The Role of Religious Participation and Religious Belief in Biomedical Decision Making

CHARLES M. SWEZEY, Ph.D. Dean of the Faculty, Union Theological Seminary in Virginia
Biomedical decisions usually focus on specific problems or cases, and particular decisions gain standing and legitimacy when they become part of a practice. By practice, I mean standard ways to deal with typical cases that emerge over time and are accepted by medical practitioners and society. Practices are justified by explicitly stated moral values and characteristic ways of understanding and so interpreting illness. Also important are a long history of care, professional training and socialization, and accepted ways of assimilating new knowledge. These and other factors, however, require an ethos of support.