BOOK REVIEW                                                                                                                         

 

May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

Hostility to Hospitality: Spirituality and Professional 

Socialization within Medicine.  Balboni MJ, Balboni TA. 

Oxford, 2019 

Alan Gijsbersa 

a MBBS, FRACP, FAChAM, DTM&H, PGDipEpi, Associate Professor of Medicine, University of Melbourne; President 

of ISCAST, Board Member, International Christian Medical and Dental Association and former Chairman of the 

Christian Medical and Dental Fellowship, Australia   

 

This book argues for the integration of religion 

and spirituality into the delivery of health care. It is 

the product of a fruitful collaboration between Tracy 

Balboni, a radiation oncologist and palliative care 

specialist, and Michael Balboni, a congregational 

minister and sociologist.  Their collaboration is 

strengthened by the support of the Harvard Medical 

community and the Longwood Christian 

Community.  The latter is a post-modern monastery 

of healthcare students living, studying, and praying 

together across the street from the Harvard Medical 

School.  The book has also been funded by a grant 

from the John Templeton Foundation, so it has a 

good pedigree.  It is a great book and worth engaging 

with, especially engaging on those parts with which 

I disagree!  For it is only through disagreement and 

dialogue that we gain further enlightenment on this 

important topic.   

The title is taken from a quote by Henri 

Nouwen, moving people from hostis to hospes, but 

the reference is not clear enough to be able to find 

the context of the quote.  It is an unfortunate title, and 

we will need to unpack the concept of hostility 

below.  

 

Content 
The book looks at the rise of modern hospital 

care.  It explores the sociological factors informing 

that care and seeks to provide a place for a 

contribution of religion and spirituality to that care.  

The Balbonis identify four big forces informing 

American hospital care:  the scientific and 

technological dimension, the market and business 

dimension, the legal and bureaucratic dimension, 

and the hospitality and compassion dimension.  They 

then argue that a return to religion/spirituality will 

strengthen the hospitality/care dimension of 

American hospital health delivery.   

The book asks three key questions:  

1. Why is spiritual care infrequently provided 

by clinicians to patients with serious illness?  

2. Is, and if so, how is spirituality connected 

to medicine’s basic social structures?  

3. Is partnership between medicine and 

spirituality/religion possible given our secular and 

pluralistic milieu?   

The first question is initially addressed by a 

survey of cancer patients at four hospitals associated 

with Harvard and Boston universities. These surveys 

show that patients are spiritual and they would like 

to address spiritual issues, but that they do not often 

have these needs addressed by their medical 

professionals.  The Balbonis list three reasons why 

spiritual care is so infrequently provided by medical 

clinicians. Each reason is highly contestable.  The 

first is that hospitals have evolved from institutions 



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May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

of care to institutions of recovery and cure, with the 

corollary that hospitals are institutions of science and 

technology committed to curing people.  The second 

reason is that physicians see themselves as scientists, 

and that science and religion are in conflict. The third 

reason is that, with the camouflaging of death, the 

need for religion disappears.  This section closes 

with a discussion of the loss of religion/spirituality 

due to the sacred-secular divide, the separation of 

body from the soul, and the divide between public 

facts and private values.  Taking their cue from 

Charles Taylor’s magisterial A Secular Age1, they 

decry medicine’s immanent frame in contrast to 

religion’s transcendent frame.   

The second section of the book addresses the 

relation between spirituality and medicine’s basic 

social structures.  The Balbonis start by defining 

religion and spirituality.  They define spirituality 

somewhat controversially as a life centred in the 

person(s) and or objects(s) of one’s chief love—

however individually understood and pursued.  They 

define religion as the individual and social structures 

that flow from and facilitate that chief love, 

including beliefs, practices, relationships, and 

organizations.  They criticise those (like me!) who 

separate spirituality from religion.  They also 

criticise the secular world which, according to their 

accounts, has no place for the transcendent and  

theological reasoning.  But they argue that medicine 

needs theology.  Historically, hospitals have arisen 

on the basis of a theology of care for the sick as a 

noble calling from God.  Belief in a rational God led 

to the belief in a rational world which allowed for the 

development of a science for rational medical care.   

They then develop a theology of medicine, a 

theology they say is based on the three Abrahamic 

faiths: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, for they are 

monotheistic.  Ironically, they start their theology 

from the Hippocratic oath, a polytheistic document. 

They move on to the writings of Judaism and Ben 

Sira, where physicians are respected, for God has 

called them to this task. They then look at Jesus and 

the example of agape love in the Gospels, 

emphasising compassion for the sick, and move on 

to how this was developed in the early church 

through the amalgamation of Hippocratic medicine 

and Christian compassion in the practice of Basil of 

Caesarea (d. 379).  The Balbonis identify Islam’s 

commitment to the dignity and unity among humans 

and the particular merit of providing alms for those 

less well off, including the sick. The physician in 

Islam is one of the wise ones, respected in Islamic 

society.  Summarising their theology of medicine, 

they argue that God alone heals, and humans are 

called to be compassionate to all humans suffering 

illnesses. A religious vision for medicine recognises 

the unity of body and soul, provides hospitality for 

the sick in the presence of the divine, and recognises 

that medicines are a gift from God.    

The Balbonis then develop a theology of the 

patient-clinician relationships challenging the 

“scientific” object-observer metaphor in favour of a 

more relational model.  They argue that there is a 

sacramental nature to medicine, pointing to the 

transcendent nature of life.    

In addressing the third question, they explore 

the partnership of religion/spirituality to medicine, 

given the secular and pluralistic framework in which 

medicine is practised.  They do this by resisting 

immanence and arguing for a greater transcendent 

world view to medicine.  They address some 

problematic rapprochement strategies, in particular, 

rejecting “spiritual generalists” in favour of a 

religious particularist approach. They finish by 

appealing to end hostility to religion and arguing for 

the introduction of religion as a basis for developing 

a hospitable and caring form of medicine in the 

modern delivery of health care.   

 

Critique 
There is a lot to agree with in this book.  I 

support their overall thesis of seeking to reintroduce 

spirituality and religion into the delivery of clinical 

care, but at many points, I find that I disagree with 

their approach and reasoning.  I am with them in 



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May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

resisting reductionism with its temptation to 

dehumanise care by a fragmentary mechanistic 

approach to a person’s sickness. This occurs 

especially with sub-specialisation which can obstruct 

a holistic approach to sickness and health.  I agree 

with them that, as Christian clinicians, we need to 

learn how to cross the spirituality gap between the 

patient’s spiritual and religious beliefs on the one 

hand and the lack of spiritual care tools the secular 

clinician has on the other.  I also agree with the need 

to develop a theology of medicine and a theology of 

health care.  However, I find myself to be like Owen 

Barfield to CS Lewis, a friend who disagrees with 

almost everything his friend sees and argues!2   

It is disappointing that the complex practice of 

hospital medicine has been reduced by these authors 

to a unidimensional technological science driven by 

business and administrative dimensions.  Clinical 

medicine is a practical discipline based on science, 

but it is also a humanity and an art.  We clinicians 

were taught by role models who embodied the 

highest values of humanity in the delivery of care to 

the patients.  They embodied the virtues of care and 

concern that we sought to emulate.  These mentors, 

whether Christian or secular, took seriously their role 

as ‘doctors’ (the word means ‘teachers’) who taught 

their patients what their disease was, and how 

patients would manage that disease with the help of 

their medical carers.  They created a team with care 

of nursing and therapy staff committed to the best 

outcome possible for the patient.  The 

biopsychosocial model is more than simply a 

recognition that the bio, the ‘psycho’ (the Greek 

word for ‘soul’), and the social are important 

dimensions in the care of patients, but the model 

argues that humans have multiple layers of 

complexity and that each of these layers interact with 

each other.3 Good clinical practice has always 

recognised the need to address all aspects of the 

patient’s life in order to manage the clinical problem 

holistically. This included the human dimension, 

irrespective of whether the doctor believed a person 

had or did not have (or was or was not) a soul.   

There is a reduction in interest in the 

religious/spiritual dimension of clinical care in 

modern medicine, as the authors’ data shows, but I 

am not sure it can be blamed on a drive for cure 

rather than a drive for care.  Clinical medicine has 

always been about “cure seldom, relieve often, and 

comfort always,” and that commitment remains in 

spite of the loss of religious input.  We need to look 

elsewhere to find the reason for the loss of religious 

input.  It may go right back to the people of God 

forgetting Moses’ injunction in Deuteronomy 8:6-

18.  I have discussed the loss of religion with my 

secular colleagues.  They agree with me that this is 

much more a drift of religion/spirituality into 

irrelevance than a hostile reaction to it, and that in 

spite of the loss of religion, there is still considerable 

humanistic care in their practice.  

Do physicians see themselves as scientists and, 

therefore, in conflict with religion?  Both aspects of 

that statement are contestable.  While there is a 

science to the art of clinical medicine, there is still 

the art of actual practice which cannot be reduced to 

science.  Most physicians, I suspect, have not read 

anything about the philosophy of science, nor is there 

a well thought out philosophy of the science of 

clinical practice. Most clinicians simply practice 

without developing a formal statement of the science 

and art of what they are doing.  Secular hospitals 

usually have a formal mission, vision, and values 

statement expressing the ethos of what they are 

about, and all have a mandatory ethics committee to 

ensure that research on patients conforms to ethical 

norms.  So modern secular physicians do not see 

themselves as scientists, nor do they see themselves 

as in conflict with religion;4 they simply do not see 

the relevance of religious commitments to their 

ethical clinical care.  There may be some hostility to 

religion in some quarters, but the bulk of secular 

medicine regards religion as optional for those who 

are into that sort of thing, but largely irrelevant to the 

bulk of the care we deliver.  I take the main thesis of 

the book, namely the spirituality gap between 

therapist and patient, but I find their explanation for 



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May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

the spirituality gap as due to a scientific hostility to 

religion unconvincing.   

The humane care of the patient has figured 

prominently in my clinical experience both in secular 

and Christian institutions, and there are regular 

articles on this human dimension of clinical care in 

reputable medical journals.  When I was a registrar 

in the 1970s, Elizabeth Kubler-Ross’s On Death and 

Dying5 was widely discussed.  I recall her comment 

that when chaplains were called on to care for the 

dying, high churchmen would hide behind the 

sacraments and low churchmen would hide behind 

the Bible.  Neither had the skills to engage with the 

person as a person.  Ross represents a secular 

humanistic approach to dying patients that should be 

highly commended, even though it contains no 

theology and does not discuss humans as souls.   

The authors blur the distinction some writers 

make between spirituality and religion.  The 

Balbonis simply see religion as the outward working 

of spirituality.  I have some difficulty in the way they 

define spiritualty as ‘chief love’, and then in the way 

they uncritically accept religion as something good 

worth commending.  I often encounter patients who 

say they are spiritual but not religious, and there are 

plenty of other thinkers in this area who are trying to 

include spirituality without formal religion.  

Why not formal religion?  Religion, 

particularly now that institutional sexual abuse has 

been exposed, is rejected for good reasons.  Such a 

rejection is not new.  The Carpenter of Nazareth for 

confronting the religion of the day, and his followers, 

suffered considerable religious persecution.  This is 

not a rejection of religion, but a simple pointed 

comment that religion is not always beneficial.  Even 

in clinical practice, we encounter patients who have 

been damaged by formal religion, and proper 

spiritual care requires the clinician to help the 

damaged patient find healing in that area.   

And what of the concept of spirituality?  The 

basic word ‘spirit’ is related to breath and liveliness. 

Thus, an inspired person has lots of life, and a 

spirited person or animal is very lively. Conversely, 

a dispirited person has lost their liveliness, and a 

person who has expired has lost their breath and is 

dead.  The Holy Spirit breathes life into the dead and 

gives life for the future.  In my area of clinical 

practice, addiction medicine, we often quote Carl 

Jung’s famous dictum “spritus contra spiritum” (the 

divine spirit driving out the spirit of alcohol) as a 

further exploration of the place of spirituality in 

addiction care.  Spirituality is not just about care for 

the dying, but a wholistic exploration of meaning and 

purpose for those struggling with existential 

questions.  There are other dimensions to spirituality 

that need exploration.  Harvard psychiatrist George 

Vaillant, in his Spiritual Evolution6, argued that 

spirituality was found in the emotions in the limbic 

system, rather than a rational, lexical activity.  In the 

end, I was able to persuade Dr. Vaillant that the 

lexical and the limbic go together7 and that 

spirituality is not just about love but also about truth, 

justice, mercy, and equity. The Kingdom of God is 

the upside-down Kingdom which seeks justice for 

the marginalised and the oppressed.  It is not just 

about individuals but also about humans in society.  

The implications of this will be explored below.   

The last two paragraphs might fall into the trap 

of regarding spirituality as good, whereas religion is 

bad.  I do not think that.  Some spiritualities are bad, 

and some religions are good.  A patient’s 

spirituality/religion needs more careful evaluation 

than either being ignored or simply affirmed.   

Is there really hostility in secular society 

towards religion/spirituality?  Once we have a more 

nuanced view of spirituality and religion, we can see 

where some of the hostility might arise.  Those who 

have suffered abuse from priests and other religious 

people, or who know those who have suffered such 

an abuse, would well feel justified to be hostile.  

Women, especially, have reason to feel that a 

hierarchical patriarchal religion deserves to be 

treated in a hostile fashion.  However, for the bulk of 

my colleagues (and indeed even my Christian 

colleagues) religious commitments are not directly 

relevant to clinical care.  



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May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

Is hostility the best description of the current 

situation in hospital medicine?  It may be so in 

Boston, where not so long ago Puritans abused 

Quakers. Modern secular society quite rightly 

condemns the hanging of Mary Dyer and other 

Boston martyrs.  Those were the days of magisterial 

Christianity—Christianity enforced and defended by 

state laws— and most Christians these days prefer to 

see their faith stand on its own two feet rather than 

be enforced by the state.  The US view of the 

separation of church and state has some justification, 

but in spite of this, for the most part, there is simply 

a secular indifference.  To label that as hostility 

creates unnecessary barriers between Christians and 

the secular world.  A more thoughtful approach 

might well create better bridges. I have some 

explaining to do if I were to lend this book to my 

secular colleagues.   

The immanent/transcendent anthropology can 

also be contested.   I looked in vain in the book’s 

rather scarce index to find any discussion on 

psychology, psychospirituality, and 

neurophilosophy.  I agree with the writers’ 

contention that a diminished anthropology can affect 

clinical practice.  Thus, in the field of psychiatry if 

one reduces human distress to depression and sees 

that as a chemical imbalance of the brain, clinical 

care will be rather limited.  Humans are more than a 

set of chemical receptors, and human distress has 

personal, social, and relational dimensions.  It also 

has a spiritual dimension.  We do not need to invoke 

an immaterial soul to deal with this problem well.   

There is a vast literature on what the Balbonis 

call the transcendent dimension of humans which 

does not invoke theology or a dualist anthropology.  

Consciousness, qualia, emotions, perceptions, the 

sub-conscious, the exercise of reason, and the 

exercise of the will all spring to mind.  Each of these 

dimensions could be bundled up into what the 

Balbonis call the soul, but this is unnecessary, and 

even Christian neuro-philosophers suggest that the 

traditional understanding of the soul needs a major 

rethink.8,9,10 

The modernist fact/value distinction is also 

challenged by the post-modern understanding that all 

facts are theory laden and that no commitment is 

objective and value-free.  This is good news for 

Christians for it acknowledges that there is no value-

free secular space.  Thus, Christians can come to the 

secular marketplace with their commitments and 

expect to be respected for those commitments.  This 

describes a secular space more in keeping with an 

Indian society which respects and allows space for 

all religious commitments, Hindu, Muslim, 

Christian, Jain, etc., respecting the different 

commitments and common values, or as Karl Barth 

put it, the proclamation of Christ is neither “hidden 

nor diluted.”11  

Why try to define spirituality and religion?  

Some complex activities, like baseball (or its slower 

cousin, cricket) are better described than defined.  

Spirituality is like that—the attempt to define it as 

one’s first love trivialises the rich complexity of the 

term and centres it too much on the individual.  I 

commend the spirituality of the Kingdom of God as 

a richer alternative, and I will explore its 

implications below.   

It is a pity that spirituality here has only been 

applied to the oncological population.  If spirituality, 

as outlined above, is about liveliness, hope, meaning, 

justice, and truth, then spirituality should be more 

than just ideas applied to the end of life.  I, 

personally, have found this to be a rich vein in 

dealing with addictions and mental health.   

I find the Balbonis’ theology of medicine 

somewhat limited.  Their theology centres on three 

theses:  

1. the human body and soul must be treated 

together, 

2. that hospitality is the foundational motive 

driving clinicians and hospitals, and 

3. that medicine is a divine gift. 

This is disappointing, for if theology (which 

after all was the queen of the sciences) is the science 

of God, then God is the subject of theology, and we 

need to centre it far more on God than on what we 



106  Gijsbers 
 

May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

are doing.  When we do, we find that one of the 

central themes of Scripture is that God heals.  In fact, 

salvation and healing are closely linked.  A theology 

of medicine has to ask questions about the relation 

between sin and sickness, salvation and healing. This 

may be difficult in the area of care for the dying, and 

we, as Christians, need to challenge the hubris of 

doctors playing God, but we are still agents of hope 

and healing of life and purpose.  We then come to the 

fraught issue of divine action in a mechanistic 

universe and how we, as spirit/flesh amphibians, 

stand in the interface between the seen world of the 

everyday and the unseen world of the Kingdom of 

God.  We also need to develop a theology of 

suffering and address the question of the existence of 

God despite suffering.  

I have found myself encountering non-medical 

thinkers trying to develop a modernist Grand Unified 

Theory of Everything, in this case limited to a grand 

unified theory of medicine, whereas we post-

modernists are far more circumspect in what we 

think we can achieve with our patients; we know 

fragments only.  I recently asked a very respected 

consultant physician interested in the history of 

medicine what his philosophy of medicine was.  His 

reply, “To be humble and to learn from your 

mistakes.” Hardly a grand unified theory but more 

suitable to the wisdom of the book of Proverbs than 

a learned dissertation!    

I have difficulty with defining spirituality as 

“first love.”  This leads to a find a niche of 

spirituality in extending the hospitality and care 

dimension into modern clinical practice and centring 

spiritual care on the individual only.  But what if 

spirituality centred on the Kingdom of God, the rule 

of God over every aspect of life and that that rule was 

characterised by righteousness, justice, mercy, truth, 

compassion, and equity?  What if this spirituality 

sought to develop a body of Christ here on earth 

committed to the rule of God in every aspect of life, 

including the scientific and technological, the 

business and market dimension, the legal and 

bureaucratic dimension, as well as the hospitality and 

compassion dimension?  There is a spirituality of 

health delivery and the need to challenge the unjust 

structures, especially in the United States, where 

families can be only one sickness away from 

bankruptcy and destitution.12  Christians in the US 

need to challenge the fear of socialism and the 

worship of the dollar in order to provide for the poor 

and the marginalised, just as God expects.  

Bureaucratic management of healthcare is not 

unspiritual, it is deeply affected by justice and truth.  

Science is about truth, and technology is about justly 

implementing that truth.  This will require 

confronting unjust and devious practices like deceit 

in research and drug companies’ temptation to 

suppress adverse outcomes or false advertising.  

There is so much more to spirituality of health than 

the laudable wish by the Balbonis to enhance the 

clinical encounter with an exploration of spirituality 

with the dying patient.  What if we humanised 

medical care according to the attitudes of the one true 

human, Jesus Christ, and sought to bring about His 

hidden kingdom of salt and light?   

 

Conclusion 
Having laid out my reservations, may I applaud 

the Balbonis for their work and research?  They are 

to be commended for entering such a fraught area 

and raising such an important issue.  I will be one 

with them in developing the spiritual dimension of 

clinical care in the secular world, and if I ever travel 

to Boston, it would be good to spend some time in 

their community for mutual benefit and 

encouragement (Romans 1:11).   

 

References 
1. Taylor C. A secular age. Cambridge, MA: Belknap 

Press of Harvard University Press; 2007.p. 539-93. 

2. Wilson AN. CS Lewis, a biography. London, UK: 

Collins; 1990.p.64. 

3. Engel GE. The clinical application of the 

biopsychosocial model. Am J Psychiatry. 

1980;137:525-44.  

https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.137.5.535  

https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.137.5.535


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May 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health 6(1)                   

 

 

4. McGrath AE. Why study history? In Science and 

religion a new introduction. 2nd Edition. Oxford, 

UK: Wiley-Blackwell; 2010: 9-16. [Also Brooke 

JH. Science and religion. Cambridge, UK: 

CUP;.1991]. [Both authors heavily criticise the 

thesis that there is a conflict between science and 

religion.] 

5. Kubler-Ross E. On death and dying: what the 

dying have to teach doctors, nurses, clergy and 

their own families. New York: Macmillan; 1969. 

6. Vaillant GE.  Spiritual evolution: how we are 

wired for faith, hope and love. New York: 

Broadway Books; 2008. [231pp.] 

7. Gijsbers AJ. Book review – Spiritual Evolution 

[Internet].  Available from: 

https://iscast.org/journal/review/Gijsbers_A_2010-

06_Vaillant_Review 

8. Gijsbers AJ.  The dialogue between neuroscience 

and theology [Internet] [cited 2019 Mar 21].  

Available from: 

http://www.iscast.org/rough_diamonds/past_paper

s/Gijsbers_A_2003-

07_Neuroscience_and_Theology.pdf 

9. Brown WS, Murphy N, Malony HN. Whatever 

happened to the soul? Scientific and theological 

portraits of human nature.  Minneapolis, MN: 

Fortress Press; 1998.   

10. Jeeves MA, Berry RJ. Science, life and Christian 

belief: a survey and assessment. Leicester, UK: 

Apollos; 1998. [Esp Chapter 10, Brains, minds and 

behaviour]  

11. Barth K. God here and now. Oxford, UK: 

Routledge Classics; 2003. p. 2. 

12. Campbell AV.  Health as liberation, medicine, 

theology and the quest for justice. Cleveland, OH: 

Pilgrim Press; 1995. 

 

Peer Reviewed: Submitted 4 April 2019, accepted 17 April 2019, published 31 May 2019 
 
Competing Interests: None declared.     
 
Correspondence: Alan Gijsbers, International Christian Medical and Dental Association, Australia. 
gijsbersaj@optusnet.com.au            

 
Cite this article as:  Gijsbers A. Hostility to Hospitality: Spirituality and Professional Socialization 
within Medicine.  Balboni MJ, Balboni TA. Oxford, 2019. Christian Journal for Global Health. May 
2019; 6(1):101-7. https://doi.org/10.15566/cjgh.v6i1.299 
 
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