, through the other both will know everything you say. One communicates to the other what was heard, the fidelity of one does not retain what is owed to the other. Both reproduce the only thing anyone has said. With reason the ears always have a single hearing of indivisible solidity, because, through his image, which God incorporated in man, not separating but uniting, by virtue of their likeness the indivisible Trinity with the Son was represented by the Holy Spirit”.(Substantia, 59–61)10
6.2. De martyrio Isaiae: Anatomy of Death and Body Spectacle
6.3. De Lazaro: From the Anatomy of Death to the Anatomy of Life
6.4. Corporis Fabrica: Human Nature
“Therefore, the bodily edifice is composed of earth, water, cold and heat (four parts that, always fighting each other, ruin the body by fighting their demands: heat does not like cold and cold is burdened by heat—the contrary things give in to their opposites—the earth is damaged by excess water and the water gets dirty with the earth). These four-shaped elements forming a single reality with a four-part mass, after the coachman, who had determined the places of these four parts, had been removed by divorce from death, so that none of them could develop too much mobility, and who guided this bodily edifice with domineering whip, divided its boundaries into the whole of a harmonious composition; these four elements, I say, as soon as the soul departs, they are mixed in the amalgamation of the uninhabited body, because the agent of union has been cast out”.(Lazaro 7)11
After four days, Lazarus’ tongue moves again, his hands get ready for work, his eyes turn in their sockets, his steps start to leave footprints again, his hearing returns to his ears and his gaze returns to his relatives. The revitalized sight recognizes family members and your family’s voice penetrates your ears.(Lazaro 20)13
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For the Hippocrates’ works presents in the historical collection usually called Corpus Hippocraticum [CH], it will be used here the Hippocrates (1923–1931) LCL: The Loeb Classical Library cf. Vol. I-IV: LCL 147–150; V: LCL 472; VIII: LCL 482. |
2 | Aesculapius is the latin version to the Greek name Asklépios (Ἀσκληπιός). |
3 | Das Evangelium vom Heiland und von der Heilung was the expression used by Adolf von Harnack in his famous pioneering work called Medicinisches aus der ältesten Kirchengeschichte of 1892, and later taken it up again in his work Die Mission und Ausbreitung des Christentums in den ersten drei Jahrhunderten de 1902. However, the French and English translations translated by The Gospel of the Savior and of Salvation, exploring the more soteriological semantics of the German radical Heilung that can be used both to save and to heal. Ferngren (1992) also explores the healing dimension, as suggested by the context of the German theologian’s book. |
4 | References from ancient Christian authors will be taken from the collections: Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos (1954); Corpus Christianorum (1953); Fuentes Patrísticas (1992) Patrologiae Cursus Completus, Series Graeca or or more commonly known as Patrologia Graeca (PG); Sources Chrétiennes (1941) and Nuova Biblioteca Agostiniana (Augutinus 1965). Due to the large number of published volumes, we chose to refer to the collection by the initials indicated here and the volume number in question, as well as indicating only the year the collection began in the bibliographic references. |
5 | for a critical analysis of this healing religion conception of Harnack cf. Weissenrieder and Etzelmüller, Illness and Healing in Christian Traditions, pp. 263–305; Ferngren, Christianity as a Religion of Healing, pp. 64–85. |
6 | Although Harnack, for example, recognizes that the soul for the Stoics has corporeality (Von Harnack 1892, p. 43), he presents them fundamentally as paying attention to the “health and diseases of the soul” (Von Harnack 1906, p. 91). |
7 | For the potamian latin textes we use the editing of M. Conti, Potamii episcopi Olisponensis opera omnia, CC 69A. |
8 | Free translation cf. “Patris et Filii cognitio in hominis vultu digeritur et qualis essent Pater et Filius, talem in archiotipam humanam de limo, quo fingimur, caracter sui vultus expressit, ut homo Deum ex homine miraretur”. |
9 | Free translation cf. “Ergo cum dixit Deus: Faciamus hominem ad imaginem et similitudinem nostram, voluit videri quid possit, cum in homine qualis esset ostendit. Nostram dixit et unam faciem fabricatus est, ut Patris et Filii hominis lineamenta signaret”. |
10 | Free translation cf. “Una, quod accipit, in alteram mox refundit. Ex ipsa illa, quae fuderat quod coloraverat, mox recurrit in alteram. Ambas mox vibrat spiritus, unam, quod recipit, aliam, quod audivit. Quicquid alia conceperit, mox et in alteram transit. Si unam laudas, per aliam quicquid dixeris ambae cognoscunt. Una uni infundit auditum, fides alterius quod debetur alteri non fraudat. Unum ambae, quod quisquis dixerit, repraesentant. Merito indiscissae soliditatis ipsis auribus unus semper auditus est, quia per imaginem suam, quam Deus in homine non separando, sed unitando collegit, suae similitudinis cum Filio per Spiritum Sanctum indiscissam reddidit Trinitatem”. |
11 | Free translation cf. “Terra igitur, humore, frigore et calore composita corporis fabrica (quae quattuor partes semper sibimet repugnantes corpus criminum in procella subvertunt: calor frigus non amat et frigus calore torquetur—contraria contrariis mancipantur-, terra nimio humore vitiatur et humor de terra sordescit), his quadriformibus elementis in unum quadripartita mole constantibus, dissotiato per divortium mortis auriga qui quattuor istis partibus loca dederat, ne quisquam mobilitatem sui vehementius tolleret, dominante flagro, divisis in unum concordanti iunctura finibus, agitabat; hae, inquam, quottuor partes, recedente anima, in globum corporis viduati, excusso societatis auctore, miscentur”. |
12 | Free translation cf. “Quantus illic, rogo vos, populi festinatus? Quae spectantium turba? Qualis tanti miraculi potuit esse concentos?”. |
13 | Free translation cf. “Et post quadriduum Lazari lingua movetur, manus officio praeparantur, oculi suis in orbibus currunt, vestigia gressibus explicantur, auribus renovatur auditus, acies dirigitur in parentes. Cognatio redivivis obtutibus numeratur, vox prosapiae currit in auribus”. |
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Villas Boas, A.; Lamelas, I. The Meaning of ‘Spiritual’ as Integral Health: From Hippocrates of Kos to the Potamius of Lisbon. Religions 2022, 13, 848. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090848
Villas Boas A, Lamelas I. The Meaning of ‘Spiritual’ as Integral Health: From Hippocrates of Kos to the Potamius of Lisbon. Religions. 2022; 13(9):848. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090848
Chicago/Turabian StyleVillas Boas, Alex, and Isidro Lamelas. 2022. "The Meaning of ‘Spiritual’ as Integral Health: From Hippocrates of Kos to the Potamius of Lisbon" Religions 13, no. 9: 848. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090848
APA StyleVillas Boas, A., & Lamelas, I. (2022). The Meaning of ‘Spiritual’ as Integral Health: From Hippocrates of Kos to the Potamius of Lisbon. Religions, 13(9), 848. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090848