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- Nursing is a ministry of compassionate care for the whole person, in response to God's grace toward a sinful world, which aims to foster optimum health (shalom) and bring comfort in suffering and death for anyone in need.
ncf-jcn.org/resources/called-care-christian-vision-nursing
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A research question was developed: “Do Christian nurses who more strictly adhere to characteristics of biblical faith (as defined by the BBMCC Model as fellowship, service, giving, and personal walk), view their source of caring differently than Christian nurses who do not adhere as strictly?”
- Nursing for the Kingdom of God : Journal of Christian Nursing
What Is Caring in Nursing?: Sorting Out Humanistic and...
- Encouragement for the Christian Nurse : Journal of Christian ...
Amid the current chaos, Christians should remain hopeful...
- Nursing for the Kingdom of God : Journal of Christian Nursing
Nursing is a vocation: a calling from God to care for others. The role of the nurse originally grew out of a holistic Christian understanding of humans as created in the image of God. Yet as nursing and healthcare continue to change, the effects have proven disorienting to many.
This study explored Christian nurses' views of their source of caring (Deity or other), adherence to biblical faith practices, and view of nursing as a job, career, profession, or calling.
- Linda S Rieg, R Shirlene Newbanks, Rose Sprunger
- 2017
What Is Caring in Nursing?: Sorting Out Humanistic and Christian Perspectives; Caring from a Christian Worldview: Exploring Nurses' Source of Caring, Faith Practices, and View of Nursing; A Christ-Centered Caring Theory; Demystifying Nursing Theory: A Christian Nursing Perspective
Jun 10, 2024 · This article explores the integration of the moral foundation of agape love in Pauline theology and Roach's human caring in nursing (1992) as the action of agape love. A narrative literature review explores the relationship between the scriptural ethics of St. Paul (Pauline ethics) and Roach's caring in nursing.
Findings reveal that 95% of research and 85% of nonresearch publications were written from the humanistic perspective. The results lay a foundation for an alternative middle range theory on caring from a biblical worldview for nurses holding Christian beliefs.
Amid the current chaos, Christians should remain hopeful while simultaneously recognizing that we are in a spiritual battle with a determined enemy. As nurses caring for peoples' minds, bodies, and souls, we stand at the forefront of this battle.