VOLUME III
Health-Promoting
Churches
Mwai Makoka
Gerald West
Contextual Bible Studies
on Health and Healing
VOLUME III
Health-Promoting
Churches
Contextual Bible Studies
on Health and Healing
Mwai Makoka
Gerald West
Health-Promoting Churches Volume III
Contextual Bible Studies on Health and Healing
Mwai Makoka and Gerald West
Copyright © 2022 WCC Publications. All rights reserved. This publication may
be reproduced in English with full acknowledgement of the source. No part of
the publication may be translated without prior written permission from the
publisher. Contact: publications@wcc-coe.org.
WCC Publications is the book publishing programme of the World Council of
Churches. The WCC is a worldwide fellowship of 352 member churches which represents more than half a billion Christians around the world. The WCC calls its
member churches to seek unity, a common public witness and service to others in a
world where hope and solidarity are the seeds for justice and peace. The WCC works
with people of all faiths seeking reconciliation with the goal of justice, peace, and a
more equitable world.
Opinions expressed in WCC Publications are those of the authors.
Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, © copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the
Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission.
Production: Lyn van Rooyen, coordinator WCC Publications
Cover design: Beth Oberholtzer Design
Book design and typesetting: Beth Oberholtzer Design
Image Credits: Maggie Machledt Girard
ISBN: 978-2-8254-1821-5
World Council of Churches
150 route de Ferney, P.O. Box 2100
1211 Geneva 2, Switzerland
http://www.oikoumene.org
Contents
Preface
vii
Introduction ix
Development Process and Acknowledgements
xi
Contextual Bible Study as Process
xv
1. Women’s Health
1
2. Priorities and Pastoral Care in Women’s Health
6
3. The Challenge of Pandemics such as COVID-19
to Leadership Styles and Skills
10
4. Being Inclusive with People with Disability
15
5. Communal Responsibility for Health Care in the Context
of Unjust Health Care Systems
19
6. Disparities in Health Care
22
7. Gender-based Violence and Mental Health
26
8. Mental Health on the Margins
30
9. Mental Health: For Christians Experiencing
Social Exclusion and their Christian Communities
33
iii
10. Accompanying Those Living with Anxiety, Depression,
the Context of Pandemics such as COVID-19
and Fear in
37
11. Different Understandings of Healing and Resources for Healing
40
12. Cross-border and Interethnic Healing
44
13. Partnership in Holistic Health Care and Healing
47
14. Healing and Herbal Medicines
50
15. Stigmatization of those Living with HIV or Disability
53
16. Institutional and Theological Constraints to Church-based
Health Care for People Living with HIV or Disability
57
Health Care for Migrants, and those Displaced by
Conflict, Economic Factors, and the COVID-19 Pandemic
61
17.
18. Health Care Systems and How to Situate the Church
within Them
65
19. Health Care Inclusion for Those Who are Marginalized
by Ethnicity, Disability, Gender, or Age
68
20. Mental Disability and Stigmatization, even within
Families with Children with Mental Disabilities
72
21. Population Growth
75
22. Access by Adolescents
to Sexual and Reproductive Health Information
and Services
78
23. COVID-19 and Human Rights
84
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
24. Psychological Trauma
89
25. Working with Children on Embracing Changes Brought
by the COVID-19 Pandemic
97
26. Working with Children on Loss and New Life
100
27. Children: Education, Nutrition, and Health Care
103
Poem on COVID-19
107
Contents
v
Other books in the Health-Promoting
Churches series
1. Health-Promoting Churches: Reflections on Health and Healing
for Churches on Commemorative World Health Days https://
www.oikoumene.org/resources/publications/health-promoting
-churches
2. Health-Promoting Churches Volume II: A handbook to
accompany churches in establishing and running sustainable health
promotion ministries https://www.oikoumene.org/resources
/publications/health-promoting-churches-volume-ii
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
Preface
Health and healing have always been important in the work of the
World Council of Churches (WCC). A study undertaken across all
regions from 1979 to 1987 emphasized the important role of churches
in the health landscape, not least in health education. The WCC mission statement Together towards Life reaffirms that as health and healing
were central features of Christ’s ministry and call to his followers, they
should be central to the mission of the church. Further to this commitment, in February 2022, the WCC re-established a commission
on health, the Commission of the Churches on Health and Healing,
which aims, among other things, to foster deeper engagement on the
part of member churches and to inspire them to embrace and advocate
for holistic health.
The WCC was heavily engaged in the Primary Health Care movement, including the 1978 Alma-Ata Declaration. Since 1980, the World
Health Organization has adopted a healthy-settings approach to health
promotion, including healthy cities, healthy villages, and health-promoting schools. Unfortunately, places of worship have not been recognized and reached with this approach. The WCC’s Health-Promoting
Churches programme is, thus, an opportunity to strengthen existing
efforts in churches in a coherent and evidence-based manner.
These contextual Bible studies will accompany churches into
deeper reflection on often difficult health issues in the context of the
vii
Ecumenical Global Health Strategy, the health-related expression of
WCC’s Pilgrimage of Justice and Peace.
Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca
Acting general secretary
World Council of Churches
April 2022
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
Introduction
The World Council of Churches (WCC) defines health as a dynamic
state of wellbeing of the individual and society. It is a state of physical,
mental, spiritual, economic, political, and social wellbeing. Moreover,
it is a state of harmony between human beings, between humans and
the material world, and between humans and God.
In June 2018, the WCC central committee approved the Ecumenical Global Health Strategy, its purpose being to support churches
as healing communities. Also, in February 2022, the WCC central
committee approved the re-establishment of the Commission of the
Churches on Health and Healing. Central to these initiatives is the
Health-Promoting Churches model, which aims to support the healing ministry of churches, especially at the congregation level, to make
the church a place:
• of health education
• of practical action
• for advocacy and care for creation
• of empowerment for public witness.
While Volume I of Health-Promoting Churches provides health
education on several health issues, including suggestions for practical
actions, and Volume II provides a framework for establishing programmatically strong health promotion ministries, this third volume
accompanies churches in their in-depth reflection on difficult health
ix
issues. The WCC has previously used the Contextual Bible Study
methodology to good effect in helping churches address various
challenging issues.1 The participatory way in which this manual was
developed has ensured that various voices and experiences are represented, enriching the publication for a global audience.
Dr Isabel Apawo Phiri
Deputy general secretary for
Public Witness and Diakonia
World Council of Churches
1. See: Ezra Chitando and Nyambura J. Njoroge, eds., Contextual Bible Study
Manual on Transformative Masculinity (Harare: Ecumenical HIV and AIDS Initiative
in Africa [WCC EHAIA], 2013), https://methodist.org.za/wp-content/uploads
/2020/06/Chitando-and-Njoroge-2013-Contextual-Bible-Study-Manual-on
-Transformative-Masculinity-English.pdf; Fred Nyabera and Taryn Montgomery, eds.,
Contextual Bible Study Manual on Gender-Based Violence (Nairobi: The Fellowship of
Christian Councils and Churches in the Great Lakes and The Horn of Africa [FECCLAHA] 2007), https://jliflc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/tamar-campaign
-contextual-bible-study-manual-english-version-final-complete.pdf; Ezra Chitando
and Nyambura J. Njoroge, eds., Let the Children Come to Me: Contextual Bible Study
Manual on Young People (Harare: Ecumenical HIV and AIDS Initiative in Africa
[WCC EHAIA], 2017), https://jliflc.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Let-the
-Children-Come-to-Me-Book-WCC-Youth-focus-child-marriage.pdf.
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
Development Process and
Acknowledgements
This manual was developed in 2021 when the COVID-19 pandemic
was raging. Four online workshops were held, each workshop was conducted twice in different time zones, one with French and the other
with Spanish interpretation for the convenience of participants. The
workshops aimed to:
• equip participants with the skills to prepare and lead contextual
Bible studies (CBS) in their organizations and churches
• help participants prepare CBS on health and healing
• compile and publish Health-Promoting Churches: Contextual
Bible Studies on Health and Healing, with contributions from
the participants.
There were 282 registrants for the workshops. About 60 of these
people participated, and 31 provided written contributions to the
Bible studies. Each workshop session lasted one hour, and each was
convened by Mwai Makoka, a medical doctor, and facilitated by
Gerald West, a Bible scholar. The workshops were later summarized
in a fireside chat between the two, and the recording is available on
xi
the WCC YouTube channel.2 A more detailed write-up of the process has been published.3
The contributors provided a theme or topic, contextual analysis, a
Bible text, and questions. The editors synthesized the contributions,
merging some of these where necessary and incorporating insights
from the workshop discussions. The editors also edited and revised the
Bible study questions. In addition, the editors provided notes to shed
more light on the health topic (Makoka) and the Bible text (West). In
this way, the Bible studies are well rooted in the health realities of our
time.
It is my honour to thank all participants of the workshops for
giving generously of their time, experience, and insights. Those who
made substantive written contributions to the Bible studies are: Angela
Sawyer, Bongi Moyo, Cheryl B. Anderson, Dumisani Sikhakhane,
Daniel O’Neill, David Tombs, Lynne Taylor, Dev Anandarajan, Edgar
Antonio López, Elvira Beracochea, Gabriel Akimana, Georgewill
Osaki, Jeremy Baker, Juliana Gil Ortiz, David Castillo Mora, Karen
Eller, Karoline Mora Blanco, Kelechi Sarah Utoware, Mutale MulengaKaunda, Mwai Makoka, Gerald West, Nathan Esala, Ndifreke AndrewEssien, Pratap Jayavanth, Ronald Lalthanmawia, Sven-Erik Fjellström,
Sinenhlanhla Sithulisiwe Chisale, Thandi Soko-de Jong, Linet Musasa,
Norman Tembo, and Paulo Ueti.
My colleague Prof. Ezra Chitando accompanied us throughout the
process. The contribution of my co-editor, Prof. West, is a labour of
2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAxyNfyEX6A.
3. Gerald West, Mwai Makoka, and Ezra Chitando, “Constructing Contextual
Bible Studies in the Context of Health and Healing,” in Ta vare – en bok om diakoni,
sjelesorg og eksistensiell helse. Festskrift til Hans Stifoss-Hanssen [Take care – a book about
diaconia, pastoral care and existential health. Festschrift to Hans Stifoss-Hanssen],
ed. A. Austad and L. J. Danbolt (Oslo: VID vitenskapelige høgskole, 2022), https://
vid.brage.unit.no/vid-xmlui/bitstream/handle/11250/3001282/240622_HSH
_elektronisk.pdf ?sequence=1, 102–13.
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
love, as he gave of his retirement time to do this work, which he loves.
Thanks to Maggie Machledt Girard for the illustrations and Lyn Van
Rooyen for coordinating the publication process.
Mwai Makoka
Programme Executive for Health and Healing
World Council of Churches
Development Process and Acknowledgements
xiii
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
Contextual Bible Study as Process
Contextual Bible Study (CBS) connects scripture and context. Contextual Bible Study has developed as a participatory Bible study method
over more than 40 years of community-based and church-based work
through the work of the Centro de Estudos Biblicos (CEBI) in Brazil
and the Ujamaa Centre for Community Development and Research in
South Africa.
Central to CBS is the threefold See-Judge-Act process, developed
by the Catholic worker-priest movement in Europe and taken up in
many global south contexts.
Contextual Bible Study begins with “See”: seeing the realities of our
context, both individual and systemic. Jesus summoned his disciples
to discern “the signs of the times” (Matthew 16:3), lamenting that the
religious leaders of that time were unable to truly “see” their context. In
this project, we are enjoined to see the realities of health and healing in
our contexts. Contextual Bible Study focuses on seeing reality “from
below,” truly seeing how those who have been marginalized experience
health and healing.
Contextual Bible Study then continues with “Judge”: judging this
reality from God’s perspective in scripture. Jesus taught his disciples to
pray, “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven”
(Matthew 6:10). What can we learn from scripture about God’s kingdom on earth with respect to health and healing? Having analyzed our
realities (See), CBS brings scripture into dialogue with our realities
xv
( Judge), using scripture as a sacred reflective surface on which we see
what God wants to do in our contexts with respect to health and healing , scripture that would speak redemptively to the context.
Contextual Bible Study then summons us to action: “Act.” If our
contextual realities with respect to health and healing do not conform
to God’s kingdom on earth, what needs to change? How can we work
with God to bring about this change? When Jesus saw the reality of the
two blind men sitting on the side of the road, he asked, “What do you
want me to do for you?” (Matthew 20:32). Seeing reality in the light
of God’s prophetic vision for God’s kingdom on earth requires us, like
Jesus, to act. “Moved with compassion, Jesus touched their eyes; and
immediately they regained their sight and followed Him” (Matthew
20:34). Our actions will take many forms, but act we must, moved by
compassion for those who yearn for health and healing in our contexts.
The CBS process
Each of the Bible studies in this resource manual has been produced by
participants from churches around the world, who have collaborated in
a series of eight online workshops.
In preparation for the first workshop, participants were invited to
prepare the following task:
Identify and analyze (See) one specific aspect of health and healing
with which you think we should engage through CBS. Work with
others in your context, if possible. Try to be as specific as you can be,
doing some preliminary analysis of your reality with regard to health
and healing. Do not generalize; be context-specific. Write a short
summary of your contextual analysis, clearly identifying the specific
aspect of health and healing you have identified. Please bring this
summary with you to the first workshop.
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The CBS process began with sharing the lived realities of the participants, each reflecting on the health and healing concerns of their
particular contexts. As each week passed, and as we moved from workshop to workshop, we built together a picture of our world and its
health-and-healing needs.
Each workshop gradually offered additional resources for participants to become a part of the CBS process. We moved together from
contextual analysis (See), to scriptural rereading ( Judge), to CBS construction (Act). Each of the Bible studies in this resource manual has
been produced by participants engaging in this process. The published
article referred to in Development Process and Acknowledgments
(above) reflects more fully on this process.
Our final set of workshops focused on facilitation. The process of
contextual Bible studies is a facilitated or animated process. It requires
a different kind of leadership: not leadership from above, but leadership from alongside. Again, the resources on facilitation offered in
this resource manual have come from our workshops. Many voices
from many contexts have shared their experiences of facilitation. We
have collated these and offer them here as a resource. Each Contextual
Bible Study includes additional aspects of facilitation, particularly in
cases where facilitators need to be particularly sensitive in dealing with
the health-and-healing topic that is the subject of reflection through
Bible study.
CBS facilitation
Facilitation is a form of leadership from alongside, in which the
emphasis is on enabling the participation of each and every person
and ensuring that the CBS process is completed, moving from See to
Judge to Act. Each CBS moves from a contextual health-and-healing
theme (See), to a slow and careful rereading of scripture ( Judge), to
contextually appropriate action (Act).
Contextual Bible Study as Process
xvii
Participants agreed that a fundamental requirement of a facilitator
is that they should be careful and attentive listeners. Listening is perhaps the foundational requirement. Listening presupposes trust in the
community of participants, and this trust is vital to the CBS process.
Trust in the community of participants and trust in the CBS process
are the two pillars of these Bible studies.
Another key dimension to the CBS process is time. Rereading scripture together changes us, so we must allow sufficient time for group
discussion and scriptural rereading to reshape us. At least one or two
hours need to be set aside for each Bible study.
The COVID-19 pandemic has taught us that we can conduct CBS
workshops via online platforms like Zoom. The CBS process is an
embodied process, so facilitators need to find ways of creatively constructing embodied space using online platforms.
A number of elements were identified in the workshops as crucial to
successful facilitation. As a facilitator, you need to:
• prepare thoroughly prior to facilitating the CBS workshop
• approach the CBS workshop with humility and an expectation that
you will learn from the participants
• come among the participants as a companion and guest, respecting
their safe and sacred space
• work with them to ensure that the CBS space remains a safe and
sacred space for each person
• be attentive to the voices and bodies present, listening to what is
said and what remains unsaid
• be attentive to the cross-cultural, multilingual, gendered realities of
the participants
• use breaks in the CBS process (for tea/coffee, etc.) to come alongside those who are dominating or who are withdrawn, discerning
how to enable them to participate more appropriately
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
• be patient and trusting of the CBS process, but keep the CBS process moving, ensuring that it is completed in the available time
• offer regular summaries of what is shared, feeding this back to the
workshop
• translate and adjust the CBS questions to clarify them, should
participants be unsure about a question. The CBS process is a question-driven process, so clarifying the questions is vital
• acknowledge and honour the presence and dignity of each
participant, and each small breakaway group, by recording and
documenting what they share publicly.
CBS facilitation checklist
Here is a list of the ‘whats’ and ‘hows’ of facilitation.
What?
• What kind of space is available? Is the space physical or digital?
• What time frame is available?
• When will you include tea/lunch breaks?
• What resources will be required? (e.g., flipcharts, pens).
• What icebreakers will you use to animate the group at the beginning of, and during, the process?
• What language/s will you use?
• What is your identity as the facilitator? Do you come from within
or outside the group?
• What religio-cultural liturgies will frame the CBS?
[Please reflect on these and add others that come to mind from your
experience.]
Contextual Bible Study as Process
xix
How?
• How many participants will be in each small group? Are the participants together in a physical space or a digital space?
• How will you divide the participants into small groups?
• How will you facilitate the movement between plenary and small
groups?
• How will you facilitate the reporting back?
• How will you document the dignity of each contribution, in both
the plenary and small groups?
• How will you pace the CBS to complete the process?
• How will you ensure a safe group process and the participation of
each person in the small groups?
[Please reflect on these and add others that come to mind from your
experience.]
Doing CBS
Contextual Bible study is a process and a practice. This manual gives
you all the tools you need to become a practitioner of CBS. If possible,
join with others in your context and work together in conducting a
CBS. You can share the CBS tasks. We encourage you to choose a Bible
study that fits your context and learn by doing. Then choose another,
and another. We look forward to receiving your feedback.
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 1
Women’s Health
Mark 5:21-43
This first Contextual Bible Study was used as an example throughout
the workshop process. It is based on a similar Bible study developed by
the Ujamaa Centre in South Africa. We have included in this example guidelines for facilitation in square brackets [ ... ]. This Contextual
Bible Study focuses on women’s health in general.
Contextual Bible Study 1
1
Notes on women’s health
The theme of women’s health is an intersection of biological, sociocultural, religious, socio-economic, political, and other factors. The
biological nature of females means that they experience menstruation,
which can involve complications such as anaemia and abnormal bleeding, stress, complications of pregnancy and childbirth, and cancers of
the breast and ovaries. There are taboos, myths, and misconceptions
around menstruation, and these restrict women’s participation in
society. Some cultural norms limit women’s access to information
and services for their sexual and reproductive health. In many countries, there is a lack of political will toward and investment in women’s
health issues. Take the example of menstrual hygiene: in many settings, there is no local manufacturing capacity for menstrual products,
creating reliance on imported and highly taxed products, and poor
sanitation facilities do not accommodate or encourage menstruating
girls to attend school. All these factors combine to place a continuing
burden on young girls and women, restricting their opportunities for
education and socio-economic emancipation.
Notes on the text
Mark 5:21-43 tells the story of two women, both of whom interrupt
Jesus. While Jesus is with a large crowd (5:21), Jairus, a synagogue
leader, interrupts Jesus on behalf of his young daughter, who is critically
ill. Jesus follows Jairus to his home, but on the way, he is interrupted
for a second time by a woman. Again, Jesus stops what he is doing and
devotes his attention to this woman. In the way Mark tells this story, it
becomes clear that it is one story about two women, a young woman
and an older one. Mark signals to us that these two women are connected in a number of ways, which we will explore together in our Bible
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
study. Notice how Mark helps us recognize that this is one story: it
begins and ends with Jesus moving from one geographical region to
another, from the area of the Decapolis (5:20) to the area of Bethlehem,
his home town (6:1). Between these two geographical movements we
have a single story: a story about women’s health and healing.
[Contextual Bible Study is a community-based process, including local
liturgy. Surround the CBS with the use of local church/community
liturgy.]
CBS Questions
1. Conduct a dramatic reading of Mark 5:21-43, inviting participants
to read the parts of the various characters.
[This requires preparation, inviting participants to take the voices of
the narrator and characters. They will need to practice.]
2. What is the text about?
[Keep participants in one group for this question, enabling them to
hear each other and to recognize that the CBS process is participatory.
The facilitator must resist answering this question! The facilitator
should encourage participants to share their understandings of the
text. This takes patience.
Each and every response should be acknowledged and recorded
publicly by the facilitating team.
This question takes time! Do not rush it. Through this question,
participants take ownership of the CBS.]
3. Who are the characters in this story, and what do we know about
each of them from the story? Draw a picture or diagram of the story
to illustrate the role of each character.
Contextual Bible Study 1
3
[Divide the participants into small groups for this question. You may
need to construct the small groups on the basis of gender and/or age,
etc. Be sensitive to the cultural heritage of the participants.
Allocate sufficient time for the small group discussion and drawing.
Make sure you have flipcharts and crayons.
Allow time for each small group to report back to the whole
group, taking turns. The drawings can be used as a resource. If there
is time, invite one or more of the other small groups to ask a question
concerning the drawing of each group as it shares its drawing.]
4. Mark connects these two women, inviting us to see similarities in
their experiences and their encounters with Jesus. By rereading the
story carefully, we can identify a number of similarities between these
two women. What do these two female characters have in common in
the text and in their world?
5. In what ways does Jesus work with these women for healing and
health?
[Questions 4 and 5 may be answered together in the small groups
if there are time constraints. Again, allow each small group time to
report back, first on Question 4 and then on Question 5, taking turns
to report back.]
6. These two women live in a world in which the health of women is
marginalized. In what ways is the health of women in your context
marginalized? Try to be specific in identifying the systems that marginalize women’s health in your context.
[CBS is a process, moving from text to context, so make sure you
allocate the available time to include Question 6.
Again, divide participants into small groups to answer Question 6
and allow time for reporting back.]
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7. Jesus acts to change the reality of these two women. What can you,
and your local church and community networks, do to change health
systems for women in your context?
What can you do immediately?
What can you do with careful planning? Share your action plan
with the other small groups.
[CBS is a process, moving toward contextual transformation, so make
sure you allocate the available time to include Question 7.
Again, do Question 7 in small groups and allow time for reporting
back.]
Contextual Bible Study 1
5
CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 2
Priorities and Pastoral Care
in Women’s Health
Mark 5:21-43
This Contextual Bible Study is based on the previous CBS and demonstrates how it is possible to adapt a CBS for a related contextual issue.
The suggestion for this CBS came from our CBS workshops. Note
that the first series of questions is the same, but the focus shifts in
Question 5.
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
Notes on competing health priorities
Health resources – personnel, equipment, medicines, supplies and
infrastructure – are inadequate in many countries. In fact, their adequacy is a matter of degree and comparison. Health workers are, therefore, often faced with competing priorities and have to decide how to
allocate the limited resources between equally deserving needs. Policymakers have to balance the allocation of health resources to health promotion, disease prevention, and curative, rehabilitative, and palliative
services. During the COVID-19 pandemic, health care workers were
having to choose to whom to give oxygen therapy, and pharmaceutical manufacturers had to decide whether to prioritize manufacturing
COVID-19 vaccines at the expense of other vaccines. In this Bible
study, we will see Jesus faced with two urgent priorities and the wisdom
with which he dealt with them. We will also reflect on his exemplification of “person-centred health care,” which challenges us to aspire to a
health care system that is compassionate and sensitive to the dignity of
each person.
Notes on the text
Although we study the same text in this CBS as in the previous Bible
study, in this Bible study, we focus on a different detail within the
story. Biblical texts always have more to offer than we are able to recognize when we first read them. We bring our questions to the Bible,
and our questions enable us to recognize detail within the text that
we previously may not have seen as significant. In the previous Bible
study, we focused on how the two women are connected as women. In
this Bible study, we focus on the different ways in which their healing
takes place.
Contextual Bible Study 2
7
CBS questions
1. Conduct a dramatic reading of Mark 5:21–6:1, inviting partici-
pants to read the parts of the various characters.
2. What is the text about?
3. Who are the characters in this story, and what do we know about
each of them from the story? Draw a picture or diagram of the story
to illustrate the role of each character.
4. Mark connects these two women, inviting us to see similarities in
their experiences and their encounters with Jesus. By rereading the
story carefully, we can identify a number of similarities between the
women. What do these two women characters have in common in the
text and in their world?
5. Jesus responds to the women individually, treating each of them
with dignity. What are the differences in how Jesus engages with each
one?
6. Why do you think Jesus prioritizes the healing of the older woman,
and why do you think he engages with her publicly?
7. Why do you think Jesus engages with the healing of the young girl
in private, taking with him only a few of his disciples (v 37) and the
child’s father and mother (v 40)?
8. Are women treated with dignity in health care in your context?
9. What needs to change in the health care of women in your context
so that women, both older women and younger women, are treated
with dignity?
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
10. In what ways do the decisions and actions of Jesus resonate
with health care priorities and pastoral care responsibilities in your
context?
11. In the face of high demand on limited health resources, it is
expected that effective health promotion programmes, like the
WCC’s Health-Promoting Churches model, will be able to ease the
pressure on curative health services, allowing them to provide more
expert care for complicated illnesses. What health promotion activities can you undertake to relieve the pressure on curative services?
12. What will you do to bring about these changes? Share your action
plan with the other small groups.
Contextual Bible Study 2
9
CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 3
The Challenge of Pandemics
such as COVID-19 to Leadership
Styles and Skills
Exodus 18:1-27
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Sweden, but it is relevant
to all our contexts, particularly as government leadership, health care
leadership, and church leadership struggle to cope with the demands
of the COVID pandemic. This CBS also includes suggestions for
using liturgical resources. Contextual Bible studies are always situated
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Health-Promoting Churches – Volume III
within safe and sacred sites and shaped by the liturgies of local communities of faith.
Notes on leadership for health
The World Health Organization considers leadership and governance
to be among the building blocks for health systems. In this sense, health
leadership is concerned with making policies, mobilizing and allocating resources, designing strategies that are effective and based on sound
evidence, networking, and harnessing partnerships with other stakeholders, empowering people for community and personal care, building the trust of the community in the science behind the interventions,
and more. Pandemics and other health emergencies put leadership and
governance structures to the test. Fortunately, pandemics also provide
an opportunity for sectors that were not previously concerned with
health matters to become more engaged.
Notes on the text
In the midst of the wilderness wanderings of the people who have fled
from slavery in Egypt, there is a pause as the story turns to questions
of leadership style. Exodus 18:1-22 reintroduces us to Jethro, Moses’
father-in-law (2:16-21, 3:1). Jethro has heard about Moses leading the
people out of Egypt. We also read, however, that Moses has sent his
wife, Zipporah, who is Jethro’s daughter, back to her father’s household
at some point. This is the first we read of Moses doing this. There is no
explanation. Jethro may have come to see what kind of leader Moses
has become. Jethro now brings Zipporah and the sons of Moses back to
him. Furthermore, Jethro watches and reflects on the leadership style
of Moses. We join Jethro in this Bible study to reflect on different leadership styles.
Contextual Bible Study 3
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CBS questions
1. In small groups of two or three, share how the COVID pandemic
has impacted your health care systems and institutions.
2. Conduct a dramatic reading of Exodus 18:1-27, inviting three
participants to take the roles of the narrator, Moses, and Jethro.
[Prepare by having five candles ready as the reading begins.] Light one
candle for each character mentioned, as they are mentioned:
Jethro, after reading verse 1
Zipporah, after verse 2
Gershom, after verse 3
Eliezer, after verse 4
Moses, after verse 5.
3. Who are the characters in this story, and what do we know about
them?
4. [Divide the participants into three groups, with each group allocated one of the characters in the story: Jethro, Moses, and Zipporah.
Each of these groups has its own unique CBS questions. Each group
reports back to the others once they have completed their series of
questions. It may be appropriate to select only women for the Zipporah group, giving women a safe space in which to probe the gender
dynamics of the text.]
4.1 Jethro group
4.1.1 Reread the text, focusing on the character and role of
Jethro.
4.1.2 How does Jethro engage with Moses? Identify each of the
things Jethro says and does. What process does Jethro follow in
offering advice to Moses?
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4.1.3 What skills can we learn from Jethro? How can we bring
the contribution of Jethro into our contexts? Who are the leaders who need to listen to Jethro in our contexts?
4.1.4 If we need a Jethro contribution in our organizations,
how can we make this happen?
4.1.5 The WCC’s Health-Promoting Churches model is
designed as a community-based model to empower communities to understand and implement solutions to their health
needs. How can you use the Jethro type of leadership to help
your church become a health-promoting church? What will
you do?
4.2. Moses group
4.2.1 Reread the text, focusing on the character and role of
Moses.
4.2.2 What style of leadership does Moses use? How does
Moses change his style of leadership after Jethro recommends
a different leadership style?
4.2.3 After Jethro leaves, Moses goes back to his old style of
leadership. Why is it so difficult to change leadership styles?
4.2.4 Do we have Moses-type leaders in our contexts? Where
are they, and who are they? How do we reach our Moses-type
leaders, assisting them to change their style of leadership?
4.3 Zipporah group
4.3.1 Reread the text, focusing on the character and role of
Zipporah.
4.3.2 What has happened to Zipporah while Moses has been
becoming a leader? The text tells us that Moses “sent her away/
back.” Why might Moses have done this?
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4.3.3 Why do you think Jethro brings back Zipporah and their
children, Gershom and Eliezer, with him when he comes to
visit Moses?
4.3.4 What happens to the wives and children of prominent
leaders in your community? What are the gender expectations
of leadership in your context?
4.3.5 How can we support the wives and children of our leaders?
5. After each group has reported on its reflections and action plans,
light three candles.
5.1 Light a candle for the local leaders who have been mentioned
during your discussions.
5.2 Light a candle for those who play a role in encouraging leaders
to be more participatory in their leadership style.
5.3 Light a candle for the unknown, unmentioned people in your
society, like Zipporah, who often play the most important roles in
bringing about change.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 4
Being Inclusive with
People with Disability
John 5:1-15
This Contextual Bible Study comes from the Asian context but is relevant to many other contexts in which people living with disability are
excluded.
Notes on public health perspectives on disability
The World Health Organization (WHO) lists the following “10 key
facts on disability”:
1.
Over a billion people live with some form of disability.
2.
Disability disproportionately affects vulnerable populations.
Contextual Bible Study 4
15
3.
Half of the people with disability cannot afford health care, compared to a third of people without disability.
4.
Children with disability are less likely to attend school.
5.
People with disability are more likely to be unemployed.
6.
People with disability are vulnerable to poverty.
7.
Rehabilitation helps to maximize functioning and support independence.
8.
People with disability can live and participate in the community.
9.
Disabling barriers can be overcome.
10.
The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
(CRPD) promotes, protects, and ensures the human rights of all
people with disability.
It is also important to understand that many disabilities are preventable; therefore, no effort should be spared to ensure primary prevention of disabilities. The following categorization of physical or mental
disabilities is useful in this regard:
• Inborn disabilities are disabilities acquired at or during birth.
• Disabilities acquired at or during birth are mainly due to complications of childbirth, in particular, prolonged labour and poor skills
of the birth attendant.
• Inborn disabilities may be genetic (i.e. inherited from parents) and
can be passed on to offspring, or are due to problems with fetal
development (e.g. caused by environmental toxins, malnutrition,
or infections during pregnancy).
• Disabilities acquired after birth can be due to:
a. diseases (infectious diseases such as polio and trachoma, and
non-infectious diseases such as strokes)
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b. age-related conditions (e.g., degenerative diseases of muscles,
nerves, joints)
c. trauma, burns, and injuries (intentional and unintentional
injuries).
Notes on the text
This story takes place at an important moment in the ministry of Jesus.
According to John’s gospel, this is the second time that Jesus has come
to Jerusalem. When Jesus goes to Jerusalem for the first time (2:13),
he disrupts and condemns the exploitative economic practices of the
temple. On this second visit to Jerusalem, the temple is not his destination. Instead, he goes to a place where those who are excluded from the
temple gather for healing. Only after that does Jesus go to the temple
(5:14), to continue his healing care of the man he found by the pool
outside the temple.
CBS questions
1. Conduct a dramatic reading of John 5:1-15, with different people
taking the parts of each of the characters and the narrator.
2. What is this story about?
3. Who are the characters in the passage, and what does the text tell us
about each of them?
4. Jesus has entered Jerusalem (v 1), where the Jewish temple is
located. However, Jesus does not go to the temple immediately but
to the site where people with disease and disabilities gather. Why do
you think persons with disabilities gather at this place? And how does
healing usually take place at this site?
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5. How does the healing of this man, who has lived with a disability
for 38 years, take place?
6. Jesus later finds this man in the temple (v 14). The Jerusalem
temple did not permit those with disabilities to enter the temple,
considering them unclean. This man has not been able to enter the
temple for 38 years! By healing this man outside the temple, among
others with disabilities at the pool, what is Jesus trying to teach the
leaders of the temple?
7. In what ways are persons with disabilities excluded in your current
context?
8. In what ways are persons with disabilities included in your current
context?
9. What could this person have been suffering from? In your current
context, how can such a disability be prevented?
10. What is the role of the church in engaging with persons with
disability, and what will you do to make your church a more inclusive
community? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 5
Communal Responsibility
for Health Care in the
Context of Unjust Health
Care Systems
2 Samuel 24 and 1 Chronicles 21; 2 Reigns 24
and 1 Supplement 21
This Contextual Bible Study comes from the context of the USA,
where health care is unequally available, but it is relevant to any context
where unequal health care is a reality. The Bible study introduces readers to the telling of the same biblical story from different perspectives
in different ancient versions. The facilitator will need to make sure that
each of these four texts is available. The first two versions, 2 Samuel 24
Contextual Bible Study 5
19
and 1 Chronicles 21, are based on the Hebrew Bible and are, therefore,
available in any Bible translation. The second two versions, 2 Reigns
24 and 1 Supplement 21, are based on the Greek Bible, the Septuagint,
and can be freely downloaded from the internet in the New English
Translation of the Septuagint (NETS): http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/
nets/edition/.
Notes on the text
This Bible study helps us understand how the Bible has developed over
time. The story told in 2 Samuel 24 is retold, with some changes, in 1
Chronicles 21. The changes are significant because they show us how
a later community of faith has taken up and retold a sacred story from
an earlier time. We find a similar process taking place when the Hebrew
stories are translated into Greek. Translation is a form of reinterpretation, so we find some differences between the Hebrew versions of this
story and the Greek versions. Each of the versions of this story engages
with the question of counting the people, and each offers a different
perspective. Is counting the people – taking a census – a good or a bad
thing? What are the consequences of a king taking a census?
CBS questions
1. Form small groups of equal size and ask each group to focus on one
of these texts. The first two versions (2 Samuel 24 and 1 Chronicles
21) are Hebrew versions, and the second two versions (2 Reigns 24
and 1 Supplement 21) are Greek versions. The participants are welcome to use any translation of 2 Samuel 24 and 1 Chronicles 21 that
they want to use. The freely available NETS translation of the Greek
Bible versions should be used for 2 Reigns 24 and 1 Supplement 21.
This CBS requires considerable preparation by the facilitator.
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2. What is the story (in your version/variant) about?
3. Draw a picture of the story’s main characters and plot. (Your
picture could be a single picture or a series of pictures that tell the
story. Feel free to use stick figures.)
4. Listen to each of the other groups explain their pictures of their
version of the story. What details do you notice in their pictures, and
how are their pictures different from yours?
5. Who and what contributes to the conflict, problem, plague, or
epidemic in your version of the story?
6. What do you notice about how the different characters in the
stories analyze the conflict, problem, plague, or epidemic, and how
they propose to resolve it?
7. What clues does the narrator of the story give that indicate what
the narrator thinks would help to resolve the plague or epidemic in
your version of the story?
8. Which groups are treated as essential in this story, and which
groups are treated as expendable? In what ways are they treated as
essential or expendable?
9. What resources does this story (in any or all of its versions) offer
your community when they engage with epidemics like the COVID19 pandemic?
10. What plan of action do you want to take collectively to help your
community respond to this and other pandemics? Share your action
plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 6
Disparities in
Health Care
Joshua 9:1-27
This Contextual Bible Study comes from the USA context and is
shaped by health disparities between white Americans and African
Americans, but it is also relevant in other contexts in which race or ethnicity are used to discriminate in access to health care. The Bible study
could be undertaken in marginalized racial or ethnic communities,
dominant communities, or mixed communities. Facilitators will need
to be sensitive to these different contexts.
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Notes on health equity
Health equity is the absence of unfair, avoidable and remediable differences in health status among groups of people. Health equity includes
issues like housing, education, food and nutrition, safe environment,
mobility and transport, economic and commercial factors, and policing and safety factors.
There is evidence that health and illness are determined by a
socio-economic ladder, with those at the bottom of the ladder suffering more diseases and poor health and those at the top enjoying more
access to conditions and provisions that promote health and wellbeing.
When we try to address inequity in health, it is often necessary to
look beyond the immediate or apparent causes of poor health to underlying historical, cultural, ethnic, or political factors.
Notes on the text
This section of the story of Joshua comes in the middle of a series of
stories about conflict and war between neighbouring ethnic groups.
Among these ethnic groups are the Gibeonites. Recognizing that
they will probably be defeated by Joshua and the Israelite army, they
use trickery to forge an alliance with Joshua, pretending to come from
far away rather than from a neighbouring territory. The story explores
interethnic relationships and the ways in which particular ethnic
groups are historically disadvantaged.
CBS questions
1. Read Joshua 9:1-27 aloud, and then ask a group of participants to
act it out.
2. When the surrounding nations hear how Joshua has defeated the
city of Jericho, most of them form an alliance to fight against Joshua.
Contextual Bible Study 6
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However, the Gibeonites adopt a different strategy. How do they
respond? (You may find it useful to read Deuteronomy 20:10-18.)
3. Later, when Joshua discovers that the Gibeonites have sought peace
through crafty ways (v 4), he responds harshly. Reread verses 22–27.
What happens to the Gibeonites within the Israelite community?
How long are they condemned to manual labour?
4. Reread verse 23, and Nehemiah 3:7 and 3:26, 31. What kinds of
manual work do the Gibeonites do?
5. What story do you think the Gibeonites would tell their children,
generation after generation? How would they explain their limited
opportunities?
6. The Gibeonites remained a marginalized community within Israel
for generations. Do you think they would have had access to the same
health care as their Israelite neighbours? Ancient temples were sites
for health care. Would the temple they had helped to sustain be a site
of care and healing for them too?
7. Do you see specific similarities with marginalized racial groups
or ethnic groups in your context? What is their story? How do we
explain their limited opportunities?
[If this CBS is done within marginalized racial or ethnic communities,
the question would shift: What is our story? How do we explain our
limited opportunities?]
8. Can you name other biblical texts that talk about God’s concern for
all humanity? Share some examples.
9. Discuss how and why both the marginalized and privileged groups
should work together toward a solution that reflects God’s concern for
all humanity?
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10. With the biblical texts in mind that you named in response to
Question 8, what are the steps that we can take to remove health disparities for all our communities, particularly historically marginalized
communities? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
Contextual Bible Study 6
25
CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 7
Gender-based Violence and
Mental Health
2 Samuel 20:3 (and 2 Samuel 15:13-16
and 2 Samuel 16:20-23)
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Aotearoa New Zealand, but
is relevant to many contexts in which gender-based violence is accompanied by a culture of victim-blaming and stigma. Facilitators will need
to take particular care in facilitating this CBS.
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Notes on gender and gender-based violence
Gender refers to socially constructed characteristics of women, men,
girls, and boys, including norms, behaviours and roles associated with
being a woman, man, girl, or boy, as well as relationships with each
other. As a social construct, gender varies between societies and changes
over time.
Gender is different from sex, which refers to the different biological
and physiological characteristics of females, males, and intersex persons, such as chromosomes, hormones and reproductive organs. Gender is hierarchical and produces inequalities that intersect with other
social and economic inequalities.
Gender-based violence is the most severe form of gender discrimination, but other forms are also experienced, especially by women and
girls. The World Health Organization estimates that about 30 per cent
of women globally have experienced physical and/or sexual intimate
partner violence or non-partner sexual violence in their lifetime.
Men should be concerned with gender because they may also be
victims of gender inequality and discrimination or victims of toxic
masculinity due to their upbringing and societal norms, and because
for any sustainable societal improvement to be achieved, men and
boys need to proactively become part of the solution.
Notes on the text
These texts form part of the story of David and the transition from
David’s leadership to the leadership of Solomon. The story is a complex
and bloody one, as political alliances shift and change. Women are often
victims of the political turmoil between rival men. Bathsheba, who is
part of the royal court, is raped by David while her foreigner husband,
Uriah, is away at war. Tamar, David’s daughter, is raped by her brother
Amnon. (Amnon is then murdered by Tamar’s brother Absalom;
Contextual Bible Study 7
27
Amnon and Absalom are rivals for David’s throne.) This story continues the violence against women.
CBS questions
1. Listen to a reading of 2 Samuel 20:3. If there are different versions
or translations of the Bible in the group, use these to listen to different
versions. Next, listen to the two background texts, 2 Samuel 15:13-16
and 2 Samuel 16:20-23. Then listen to 2 Sam 20:3 again.
[The facilitator or another participant should read the text while the
rest of the group listens.]
2. What is 2 Samuel 20:3 about? What useful information do the
background texts offer for reading 2 Samuel 20:3?
3. Who are the characters mentioned in 2 Samuel 20:3? What are
we told about them in 2 Samuel 20:3? What more do we know
about them from the two background texts, 2 Samuel 15:13-16 and
2 Samuel 16:20-23?
4. Why did David leave these ten women in Jerusalem when he left
the city in a hurry? What happened to the women? Who was responsible for what happened?
5. How does David treat the women on his return? Why does he
treat them this way? Are David’s actions more likely to help healing
or cause further harm to the women?
6. What emotions might the women feel at different points in the
story? How might they relate to each other, especially when they live
in seclusion together? What mental health challenges might they
face? How might they support one another?
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7. In your own context, is the church more likely to reach out to sup-
port survivors who experience gender-based violence, or is the church
more likely to marginalize survivors? Why does the church respond
the way it does?
8. What can be done to improve church responses to survivors of
gender-based violence in your community? Are there specific steps
that you and others can take to address a feeling of isolation?
9. In the promotion of holistic health and wellbeing, what can
churches do to prevent gender-based violence? Devise a specific action
plan to help churches recognize the impacts and mental health challenges of gender-based violence. Share your action plan with the other
small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 8
Mental Health
on the Margins
Mark 5:1-20
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Australia but engages with
any context in which people find themselves on the margins of society,
with little connection to the community.
Notes on mental health
The Bible has many stories of mental health problems, some of which,
like this text, depict extreme mental disease. Many cases, however, are
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subtle and not easily recognizable. Mental health disorders, unlike
physical or somatic disease, frequently manifest as abnormal behaviour
that is unlike the symptoms we usually associate with disease, such as
pain, swelling or bleeding.
Because of this, mental disorders do not evoke the same empathy
as other diseases. They are largely misunderstood, overshadowed by
stigma, misconceptions, prejudice, and superstition. Mental disorders
include depression, mood disorders, and neurological disorders like
dementia and epilepsy. For more information, refer to the reflection on
World Mental Health Day in Health-Promoting Churches Volume I.
Notes on the text
Mark signals to the reader where each of the stories he tells about Jesus
begins and ends. He uses geographical shifts to indicate the beginning
of a new story. Sometimes the chapter divisions are in an appropriate
place, but often not. In this case, Jesus moves from a Jewish area to a
Gentile area (5:1) and then back to a Jewish area (5:21). Between these
movements, we have the remarkable story of a man who lives among
the tombs of the dead, afflicted by a form of mental illness.
CBS questions
1. Conduct a dramatic reading of the biblical story found in Mark
5:1-20, inviting participants to read the parts of the various characters.
2. What is this story about?
3. Who are the characters in this story, and what do we know about
them from the story?
4. What is the setting or place in which the story is located? Draw a
picture or diagram of the relationships between the characters and
their location in the setting of the story.
Contextual Bible Study 8
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4. How does this story describe the mental health of the man from
the tombs? What images does the text use to tell us about this man’s
mental health?
5. There are indications in the story that this man is probably a Gen-
tile: he is from Gerasa (v 1), and the way he addresses Jesus indicates
this (v 7). The reference to ‘Legion’ (v 9) also indicates that he may
have been the victim of Roman military violence. What does this
information add to your picture of the man’s mental health condition
and to your understanding of Jesus’ engagement with him?
6. What keeps you from full participation in the community?
7. What might keep others from full participation in the community?
8. How might your church help others to better participate in the
community?
9. What will you do to encourage your church to enable participa-
tion in the community? Share your action plan with the other small
groups.
Refer to Health-Promoting Churches vol. 1, 38–41 and vol. 2, 50–55.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 9
Mental Health:
For Christians Experiencing
Social Exclusion and their
Christian Communities
Psalm 31
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Australia and focuses specifically on the perspective of Christians who experience social exclusion.
The CBS comes in two parts, one for people within the socially excluded
groups and another for the church more generally. Part 1 leads into Part
2, so Part 1 needs to be facilitated before Part 2, with the resources of
Part 1 taken into Part 2. Conducting this CBS in this order will require
careful preparation and planning.
Contextual Bible Study 9
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Notes on social aspects of health
Both the World Health Organization (WHO) and WCC definitions
of health include the word “social.” Health and wellbeing cannot be
experienced in isolation. Equally, a person’s family and community are
often instrumental in healing processes.
Social exclusion can be a cause or a result of various health problems, including mental health problems. Unfortunately, social issues
are often less recognized and are not prioritized as critical to holistic
health.
Notes on the text
Psalms are ancient poems, songs, or hymns. They are made up of stanzas, or sections. Each stanza forms a unit of meaning. It is often useful
to divide a psalm into its stanzas as we read it, as this helps us to understand the theological logic or argument of the psalm. Some translations
do this for us, but it is a good discipline to try and do this ourselves.
Psalm 31 is a lament, as the psalmist cries out in distress to God.
CBS questions
Part 1
1. Read Psalm 31, asking different participants to read each of the
following sections of the Psalm: verses 1–2, 3–5, 6–10, 11–13, 14–18,
19–20, 21–22, 23–24.
2. What phrases and what images of the Psalm resonate most strongly
with you?
3. Reread verses 11–13 in a few different translations. How do these
verses reflect your own experience of discrimination?
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4. Reread verses 14–18 in a few different translations. How do these
verses reflect your own experience of faith?
5. Lament is a key component of this Psalm. Psalm 31 turns to God
from the midst of trauma, giving voice to both the trauma of exclusion
and a deep trust in God’s embrace. Write a short Psalm of lament that
reflects your own experience.
6. What might Psalm 31 and your Psalm of lament say to the church
today?
7. Why and how would some people feel excluded in your church?
8. What will you do to summon the church to be inclusive of those
who feel different and thus excluded from the dominant group? Share
your action plan with the other small groups.
Part 2
1. Read Psalm 31, asking different participants to read each of the
following sections of the Psalm: verses 1–2, 3–5, 6–10, 11–13, 14–18,
19–20, 21–22, 23–24.
2. What phrases and what images of the Psalm resonate most strongly
with you?
3. Reread verses 11–13 in a few different translations. How might this
passage be read by a faithful Christian who experiences social exclusion by the dominant group?
4. Can you give examples of persons who are excluded, stigmatized,
marginalized, or discriminated against in your community?
5. Reread verses 14–18 in a few different translations. How might this
passage be read by a faithful Christian who is excluded by the dominant group?
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6. Read the laments that have been written in response to Psalm 31
by faithful Christians who experience exclusion, stigma, and
marginalization.
7. How do you feel, hearing their psalms of lament?
8. Write your own psalm of response, aligning yourself with the
inclusive God who embraces everyone
9. What will you do to summon the church to be inclusive of all
and overcome the markers that are used to exclude others? Share
your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 10
Accompanying Those Living
with Anxiety, Depression,
and Fear in the Context of
Pandemics such as COVID-19
Luke 24:13-35
This Contextual Bible Study has its roots in various contexts, including Thailand, Brazil, and South Africa, and has been adapted from a
version constructed by the Ujamaa Centre and the Anglican Alliance.
Contextual Bible Study 10
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Notes on depression
Depression is a mental disorder that causes persistent sadness and a lack
of pleasure or interest in activities that the sufferer previously enjoyed or
found rewarding. Additionally, depression can disturb sleep and appetite and cause fatigue and loss of concentration. Depression reduces a
person’s ability to function and lead a productive life. It is estimated
that depression affects over 260 million people worldwide.
Fear, anxiety, worry, or sadness are inevitable in life, but it is a problem when they become excessive, prolonged, persistent, and disabling,
or when they overwhelm a person’s coping mechanism.
Holistic health care opens the possibility of seeking solutions from
a wide range of sources, including medical (psychological and pharmacological treatments), psycho-social counselling, pastoral counselling,
and accompaniment.
Notes on the text
This story comes from the final chapter of Luke’s gospel and tells of
events that take place after the death of Jesus. This is a story of loss,
confusion, and fear. But it is also a story of companionship, hope, and
transformation. Two disciples are walking from Jerusalem to Emmaus.
As they walk, a stranger joins them on the journey.
CBS questions
1. Conduct a dramatic reading of Luke 24:13-35, with participants
taking the roles of the various characters and the narrator.
2. What do we think this text is about?
3. Who are the main characters, and what do we know about them?
Draw a picture or diagram of the characters and their journey.
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4. Read verses 13–24 again. Why are the disciples sad and depressed
(v 17)? What words and phrases tell us about their mental health?
How does Jesus engage with them when he comes alongside them?
5. Read verses 25–27 again. After Jesus has listened to them care-
fully, what does he then do? Why do you think that Jesus focuses on
reinterpreting scripture (the Old Testament) for them? How does
a different understanding of scripture change how they understand
themselves and their world?
6. Read verses 28–35 again. Accompanied by Jesus, the disciples have
analyzed their context and reflected on scripture. How do they then
respond? What is the significance of their sharing a meal together?
7. By the end of the story, a sense of hope, purpose, and solidarity has
been restored. How did this happen?
8. In what ways are the two disciples transformed by their journey
with Jesus? How do they act when they come to Emmaus? How do
they act when they come to Jerusalem?
9. Are there confused, anxious, depressed, and fearful people in your
church and community? Share your and their stories, being sensitive
and respectful.
10. Drawing on your reflections on the Emmaus story, discuss what
you can do to make your church more responsive to those living with
confusion, anxiety, depression, and fear? Share your action plan with
the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 11
Different Understandings
of Healing and Resources
for Healing
2 Kings 5:1-19
This Contextual Bible Study comes from a number of contexts, including Sweden, South Africa, and Liberia.
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Notes on diversity of healing practices
All healing is of God. While it is easy to associate divine intervention
with instantaneous miraculous healing, most of God’s healing touch
today is experienced in many humble situations at the hands of people
who are not recognized as “miracle workers.”
The Western medicine model has dominated the health landscape,
and this has enabled humankind to experience huge advances in health.
Nevertheless, much is lost when we disregard, discard, or otherwise
underutilize other practices of healing – indigenous healing knowledge
and practices, herbal medicine, and so on.
Notes on the text
Within the books of Kings, we also find the stories of prophets. Prophets emerge within ancient Israel alongside the beginning of kingship.
The prophet Elisha is one of the best-known biblical prophets, following in the footsteps of the prophet Elijah. We find the stories about
Elisha across the books of Kings, beginning in 1 Kings 17. Elisha was
based in the northern parts of ancient Israel, in the area of Samaria. The
stories of Elisha are only loosely connected to one another. This story
is not directly related to the story that precedes it. Naaman, the main
character in this story, is not an Israelite. He is an Aramean.
CBS questions
1. Do a dramatic reading of 2 Kings 5:1-19, inviting participants to
read the parts of the narrator and the different characters.
2. What is the story about?
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3. Who are the characters in the story, and what role does each of the
characters play in the healing of Naaman?
4. Reread verse 1 in different translations. The story begins with tension between Naaman as “a mighty warrior” and Naaman as “a leper.”
Why is there tension here? What does this indicate about the understanding of sickness and health at that time?
4. What are Naaman’s expectations about how he will be healed?
How is he healed? What are the cultural and religious understandings
that could prevent Naaman from being healed?
5. What is the relationship between the ordinary and the miraculous
in the healing of Namaan?
6. How is healing understood in your context, both in your cul-
tural context and in your church context? How have the HIV and
COVID-19 pandemics challenged cultural and religious understandings of healing in your context?
7. In what ways are you able to integrate different understandings and
methods of healing in your family and local church?
8. How can you contribute to integrated and holistic understandings
of health and healing in your local church and community?
9. [Conclude this CBS with a liturgical ritual in which you give thanks
for healing among the participants and their families and communities:
Prepare a big bowl (if possible, transparent) filled with fresh water.
Reread the text and, when you read 5:14, pause to pour water
seven times into another bowl.
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After the reading:
Invite each participant to come up and look into the second bowl
of water and then to give thanks for a specific healing.
Now invite the participants to focus on the first bowl, inviting
them to pray for work that still needs to be done to bring health and
healing in their church and community.
If possible, light candles around the bowls.]
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 12
Cross-border and
Interethnic Healing
2 Kings 5:1-19
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Rwanda, Sweden, and South
Africa but is relevant to any context where health care is restricted
because of national or ethnic boundaries. This Bible study is another
example of how the same text may be used to engage with different
contextual realities. It also engages with gender roles in health care and
healing and is based on a CBS that has been used by the Ujamaa Centre.
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Public health perspectives on migration
Migration of workers, especially from low-income to high-income
countries, is a common phenomenon. Migration becomes more complicated when it involves health workers, who are often in critical supply
and costly to train in their home countries.
On the other hand, immigrants, who are designated illegal or
undocumented, are often unable to access health care due to socio-economic barriers or fear of arrest. Migrants and other minority groups
may also suspect that health care workers may not be diligent in their
duty of care toward them because they lack legal and social protections.
“Medical tourism” is a term that initially referred to the travel of
patients from less-developed countries to developed nations in pursuit
of treatments not available in their homeland. Although nowadays
medical tourism also takes place among equally developed countries, it
is still undertaken predominantly by people from poor countries who
have the financial means or political connections to receive medical
treatment that is not available to the majority in their countries.
Finally, holistic healing opens up the possibility of benefiting from
healing practices that are effective but may not be familiar to us.
Notes on the text
Among the stories of Elisha, we have this beautifully told story of
Naaman, which we have already considered carefully in the previous
Bible study. Though Naaman and Elisha are two of the named characters in this story, the story also includes two unnamed women. This
Bible study invites us to consider these characters as we focus more fully
on the interethnic (Aramean/Israelite) dimensions of this story.
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CBS questions
1. Do a dramatic reading of 2 Kings 5:1-19, inviting participants to
read the parts of the narrator and the different characters.
2. What is the story about?
3. Who are the characters in the story, and what do we know about
each of them?
4. What are the ethnic and gender identities of each of the characters?
5. What role do each of the ethnic and gender identities play in the
healing of Naaman?
6. What enables cross-border and interethnic healing in this story?
7. What are the obstacles to cross-border and interethnic health care
in your context?
8. What role do women play in cross-border and interethnic health
care in your context?
9. What can the church do to facilitate cross-border and interethnic
health care in your context? What can the church do to acknowledge
and celebrate the role of female health care workers? Share your action
plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 13
Partnership in Holistic
Health Care and Healing
Mark 2:1-12
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Malawi, Switzerland, and
Thailand but offers resources to all because collaboration is required
for health care in all contexts.
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Notes on partnerships for health
The slogan of “leaving no one behind”, associated with the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs), can also be understood as “all hands on
deck” because everyone must be invited and enabled to make their
contribution toward achieving the SDGs. Specifically, SDG 17 is on
sustainable partnerships, and in this context, we should harness partnerships within the Christian family and with government ministries
of health. Christian health networks are important conduits for the
ecumenical sharing of resources, knowledge, and expertise, and they
have thrived where network members are keen to contribute to it as
much as they gain from it.
Collaboration is meaningful when partners respect each other, do
not seek to change the other, recognize the differences in their missions
or institutional mandates, and understand that partners may use different “tool boxes” to solve the same problem.
Notes on the text
This story comes from the early period of the ministry of Jesus when he
was based in Galilee. Once again, we note that Mark uses geographical
shifts to indicate the beginning and end of a new story. The story begins
with Jesus in Capernaum (Mark 2:1) and ends with Jesus moving to the
seashore (2:13). Many of Mark’s stories about Jesus show how willing
Jesus is to be interrupted by the needs of others. This is a story of a
dramatic interruption. While he is ministering in his own home (2:1),
those in need make a hole in the roof of his home!
CBS questions
1. Do a dramatic reading of Mark 2:1-12, with participants taking the
roles of the narrator and the various characters.
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2. What is the text about?
3. Who are the characters in this story, and what are the relationships
between them? Draw a picture or diagram that illustrates how the
various characters are connected in this story.
4. Reread verses 3–4. What would the people who brought the
paralyzed man to Jesus have had to do in order to bring him to Jesus?
What kinds of conversations would they have had with the paralyzed
man and with each other?
5. Reread verses 3–5. What role do the people who bring the para-
lyzed man to Jesus play in his healing?
6. What are the various forms of healing that the paralyzed man
experiences?
7. Do people in your context work together for health and healing?
Share with each other examples of collaboration in health care and
healing from your context. Share examples of how working together
can lead to more holistic health care.
8. What partnerships can your church or faith group forge to bring
about more health and healing in the community? What are the
possibilities, and what are the problems?
9. What is your specific plan of action for health care partnerships in
your context? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 14
Healing and
Herbal Medicines
2 Kings 20:1-11
This Contextual Bible Study comes from African contexts and many
other contexts in which indigenous herbal medicines are used together
with faith healing, as well as modern scientific medicine.
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Notes on herbal medicine
Many medicines were developed from naturally occurring biologicals
such as plants, animals, and microorganisms. Humans have harnessed
the therapeutic properties of plants. This practice, however, is threatened by several factors, including loss of biodiversity, the loss of indigenous knowledge because of the absence of, or weak mechanisms to
document, preserve, advance, and transmit indigenous knowledge, and
a lack of clarity on how herbal medicine and indigenous healing practices would work in complementarity with Western medicine.
Notes on the text
The books of Kings tell the stories of the kings and prophets of both
the northern kingdom (known as Israel) and the southern kingdom
(known as Judah). The ten northern tribes split from the southern
tribes after the death of Solomon (1 Kings 12). Hezekiah is in the long
line of kings of Judah, and Isaiah is a prophet who operates mainly
within the southern kingdom of Judah.
CBS questions
1. Conduct a dramatic reading of 2 Kings 20:1-11, inviting partici-
pants to take the roles of the narrator, the Lord, Isaiah, and Hezekiah.
2. What is the text about?
3. Who are the characters, and what do we know about them from
this story?
4. What are the various elements used in the healing of Hezekiah?
What role does each of these elements play in his healing?
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5. Dried or pressed figs were commonly used for healing in the
ancient world, often as part of healing rituals which included forms of
religious practice. In what ways are herbal medicines used for healing
in your context? Are they used on their own, or are they integrated
into religious rituals? Are herbal medicines used within your church
community for healing?
6. What are your sources of information on herbal medicine in your
context?
7. There are often tensions in the church between herbal medicines
and Christian faith healing and between herbal medicines and modern scientific medicines. What is your understanding of why there
are these tensions between different forms of healing? Is it possible
in your church to have an integrated approach to different ways of
healing?
8. What resources are there in your context for a fuller dialogue
between different forms of healing? What will you do to facilitate
your church engaging more fully with different forms of healing,
including herbal medicines? Share your action plan with the other
small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 15
Stigmatization of those
Living with HIV or Disability
John 9:1-41
This Contextual Bible Study comes from South Africa. It was developed by the Ujamaa Centre as part of its biblical and theological
engagement with HIV and AIDS. This CBS has also been used by the
Ujamaa Centre in the context of those living with disability. It engages
with theological views that claim that HIV and/or disability are punishments from God or the consequences of sin. This Bible study has
two parts. Part 1 is the basic CBS, and Part 2 engages with other elements in the text.
Notes on stigma and discrimination
Stigma is the negative perception one person attaches to another
because of race, ethnicity, religion, ideology, physical or mental ability, or any other status. Discrimination is the negative treatment of the
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person/s who is/are stigmatized. Stigma and discrimination make up
a toxic social phenomenon that prevents people from receiving adequate health care services, enjoying social integration in communities,
and experiencing fullness of life, thereby worsening any constraint that
they face.
As well as engaging with perpetrators of stigma and discrimination,
it is necessary to review systemic issues that enable this vice to continue. Elements of self-stigmatization and self-discrimination in society
should also be graciously addressed.
Notes on the text
This is one of the longest stories in John’s gospel. It is a beautifully told
story and deserves our careful attention, which is why we have offered
two related Bible studies, each focusing on particular details of the
story. The story takes place in Jerusalem, near the pool of Siloam (v 7),
where, once again, Jesus identifies with those who have been marginalized by the religious leadership of the temple. Jesus makes it clear that it
is the temple leadership who are truly blind.
CBS questions
Part 1
1. Do a dramatic reading of John 9:1-41, with participants being
invited to read the parts of the narrator and the different characters,
and then share briefly, in twos, how this text has been interpreted in
your context.
2. In a number of ways, Jesus engages with a man born blind: Jesus
sees him (v 1); Jesus touches him (v 6); Jesus speaks to him (v 7); Jesus
finds him (v 35); Jesus has a conversation with him and draws him
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back into community (vv 35–41). Reread each of these encounters.
What do these encounters say about Jesus and his attitude to the man
born blind? Draw a picture that reflects these encounters.
3. The question the disciples ask in verse 2 reveals what they have been
taught about sin and sickness. What is this teaching? What is their
theology and attitude to sickness?
4. What Jesus says to his disciples in verse 3 and his subsequent
actions (see Question 2 above) reveal an alternative teaching. What
is this alternative theological orientation?
5. What is the theological theology/teaching of your church toward
those who are HIV-positive? Is it like that of Jesus or that of the
disciples?
6. How will you respond to this Bible study in your context? For
example, how would you preach about HIV and AIDS in a way that
counters the dominant theological position that HIV is a punishment
from God?
7. What structures could be put in place in your local congregation to
make HIV-positive people welcome? Share your action plan with the
other small groups.
Part 2
1. Read the text together again. Then summarize together what you
did and discovered in the first Bible study on this text.
2. Four other groups of people also interact with the man born blind:
his neighbours and acquaintances (v 8); the Pharisees (v 13); the Jews/
Joudaioi/leaders of the Jews (vv 18, 24); his parents (v 20). What do
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these encounters say about each of these groups, and their theologies
and attitudes to the man born blind?
3. What is the theological orientation or attitude of the Pharisees and
the Jewish leadership?
4. What prevents the neighbours and family from being in solidarity
with the man born blind?
5. What does this text say to your context of HIV?
6. How will we work against stigma and discrimination in our
churches and families? Share your action plan with the other small
groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 16
Institutional and Theological
Constraints to Church-based
Health Care for People
Living with HIV or Disability
Mark 3:1-6
This Contextual Bible Study comes from South Africa. It was developed by the Ujamaa Centre as part of its biblical and theological
engagement with HIV and AIDS. This CBS has also been used by the
Ujamaa Centre in the context of those living with disability. The questions have been grouped in sets of two related questions for each of the
main characters in the story.
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Notes on churches as sites for health action
The motto of the Declaration of Alma-Ata on Primary Health Care,
created in 1978, was “Health for All by the Year 2000.” In 1986, the
Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion took this declaration further
by emphasizing that health is made or broken not in the hospital, but
in the places where people learn, work and play: at home, at school, at
work, and so on. The World Health Organization (WHO) thus developed the healthy settings approach, which included health-promoting
schools and healthy cities as a methodology of implementing health
promotion initiatives. Unfortunately, places of worship were not recognized or included in this approach, but we know that they are equally
important. The WCC’s Health-Promoting Churches programme is,
thus, an effort to recognize that churches, as institutions and communities, have a role to play in health promotion, and to strengthen that role.
Notes on the text
Jesus regularly visits local synagogues during his ministry travels. While
Jesus is openly hostile toward the temple in Jerusalem, he is often welcomed and accepted in the synagogue. The ancient synagogue was
literally, as the name indicates, a place in which people gathered. Synagogues were used for a variety of communal needs: as schools, for communal meals, as hostels, as courts, as a place to collect and distribute
charity, for political meetings, and for worship, prayer, and the reading
of the Torah.
CBS questions
1. Do a dramatic reading of Mark 3:1-6, inviting participants to read
the parts of the narrator and the different characters.
2. What is this text about?
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3. There was a synagogue in almost every local Jewish community.
The synagogue was like a combined community centre and church.
3.1 From the text, what image do you think the Pharisees have
of God?
3.2 From the text, what view of synagogue tradition do the
Pharisees hold?
4. Jesus calls the man with the withered hand “into the centre
(middle)” (v 3). The congregation would have been facing the wall
of the synagogue where the scriptures, the Torah, would have been
displayed.
4.1 From the text, what image do you think Jesus has of God?
4.2. From the text, what view of synagogue tradition does Jesus
hold?
5. The man with the withered hand is sitting in the back of the synagogue, but Jesus calls him forward, into the centre or middle, in front
of everyone and in front of the Torah.
5.1 What image of God do you think the man with the disability
has – first, before Jesus calls him forward, and then, after Jesus calls
him forward?
5.2 What view of synagogue tradition do you think the man with
the disability has?
6. Christian churches have been slow to publicly include people living
with HIV or disability.
6.1 What image of God might people living with HIV or disability have?
6.2 What view of church tradition might people living with HIV
or disability have?
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7. Why was Jesus angry (v 5)?
8. How do your local churches include people living with HIV or
disability? Is your local church a safe place for people living with HIV
or disability? How should the church respond to people living with
HIV or disability?
9. What will you now do to assist your church to work more posi-
tively with people living with HIV or disability? Share your action
plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 17
Health Care for Migrants,
and those Displaced
by Conflict, Economic
Factors, and the
COVID-19 Pandemic
Mark 6:30-44
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Nepal, India, and South
Africa. The Ujamaa Centre and the Anglican Alliance have used this
text for a related CBS. Each of the gospels tells at least one story of
Jesus feeding the multitudes who followed him in search of healing
and wholeness. We have chosen Mark’s version of the story as the
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basis for our CBS. Mark’s version is probably the oldest version and is,
therefore, the closest in time to the community of care that Jesus was
constructing.
Notes on migration and access to health services
Migration and displacement of people have taken place since time
immemorial. However, this situation has become more acute in recent
times for various reasons: lack of economic opportunities and various
forms of insecurity, including perennial low-intensity conflicts and
wars, unplanned urbanization, and climate change. Within developing
countries, rural to urban migration is exacerbated wherever economic
and infrastructural development is concentrated only in urban centres
or when indigenous people are dispossessed of their land and other
means of livelihood.
Immigrants are often unable to access health care due to social, economic or language barriers, or for fear of arrest. Migrants and displaced
people may also suspect health care workers of being less diligent in
their duty of care toward them than they should be, since they lack
legal and social protections.
Notes on the text
This text is part of a larger story in which Jesus sends out his disciples
to minister to the marginalized in surrounding villages and towns. In
the middle of this story we also hear the story of how John the Baptist was executed by King Herod (Mark 6:14-29). When the disciples
return from their ministry work, they report to Jesus, and he then
draws them aside so that they can rest. But their rest is interrupted by
a large crowd.
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CBS questions
1. Listen to a reading of the poem
The Return of labour migrants
a poem by Pratap Jayavanth:
With sore feet and cracked heels,
aching shoulder and empty belly,
thousands march without wheels.
Few wept when they saw on telly.
Poor workers see no access to aid,
as the government shuts one eye,
help is needed before hope fades.
Only the kindhearted hear the cry.
The poor have struggled from birth,
will the rich have a heart to share?
Will God’s kingdom come on earth,
to ensure neighbourly love and care?
2. Do a dramatic reading of Mark 6:30-44, inviting participants to
read the parts of the narrator and the different characters. What is this
text about?
3. Who are the characters in this story? Where are they? What do
we know about them, and what are the relationships between them?
Draw a picture or diagram that represents the characters, their relationships, and their location, as indicated in the story.
4. Reread verses 33–37. The gospel of Mark pays careful attention to
place. In this story we are told that Jesus feeds the crowd in a “secluded
place” (v 32) between the city and the villages. In the time of Jesus,
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63
cities were often associated with economic oppression. The elites who
lived in the city made up less than five percent of the population, yet
they consumed the vast majority of the available resources. These
elites, which included religious elites, often exploited the villages
around the city. City elites extracted economic resources from the
villages around them in the form of taxes, tribute, and tithes. Many in
the crowd who followed Jesus would have been displaced or marginalized by the exploitative economic relationship between the city and
the villages.
Why do you think Jesus chose a place between the city and the villages to feed the crowd? Why do you think Jesus rejected the disciples’
suggestion that the crowd go into the villages to find food? Why do
you think Jesus insisted that the disciples identify for themselves what
resources there were among them to give everyone something to eat?
5. From this story it is clear that Jesus wants to rebuild community,
bringing together the vulnerable who have been displaced by various
factors. What kind of community does Jesus want to build? What are
the spiritual characteristics and material practices of this alternative
community?
7. Who participates in the building of this alternative community?
Identify the different kinds of people involved.
8. Reread the poem with which we began this Bible study. Who are the
displaced persons in your context in need of dignity, health care, and
economic opportunities? Be specific about their health care needs and
the obstacles that prevent them from receiving dignified health care.
9. What actions will you take to transform your locations into healing
communities? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 18
Health Care Systems
and How to Situate
the Church within Them
Luke 10:30-35
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Switzerland and Malawi.
It includes a careful analysis of how health care systems operate and
reflects on how the health care of churches fits within local, national,
regional, and global health care systems. This CBS uses the well-known
story of the “good Samaritan” but offers an unusual way of rereading it.
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Notes on open health systems
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted that just as all sectors are
affected by health matters, they should be encouraged and enabled to
contribute to health. This is known as multisectoral collaboration. Multisectoral collaboration entails transparency on how health resources
are allocated and utilized and accountability in achieving results. New
stakeholders who are able to mobilize community resources and structures, and strengthen linkages between facility-based health institutions and community-based structures, should be embraced.
“All hands on deck” requires patience and an openness of mind to
explore the unique gifts that different stakeholders bring to the table.
It also requires us to reform our health systems to harness these differences.
Notes on the text
This story follows the story of Jesus sending out 70 of his disciples
to minister to those in need in the surrounding areas (Luke 10:1).
Overhearing their reports, and the conversation between Jesus and his
disciples (vv 17–24), an expert in religious law tries to turn the discussion away from practical matters to abstract matters. He asks Jesus,
“What shall I do to inherit eternal life?” (v 25). The expert in the law
knows the law in the abstract, but he does not understand that loving
God requires loving one’s neighbour in practice. When he asks Jesus
the abstract question, “And who is my neighbour?” (v 29), Jesus tells
the story of the good Samaritan.
CBS questions
1. Listen to a reading of Luke 10:30-35. Share in pairs how this story
has been understood in your church and community.
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2. Who are the characters in this story, and what do we know about
them? Draw a picture or diagram of this story, indicating the relationships between the characters.
3. How does each of the characters contribute, negatively or positively,
to the health care of the destitute and injured man?
4. What are the specific health care tasks that the Samaritan provides?
What qualities does he embody?
5. What are the specific health care tasks that the innkeeper provides?
What qualities does he embody?
6. Who are the health care “Samaritans” in your context? What forms
of health care do they provide? Is the church in your context a health
care “Samaritan”? How does the church, as a health care “Samaritan,”
fit within the other health care systems in your context?
7. Who are the health care “innkeepers” in your context? What forms
of health care do they provide? Is the church in your context a health
care “innkeeper”? How does the church as a health care “innkeeper”
fit within the other health care systems in your context?
8. What are the opportunities, and what are the obstacles for the
church to be a resource for health care within the other health care
systems in your context?
9. What should be done in your context to align and integrate the
health care resources of the church with the other health care systems
in your context? Try to be specific about what actions need to be
taken. Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 19
Health Care Inclusion for
Those Who are Marginalized
by Ethnicity, Disability,
Gender, or Age
Matthew 15:21-31
This Contextual Bible Study comes from South Africa, Zimbabwe, and
Australia, reflecting on the range of marginalizations that keep people
from accessing health care.
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Notes on equity
Equity, according to WHO, is the absence of unfair, avoidable or remediable differences among groups of people, whether those groups are
defined socially, economically, demographically, geographically, or by
other dimensions of inequality (e.g., sex, gender, ethnicity, disability,
or sexual orientation). Health is a fundamental human right. Political,
economic, sociocultural, technological, environmental, legal, and institutional structures determine how power and resources are distributed,
which in turn determine how people are born, live, and die.
Notes on the text
Both the gospel of Mark and the gospel of Matthew include this story.
Mark refers to the woman as “a Greek, a Syrophoenician” and Matthew
refers to her as “a Canaanite,” but it is the same story. The key point in
these identifications of the woman is that she is a foreigner outside the
Jewish-Israelite community. We have chosen to use Matthew’s version
here because Matthew makes it clear how the healing in this particular case leads to many other healings. We will study Mark’s version in
another Bible study. Matthew’s story is told when Jesus is in Galilee.
While he is in Galilee, Pharisees come from Jerusalem to confront Jesus.
Clearly, they are watching him, recognizing that he is a potential threat
to their religious and economic systems. They ask him why he allows
his disciples to eat food with unwashed hands. Jesus rebukes them for
their hypocrisy, arguing that they use the oral law for their own economic agendas (Matt. 15:3-9). Jesus then turns to the crowd who are
listening and teaches them that God is not concerned with what goes
into the mouth but with what comes out of the heart. He confirms that
God will judge the Jewish leadership for its failure to serve the people
because they prefer to serve themselves. In the midst of these Jewish
discussions, a Gentile woman comes to Jesus.
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CBS questions
1. Listen to readings of Matthew 15:21-31 in different translations.
2. What is the text about?
3. Who are the characters in these stories, and what do we know
about them?
4. How are these two stories connected? Draw a picture or create a
drama that shows the connections between these healing stories.
5. Reread verses 22–24. In these verses, the disciples bring their concerns about the woman to Jesus. What is it that worries the disciples
about this woman? How does Jesus respond to the disciples? What is
Jesus’ initial attitude to the woman?
6. Reread verses 25–28. In these verses, the woman engages Jesus
directly, refusing to be silenced. She argues with Jesus. What is the reason Jesus gives for not healing her? What is her argument in response?
How does Jesus then respond to her argument?
7. Matthew connects two healing stories, that of a Canaanite woman
(vv 21–28) and that of the crowds (vv 29–31). Reread verses 29–31.
If we read these verses carefully, we see that many of those who were
brought to Jesus for healing were not from the Jewish-Israelite community, for when they were healed, “They glorified the God of Israel”
(v 31). In what ways has this foreign woman enabled other foreigners
to come to Jesus for healing? In what ways has this foreign woman
persuaded Jesus that his ministry of healing is for everyone, not only
the Jewish-Israelite community?
8. There are other similarities between the two healing stories. In both
stories, there are those who enable the healing of others. What is the
role of those who facilitate the healing of others in these two stories?
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9. Who are the “disciples” in our contexts, those who hinder the heal-
ing of people on the margins, particularly women, children, foreigners,
and people living with disability?
10. Who are those on the margins of the available health care systems
and health care resources in your context?
11. What arguments should the church be making in our contexts to
ensure that available health care is made accessible to all, particularly
women, children, foreigners, and those living with disability?
12. Jesus acts to change the reality of the marginalized and discrimi-
nated. What actions should the church take in our contexts to ensure
that available health care is made accessible to all, particularly women,
children, foreigners, and those living with disability? Be specific about
what actions can be taken immediately and what actions could be
taken with further planning. Share your action plan with the other
small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 20
Mental Disability and
Stigmatization, even within
Families with Children with
Mental Disabilities
Mark 7:24-30
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Australia and takes up the
reality of families living with children with mental disabilities. This
CBS will require careful facilitation, touching as it does on deeply personal and painful family realities.
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Notes on mental disability
Refer to the notes on public health perspectives on disability (CBS 4)
and on mental health (CBS 8 and 9). Children with mental disabilities,
including learning and intellectual disability, have multiple vulnerabilities because they are children, they have a disability, and their disability
affects their mental status and development. The families of these children also require healing, care, and support.
Notes on the text
Here we work with Mark’s version of the familiar story of the woman
who comes to Jesus on behalf of her daughter. The story is very similar
to Matthew’s version of the story. Indeed, Matthew probably bases his
story on the story of Mark, for Mark’s gospel was already written when
Matthew wrote his gospel. The details are slightly different.
CBS questions
1. Do a dramatic reading of Mark 7:24-30, inviting participants to
read the parts of the narrator and the different characters.
2. What is this text about?
3. Who are the characters in this story, and what do we know about
each of them?
4. Earlier on in chapter 7, Jesus engages in a discussion with the
Pharisees, who confront him about his disciples eating with unclean
hands (7:1-15). He condemns the Pharisees for their hypocrisy, making it clear to the crowd who are listening to their theological debate
that “there is nothing outside a person that by going in can defile, but
the things that come out are what defile” (v 15). Jesus then engages in
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a discussion with his disciples (7:17-23), trying to help them understand that it is not “what goes into a person from outside” that defiles
but “what comes out of a person that defiles” (vv 18, 20). Jesus is clear:
“it is from within, from the human heart, that evil intentions come”
(v 21). Jesus then debates with the Gentile Syrophoenician woman
(7:26-30).
Reread Mark 7:26-30.
5. In his discussions with the Pharisees and his disciples, Jesus shifts
the focus away from eating and food to what comes out of the human
heart. Why, then, does Jesus talk about food when the woman asks for
healing for her daughter?
6. The woman refuses to be ignored by Jesus. Instead, she too talks
about food, insisting that there is enough food for all, even those who
are on the margins, like the dogs. What does Jesus hear coming from
her heart as they discuss this?
7. The woman enables Jesus to change, recognizing that God’s ministry of healing should be extended to all people. Jesus then enables the
woman’s situation to change. If we accept that the woman’s daughter
had some kind of mental disability, what changes for the woman when
she returns home?
8. Healing takes many forms. What forms of healing are required
for us to accept and affirm children living with mental/intellectual
disabilities?
9. How must we, our families, and churches change so that we are able
to accept and affirm children living with mental/intellectual disabilities? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 21
Population Growth
Numbers 1:1-16; 2 Samuel 24:1-4;
1 Chronicles 21:1-4; Luke 2:1-5; John 6:1-14
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Switzerland and Malawi. It
invites participants to consider what a Christian response might be to
population growth worldwide.
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Notes on population growth
Earth is the only planet so far known to support life. Seventy per cent
of the earth’s surface is covered with water, while 30 per cent is land.
Land, water and air are finite elements that must exist in a delicate balance in order to support life on earth. The world population is now
close to 8 billion. Since 1974, it is taking less than 15 years for the world
population to increase by 1 billion; the finite resources are becoming
increasingly unstable and inadequate to sustain the population.
On the other hand, wildlife – life on land, in water and in the air – is
dwindling drastically, along with a loss of biodiversity. Strangely, while
wildlife is being lost, the pet population is increasing everywhere: for
example, in 2021, there were 10.1 million dogs, 10.9 million cats and 1
million rabbits in the UK; in the USA, there were 78 million dogs and
58 million cats.
In addition to the biological resources described above, socio-economic services are also constrained. Climate change, the integrity of
finite resources (land, water and air), and the loss of wildlife and biodiversity are all connected to population growth and affect the earth’s
ability to continue sustaining human life.
Notes on the text
Census-taking in the ancient world was usually associated with military
conscription and taxation. This is why biblical texts about counting the
people are often negative (see CBS 5). Kings living in cities would take
a census of the surrounding villages to conscript the young men into the
king’s military service and to determine what taxes each village would
have to pay to the king. All such biblical texts, except the last one cited
here, are accounts of ancient kings (in both the Old and New Testaments) using the census to conscript and tax ordinary people. John’s
gospel offers an alternative understanding of counting the people.
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CBS questions
1. Listen to this series of biblical texts: Numbers 1:1-16; 2 Samuel
24:1-4; 1 Chronicles 21:1-4; Luke 2:1-5; John 6:1-14. Invite a different participant to read each text.
2. What do these texts have in common?
3. Counting the people in the ancient world was usually associated with
the military and economic dimensions of life. Leaders took a census in
order to know how many fighting men they had access to and how many
people they could tax. This is why we find an ambiguous attitude to the
census in 2 Samuel, 1 Chronicles, and Luke. In the book of Acts, we read
of rebellions that took place during the census (Acts 5:37). Ordinary
people often experienced the census as a means of exploitation, of counting them so that they could be conscripted into the military and taxed.
In our contemporary world, governments conduct censuses for
a range of reasons. What are some of these reasons?
4. Do a dramatic reading of John 6:1-14, inviting participants to read
the parts of the narrator and the different characters. What role does
the counting of the people play in this story?
5. What is the population structure of your community and country?
Why do you think you have such a population?
6. What benefits or challenges do your community and country
experience due to its population status?
7. What is the relationship between population growth in your con-
text and the available resources, particularly health-related resources
such as food, water, land, shelter, and primary health care?
8. In what ways should the church be engaged with questions of pop-
ulation growth? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 22
Access by Adolescents
to Sexual and Reproductive
Health Information
and Services
Genesis 19:1-12
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Zambia and was written by a
Zambian woman, but is relevant to any context in which conservative
may sound judgmental cultural norms and theologies make it difficult for adolescents to talk about and access sexual reproductive health
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information and services. Given the violence depicted in this text and
the gendered reality of participants, it is advisable to separate men and
women in the small group work. This CBS requires careful preparation by the facilitator, who will need to explain the process clearly to
the participants.
Notes on adolescent sexual and reproductive health
Sexual and reproductive health (SRH) is central to the health and wellbeing of individuals, families and communities. Sexual and reproductive health is relevant to persons throughout life, and not only during
their reproductive phase of life. Holistic SRH allows for access to comprehensive age-appropriate and correct information on sex and sexuality, risks and vulnerabilities, and access to services. Inadequate SRH
care increases vulnerability to infections and diseases, problems with
managing one’s reproduction (e.g., unintended pregnancies, too many
children, high-risk pregnancies, etc.), sexual dysfunction, as well as
taboos, harmful sexual practices, and sexual violence.
Respect for human dignity requires that every person – irrespective of age, sex, marital status, economic status, ethnicity, or literacy –
should be afforded SRH care with full respect for their personal agency
and dignity. Despite this, SRH continues to be steeped in myths and
misinformation, marginalization, cultural oppression, and even misleading theologies.
Notes on the text
Genesis 18–19 tell the story of how three strangers, who turn out to
be two angels and the Lord, visit Abraham and Sarah, and how the
two angels, disguised as two men, go down into the city of Sodom to
visit Lot. The story focuses on the question of who will offer hospitality to strangers. Abraham and Lot offer generous hospitality. The men
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of Sodom offer violence. Genesis 18–19 is a single story, a story which
contrasts generous hospitality with the violence of threatened rape.
CBS questions
1. This CBS calls for a rereading of a well-known but often misunder-
stood biblical story. The story is often used to condemn homosexuality. However, if we read Genesis 18 and 19 as a single story, we soon
understand that the story is about generous hospitality: the generous
hospitality of Abraham to strangers in Genesis 18:1-8 and the generous hospitality of Lot to strangers in Genesis 19:1-3. The men of
Sodom lack hospitality and seek to dominate and humiliate the two
strangers and Lot when he resists them (v 9). The men of Sodom are
heterosexual men who use sexual violence to shame and subordinate
other men. In this CBS we focus on a part of the story that is often
neglected, the story of the women of Lot’s household.
2. Listen to a dramatic reading and acting of Genesis 19:1-13. After
the reading, explain to the participants that what follows is an imagined dialogue between the various characters in the story and a news
reporter. Invite young people to take on the roles of the following
characters: the narrator, Lot, the two men/angels, the men of Sodom,
Lot’s two daughters (even though they do not say anything), and Lot’s
wife (even though she does not say anything).
When the text has been read dramatically and acted, invite another
young person to be a news reporter, interviewing those in Lot’s household. The news reporter asks the characters in Lot’s household (Lot,
the two men/angels, Lot’s daughters, and Lot’s wife) the following
kinds of questions:
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To Lot
• Mr Lot, there was a commotion around your residence during
the night, with the men of the city demanding that you should
send the men you invited to your home out to them. We understand that the men of the city wanted to take advantage of your
visitors. How did you handle their demands?
• Mr Lot, we have heard that you begged these two strangers to
rest in your home instead of the city square, where they wanted
to spend the night. Why were you worried about their spending
the night in the town square?
• Mr Lot, were you not worried that the men outside would harm
you and your family while you were protecting the men in your
home?
To the two strangers
• How did you feel when Lot begged you not to spend the night
in the city square?
• We have heard that Lot, his wife, and his daughters took good
care of you in their home. In what ways did they offer you
welcome and hospitality?
• What was your reaction when you heard Lot offering to send
his daughters out to be raped by the violent men of Sodom
surrounding the house?
To Lot’s wife
• Mrs Lot, did your husband consult with you before offering your
daughters to the violent men of Sodom surrounding your home?
• Mrs Lot, what was your reaction when your husband offered
your daughters to the violent men of Sodom surrounding your
home?
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To Lot’s daughters
• How did it make you feel when you heard your own father
suggesting that you be sent to the men outside so that the
violent men of Sodom surrounding your home could do whatever they willed with you?
• Did your father discuss this with you before offering you to the
violent men of Sodom surrounding your home?
[After this exercise, form small groups and invite each small group
to engage with the following questions. Each small group should be
a safe place, so group the participants as follows: young women in
one small group, young men in one small group, older women in one
small group, and older men in one small group. After each question
or series of questions, in which the characters in the story respond to
the news reporter’s questions, each small group should report back
to the other groups. In this way, there is both safety and sharing
throughout this CBS.]
3. Do Lot’s wife and daughters do and say anything in the text? Who
speaks and acts in this story?
4. Are there women like Lot’s wife and young people like Lot’s two
daughters in your community or in your church? What are the cultural
and religious constraints on wives and daughters in your community
or in your church? What are the cultural and religious constraints on
young people in your community or in your church?
5. What access do young people, especially young women, have to
information and decision-making about their sexual and reproductive
health care in your context?
6. What information and support services are available in your context for young people, especially young women, that would facilitate
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them becoming well-informed decision-makers about their sexual
reproductive health care realities?
7. Is the church a safe place within which to invite sexual reproduc-
tive health care providers to offer education and services to the young
people in the church?
8. [To young people in the church] What can you, as young people, do
to enable your own church to become a safe place in which young people can discuss SRH, receive information, and develop their capacities
to become decision-makers about their own SRH? Share your action
plan with the other small groups.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 23
COVID-19 and
Human Rights
Mark 1:21-39
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Colombia and focuses on the
way in which human rights are refused to the most marginalized, especially workers and women.
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Notes on right to health
The Constitution of the World Health Organization (WHO) of 1946
states that “[t]he enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health
is one of the fundamental rights of every human being.” The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) further enshrines health as a
human right in Article 25. Health is couched as a product of an adequate standard of living, being linked to various socio-economic determinants of livelihood.
While these two instruments have really done a lot to enshrine
health as a fundamental human right, sadly, many are not yet enjoying
this right. It is, therefore, an almost sacred duty to climb every mountain and cross every valley to ensure that those that are marginalized
and left behind can begin to enjoy their right to health.
Notes on the text
At the beginning of his ministry in Galilee, Jesus went to Capernaum
with four of his disciples. After visiting the synagogue, where Jesus
taught and expelled an unclean spirit from a man, they went to Simon’s
house (v 29). At the house he healed many sick people, including Simon’s
mother-in-law, and drove out many demons. Then they left Capernaum
and went to other Galilean towns, where Jesus continued his ministry by
preaching in their synagogues and casting out demons (v 39).
CBS questions
1. In groups of two or three people, talk for five minutes about the
relationship between the COVID-19 pandemic and the situation of
workers, both in the formal sector (jobs with wages and social security benefits) and in the informal sector (self-employed workers with
uncertain incomes and no social security benefits).
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2. After a brief report back from the small groups, divide into dif-
ferent groups of two or three and talk for five minutes about the
consequences of COVID-19 lockdowns on poor people living in
overcrowded conditions.
3. After a brief report back from the groups, divide into different
groups of two or three people and talk for five minutes about the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic for people in contexts with a
lack of vaccines, and a shortage of intensive care units and health care
facilities.
4. Ask someone to read Mark 1:21-39 aloud for the whole group.
5. Then ask the participants: What is the text about?
[Write the answers on a board or a sheet of newsprint so that they are
visible to everyone. ]
6. Who are the characters in this story? What do they do? What do
they talk about?
[Write the answers on a board or a sheet of newsprint so that they are
visible to everyone.]
7. Divide the group into smaller groups of five or six people and ask
them to read the text again, paying attention to the moving actions
such as “leaving” and “entering,” or “going” and “coming.” Draw a picture or diagramme of how the characters move through the different
locations indicated in the story.
[Providing newsprint and crayons, ask each small group to draw a picture or diagram of the locations in the text (the synagogue, the house,
the bedroom, the door, the deserted place, the towns) and the characters’ movements through them.
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When the small groups have completed their pictures, gather all
the groups together again and ask each small group to share their
picture and explain the movements of the characters to the other
participants.
After the presentations, introduce the next set of questions, Questions 8–10. These questions should be done in the same groups of five
or six people. After these questions have been discussed, bring the
small groups together for a report back.]
8. At the synagogue, Jesus heals and liberates one person from the
power of an unclean spirit (vv 23–26); while at Simon’s home he heals
and liberates many people. What is the difference between these two
locations? Why does Jesus need to move (vv 32–34) from one location to another?
9. What is the role played by the community (represented by Simon,
Andrew, James and John) at the house in relation to the sick and
possessed people (vv 30–32)? Reread verses 35–37 and 38–39. What
is the role of the community in each?
10. Reread verses 38–39. How do Jesus and his community bring
health care and healing to the many who need access to health care
and healing?
[After the report back from the small groups, introduce the final set
of questions, 11–12. These questions should be answered in the same
small groups. After these questions have been discussed, bring the
small groups together to report back.]
11. Simon’s home is a place of hospitality and healing. What kinds of
impact has COVID-19 had on our homes?
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11.1 To contain the spread of COVID-19, authorities have asked
people to “stay at home.” What does this mean for informal workers? What are the economic implications for their households?
11.2 One of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic is that more
people are having to “stay at home” because of government lockdowns or unemployment. Is the house a safe place for everybody?
11.3 What can you, your church, and your community do to help
people who have to “stay at home”? Share your action plan with
the other small groups.
12. Jesus and his community ensure that all those in need have access
to healing. Do people in your communities have access to health care,
including access to vaccines?
12.1 What can you and your community do to help others to have
access to health care, including vaccines? Share your action plan
with the other small groups.
[As each of the small groups reports back, write the answers on a
board or a sheet of newsprint so that they are visible to everyone.
Close the meeting by singing a song that encourages the participants to commit to their action plans.]
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 24
Psychological Trauma
Mark 4:35-41, Job 3
This Contextual Bible Study is from New Zealand. It resonates with
many similar contexts in which people are traumatized, either through
particular events or daily realities. Due to safety issues and the risk of
re-triggering traumatic memories, it is divided into two parts. The first
part addresses the ability to safely feel emotions; the second part focuses
on feelings of abandonment, desperation and powerlessness.
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Notes on mental trauma
Mental health disorders are increasingly being recognized all over the
world, and they affect almost every age group, gender, and socio-economic group, although some groups may be more affected than others.
However, psychological trauma, such as is seen in war zones, during
severe natural disasters or in personal tragedies, elevates our awareness
that mental anguish can reach unimaginable and indescribable levels.
Extreme mental suffering can occur, testing the ability of human beings
to cope, and casting doubt on the adequacy of various therapeutic and
support mechanisms, be they clinical, psychosocial, or spiritual.
Today, unfortunately, there is no shortage of countries in conflict,
trapping over 100 million people, and on account of climate change
and environmental degradation, natural disasters are becoming more
common, more severe and more widespread.
All these developments underline the need to recognize and
empower community-based structures such as Christian congregations
to help identify, and offer support and accompaniment to affected
individuals, families, and communities.
However, prevention is better than cure, which means that churches
should also be at the forefront of advancing peaceful means of preventing and resolving conflicts, and of implementing effective measures to
reverse the environmental and climate crisis.
Notes on the texts
Mark 4:35-41 is identified as a textual unit by clear shifts in geographical movement, beginning with Jesus teaching the crowd from a boat on
the lake (4:1-34), then depicting Jesus sailing in the boat to the other
side of the lake (4:35). The story that follows is a remarkable story, with
Jesus asleep in the boat in the middle of a storm.
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Job 3 is another remarkable text. The book of Job consists of a
prose beginning and ending, with a long series of poetic dialogues in
between. Job 3 is the beginning of the poetry. It is also the beginning of
a changed Job who is no longer silent, but who vocally laments before
his friends and God. Job has lost his family and his possessions, and his
body is diseased (chapters 1–2). Having suffered in silence for seven
days and seven nights, Job finally breaks the silence, beginning a series
of theological poetic debates with his friends and God (chapters 3–37).
God finally answers Job in the poetry (chapters 38–41). And then, in
prose, God and Job complete the story (chapter 42).
CBS questions
[A note on safety: When addressing people’s trauma through Bible
stories, we need to be particularly mindful of the likelihood of triggering difficult emotions and painful memories. Leaders of this study
need to begin with a brief psycho-education and provide practical
skills in how to breathe slowly and calmly in order to calm emotions
and to self-regulate. Participants should be encouraged to envision a
safe place in their minds if they are troubled by anything in the story.
Consider carefully whether to have a trained therapist within the
session who is also available for consultations afterwards. Request that
participants take care when speaking to, comforting, and touching
others.]
PART 1
Theme: Getting used to emotions and feelings
Text: Mark 4:35-41.
Step 1
1. Do a dramatic reading of Mark 4:35-41, inviting participants to
read the parts of the narrator and the different characters.
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[This is a whole-group exercise. Participants are encouraged to listen
to the story slowly and deliberately. They are asked to connect with
and not be alarmed by their bodily feelings. This is a case of accepting
and facing emotions rather than blocking them out. It is important to
pay attention to the symbols and metaphors in the stories that bring
up memories and emotions.]
2. What is this text about?
Step 2
[In small groups of 3 or 4, and with pens, paper, and Bibles at hand,
reflect together on the following questions. Each participant should
also write down in private their own personal thoughts.]
3. What is it like being in the boat in a storm?
4. What do the disciples feel in their bodies?
5. How do they reach a decision to wake Jesus?
Step 3
[Report back to the main group using the summary answers as a
guide, but also invite participants to share their personal feelings
if they feel capable.]
Step 4
[Now, back in small groups, discuss and document the next set of
questions.]
6. What do the disciples expect Jesus to do?
7. What fears do we have when we listen to the story?
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8. How difficult is it to speak out about our fears?
9. Would we wake Jesus? Could we? How would this make us feel?
10. Is there hope in the story?
Step 5
[Report back to the larger group, and when they have done this, give
an invitation to participants to compare anything in the Bible story
with their own stories using the following question.]
11. What other issues come up when we share like this with others?
Step 6
Check that people feel safe and reassured before ending the session.
Set in place support plans and arrange for follow-up after the study
where required. Encourage participants to keep a personal journal and
to reflect on personal thoughts and emotions.
PART 2
Theme: Abandonment, desperation, and powerlessness
Text: Job 3
[To begin, the leader might ask what issues have come up since
the first study. What was difficult? Was the group space supportive?
Did participants have enough support from the leader and the
therapist? Did they feel free, or did they feel stuck when trying
to tell their own story?
In this session, advise participants to keep gently thinking about
their own trauma experiences alongside the Bible reading. Allow
plenty of time for them to write about, talk about, and/or draw their
own stories. Remind them that emotions are important; ask partici-
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pants to listen to them rather than bury them. Remind them that the
therapist is available to help them.]
Step 1
[This is a whole-group exercise. The following verses are put up on the
power-point, or otherwise clearly displayed.]
“So Satan went out from the presence of the Lord, and inflicted loathsome sores on Job from the sole of his foot to the crown of his head.
Job took a potsherd with which to scrape himself, and sat among the
ashes” ( Job 2:7-8).
“Now when Job’s three friends heard of all these troubles . . .
[t]hey sat with him on the ground seven days and seven nights, and
no one spoke a word to him, for they saw that his suffering was great”
( Job 2:11, 13).
1. How common is this experience for people?
2. Can you relate to this story?
3. What do you think of what the friends did?
Step 2
[The facilitator reads aloud the text from Job 3 slowly, then rereads
it using a different Bible translation. Divide into small groups and ask
the following questions.]
4. What is Job trying to say?
5. What images or metaphors does he use?
6. What does this make you feel?
7. What can you feel in your body?
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Step 3
[In the whole group, gently ask participants to share their discussion
from the small group. Ask them to be mindful of those listening to
them and be prepared to pause if they need comfort. Together reflect
on these questions.]
8. What do you want to say to the friends who have been listening?
9. Which images or metaphors do they most need to hear?
Step 4
Divide again into the same small groups. Ask participants to be
prepared to write down their responses, draw them, or enact them
in a drama.
10. What does God think of what Job has said?
11. Do you have a story like that of Job that you are prepared to
share?
12. What stops people from listening to other people’s pain and
suffering?
Step 5
[Gather again in the large group. Ask participants to share, or
otherwise just write down, what has come up for them so far
in the study. When they have done this, read the following text.]
Now read Job 42:7.
13. How could things be different in the way our families and
communities help those who suffer from trauma?
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14. In general terms, which experiences of psychological trauma can
be prevented, avoided, or minimized? What can churches do in these
prevention efforts? What actions will you take as a congregation?
Share your action plan with the other small groups.
Step 6
In closing, remind participants of the benefit of continuing to record
things in their journals, and to share their feelings of what comes up.
Ask them to be prepared to continue (re)writing their own stories.
Remind them of the availability of the therapist.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 25
Working with Children on
Embracing Changes Brought
by the COVID-19 Pandemic
Luke 10:38-42
This Contextual Bible Study comes from Costa Rica and is specifically
designed as a Bible study for children. This will require careful facilitation.
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Notes on social adjustment for children
“There is nothing permanent except change,” the saying goes. Crucial
to children’s growth and development is their ability to manage change
– and they are often good at it. However, sometimes change is so drastic
that it overwhelms them. The COVID-19 pandemic is an example. In
such cases, it is wise not only to consider the medical needs of the children (such as nutrition and dealing with infectious diseases) but also to
understand them and help them to process, navigate and manage the
change. These non-medical issues can easily be forgotten.
Notes on the text
In chapter 10 of Luke’s gospel, Jesus sent out the 70, debated with a
teacher of the law about eternal life, and told the parable of the good
Samaritan. Jesus then pauses from his teaching and is welcomed into
the home of Martha and Mary. In some ways, these two women are like
the good Samaritan, offering Jesus a place of rest and care.
CBS questions
1. Listen to this short story.
Times we will never forget
Susana wakes up today, but she is not in a rush. Normally, she would
have already jumped out of bed and been getting ready to go to
school. As she lies in bed today, she wonders when the virus will go
away. When will she return to school? When will her dad get a new
job? And how long will her mum work from home? As she thinks
about this, her mum opens her bedroom door and smiles at her. The
smell of the breakfast her father is preparing enters the room. No
more quick breakfasts on the way to school.
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Susana feels very happy to be at home, eating at the table with
her mum and dad, receiving classes in the company of her father, and
being able to enjoy the food that her mother prepares. And what she
enjoys the most is that they all play together in the afternoons.
2. What is the story about?
3. Do you identify with the story? In what ways?
4. What has changed in your routines since the COVID-19 pan-
demic? Which of the changes brought by the pandemic do you like?
Which of these changes do you not like?
5. Listen to another story. This time it is one that comes from the
Bible, from Luke 10:38-42.
[If the children are not of an age to read, it is advisable to bring
pictures of the story and use them to accompany the questions
as the story is reread.]
6. What is the story about?
7. Draw a picture of what Martha is doing in the story.
8. Draw a picture of what Mary is doing in the story.
9. What did Jesus say about what Mary was doing?
10. Thinking about the changes that the pandemic has brought to
us, and remembering the story of Mary and Martha, what have we
learned about what is important?
11. How can we share our time and listen to each other in our social
bubble?
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 26
Working with Children
on Loss and New Life
Isaiah 43:18-21
This CBS comes from Costa Rica and is specifically designed as a Bible
study for children. This will require careful facilitation.
Notes on social adjustment for children
“There is nothing permanent except change,” the saying goes. Crucial to children’s growth and development is their ability to manage
change. Sometimes this change is very unfortunate and unwelcome,
like the loss of parents, caregivers, or loved ones, or other drastic
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changes in living circumstances. It is wise always to pay attention to
the support for children to cope with such changes.
Notes on the text
The first part of the book of Isaiah, Chapters 1–39, focuses on God’s
judgment. Chapters 40 onwards then focus on God’s restoration. Isaiah
43 is a good example of God speaking words of comfort and redemption to the exiled people of Israel.
CBS questions
1. Listen to this short story.
Leaving the past behind
Lucas did not feel like playing. He had been living in his new home
for a week, and he felt and looked sad. His father and his grandmother
understood perfectly. Very sad things had happened, and it was
normal that Lucas did not feel very excited by the fact that he and his
father had left their old neighbourhood after his mother died. They
had had to move, and now they lived with Lucas’ grandmother.
One morning, after several days of rain, the sun finally peeked
out. Lucas went outside to warm himself up in the sunshine. There,
he began to investigate the patio of his new house. There was a little
dog on the patio, wagging its tail. It was his grandmother’s dog. That
morning he made friends with his grandmother’s little dog. He began
to understand that although sad things had happened, there were still
good things to enjoy. When he played with the dog, he remembered
his mother. She, too, had liked dogs.
2. What is the story about?
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3. What does the story remind you of from your own life? In what
ways?
4. Can you think of something that is new in your life, like Lucas’s little dog, that brings you to hope, even though you have lost something
or someone?
5. Listen to another story. This one comes from the Bible, from Isaiah
43:18-21.
[If the children are not of reading age, it is advisable to bring pictures
of the story and to use them to accompany the questions as the story
is reread.]
6. What do you think God means when God tells the people not to
live in the past?
7. In your life, is there something from the past that makes it hard to
find new things in your life right now? Is there something from the
past that you need to remember?
8. According to the biblical text, God will make water flow in the
desert. God will bring new life to the desert. God can do new things
in difficult circumstances. What difficult circumstances are you living
in now?
9. Would you like to ask God to do new things in your life? Let us
pray and ask God.
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CONTEXTUAL BIBLE STUDY 27
Children: Education, Nutrition,
and Health Care
Mark 5:21-43
This Contextual Bible Study is related to the two previous studies but
was developed by the Ujamaa Centre in its local work with African pastors and their focus on children. What is significant about this CBS is
that it demonstrates how each biblical text contains details that resonate with a particular context. In this case, it is the context of children’s
health and healing.
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Notes on the topic
Childhood is vital but critical. Childhood is the phase in which a person grows and develops, and it thus demands timely availability of a
wide range of resources – including food and nutrition, education, and
health care. These and other needs are linked, and none of them should
be prioritized over the others.
Indeed, most governments pay attention to this, dedicating ministries to the growth and development of children. Organizations like
UNICEF, World Vision, and many others are dedicated to promoting the interests of children globally. Early childhood development
programmes help to systematically support child development. Many
churches, too, run various programmes for children. Nevertheless,
over 140 million children under 5 years are stunted, and at least 15 per
cent of children do not receive their full immunization. More needs
to be done.
Notes on the text
This study recognizes and respects Mark’s linking of the two stories
about the healing of two women. The CBS, therefore, begins in a similar way to the two previous studies on this text (CBS 1 and 2). However,
Question 3 shifts the focus of this CBS to a particular part of the text,
the story of the healing of the young girl. This study draws on details
from the text, and from the world in which the text was produced in
the New Testament period. Mark makes it clear that Jairus is a leader in
the local synagogue. This CBS reflects on the role of the ancient synagogue in the education of children.
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CBS questions
1. Do a dramatic reading of Mark 5:21-43, inviting participants to
read the parts of the narrator and the different characters. What is this
text about?
2. Who are the characters in this story? What do we know about
them?
3. Mark links the healing of two women in this text, an older women
and young girl. In this Bible study we will focus on the young girl. Jairus uses the term ‘little daughter’ (5:23) to refer to her, and Jesus uses
the terms ‘young child’ (5:39-41) and ‘little girl’ (5:41-42). This young
girl was, therefore, probably between five and 12 years old. Reread
Mark 5:22-24 and 35-43. As you reread the girl’s story, check how
your translation translates these terms. What is this young girl’s story?
Draw a picture of her story.
4. In the ancient world, during the time of Jesus, the synagogue was a
community centre, often with a school attached to it. The synagogue
and its school provided education to young boys and sometimes
young girls. As in many of our contexts, the education of young boys
was often given a higher priority in the time of Jesus than the education of young girls. Reread Mark 5:22-23. Who is Jairus? What kind
of father is he to his daughter? Given what we know about Jairus, do
you think he would have included her in the education programmes
of his synagogue and its school?
5. What is the situation in your context with respect to the education
of young girls? Are there cultural and societal constraints on the education of young girls? Does the church offer education to young girls?
What kinds of education are offered to young girls in your context?
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6. Reread Mark 5:35-43. How does this part of the story make it clear
that Jesus places the young girl at the centre of his ministry and care?
7. The young girl’s story ends with Jesus instructing her parents “to
give her something to eat” (5:43). Why do you think the story ends in
this way, with this emphasis?
8. What is the situation in your context with respect to the nutrition
needs of young girls? Are there cultural and societal constraints on
the nutrition of young girls? Does the church offer nutrition to young
girls? What kinds of nutrition are offered to young girls in your context?
9. What are the links in your context between children’s education,
children’s nutrition, and children’s health care?
10. Jesus places this young girl at the centre of his attention and the
centre of her family. In verse 40 we read that he takes “the child’s
father and mother” with him. The young girl is the subject, not her
parents. What can we learn from Jesus’ child-centred approach for our
own contexts? What can we do in our contexts to ensure that children, particularly girl children, have access to quality education and
nutrition? Share your action plan with the other small groups.
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Poem on COVID-19
The workshops on Contextual Bible Study on health and healing and
the subsequent development of this book were overshadowed by the
COVID-19 pandemic. The poet, a medical specialist in respiratory diseases, offered this poem that captured his experience with COVID-19.
The poem was written during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic,
a few days after his return from hospitalisation. It vividly captures the
merciless onslaught of the COVID-19 virus, and the poet’s gratitude
to the Greatest Healer for divine guidance of the medical team and a
miraculous recovery.
Battle-Scarred Veteran’s Missing Medal
(Pratap Jayavanth)
The antiquated radar picked up feeble signals,
The decoder failed to estimate the danger levels.
Waves of alien viral mutants from all directions,
Skyjack airborne ways to nosedive on targets.
Surreptitiously invade moist alleys and airways,
Breaking into alveoli to trigger immune responses,
Destroying vital supply lines and oxygen reserves.
A battle-scarred veteran calls for reinforcement,
An urgent SOS first to the Supreme Commander.
All the generals on the ground immediately respond,
Aerial units swiftly restore oxygen supply to normal,
Subterranean channels ship life-saving medications,
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Soldiers in PPE check vital signs, deliver vitamins.
A fortnight later, the veteran hears the bugle at dawn,
War is over, victory declared; he is ready to join duty.
Battle-scarred survivor proudly eyes his war medals,
One that’s missing is with His Supreme Commander!
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“The essence of contextual Bible study is the transformation of individuals and communities for the better. This book is mind-transforming and
will equip Christian communities with the skills to act rightly on their
health challenges. I sincerely recommend this book to everyone who is
committed to human wellbeing.”
Rev Dr Fidon Mwombeki, General Secretary,
All Africa Conference of Churches
“The Covid-19 pandemic has highlighted yet again that the quest for
health is as much the business of churches as of health professionals. This
book will help church communities to discuss difficult health issues, using
the Bible to guide them toward solutions.”
Bishop Teresa Jefferson-Snorton, Christian Methodist Episcopal Church;
Chair, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA
Mwai Makoka is Programme Executive for Health and Healing at the
World Council of Churches. He received medical training from the University of Malawi and post-doctoral training in medical and public health
microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
USA. In addition to clinical work, he has worked in academia and health
programmes in both the public sector and ecumenical circles.
Gerald O. West is Professor Emeritus in the School of Religion, Phi-
losophy, and Classics in the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
He has conducted community-based Bible study work for social transformation with the Ujamaa Centre for Community Development and
Research for more than thirty years
Religion / Health
www.oikoumene.org
worldcouncilofchurches
@oikoumene
@worldcouncilofchurches
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