American Minute with Bill Federer
History of Hospitals
|
|
"It is not just about sterilization, abortifacients, and chemical contraception... It's about religious freedom, the sacred right, protected by our constitution ..."
- Cardinal Timothy Dolan,
Archbishop of New York, October 29, 2012, responding to President Obama's HHS healthcare mandates.
|
|
Cardinal Dolan,
as President of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), 2010-2013, continued:
"President Obama announced ... the
choking mandates
from
HHS
would remain -- a shock to me, since he had personally assured me that he would do nothing to impede the good work of the Church ... that he considered the
protection of conscience
a sacred duty ...
|
|
...
There was still no resolution
about the
handcuffs placed upon ... Catholic charitable agencies
... just because
they will not refer victims of human trafficking, immigrants and refugees,
and
the hungry of the world,
for
abortions, sterilization, or contraception."
|
|
The
Catholic Church
is the
oldest institution in the Western World
and the originator of
"hospitals."
Though
some ancient cultures had medical practices,
often mixed with superstition, it was primarily for the
royalty and wealthy.
Healthcare for the poor
traces its roots to
Christianity.
|
|
The
Syrian Church
pioneered medical care in the
East,
as did the
Catholic Church
in the
West.
The Byzantine Empire's
School of Nisibis,
founded in the 4th century, sometimes referred to as
the world's first university,
was a Christian center of scientific and medical learning, located in present-day Turkey.
|
|
The Assyrian Christian
Bukhtishu family
had nine generations of physicians who helped found
the great medical academy at Gundeshapur,
(5th to 9th centuries), in present-day Iran.
|
|
The
Assyrian Christian physician, Hunayn ibn-Ishaq,
wrote a textbook on ophthalmology in 950 AD which remained the authoritative source until 1800 AD.
|
|
In both the
East
and the
West, Christians
sought to put into practice the
words of Jesus:
"I was sick and you visited me";
"Whatever you have done to the least of my brethren, you have done unto me";
and Jesus' parable in Luke 10:25-37: "But a Samaritan, as he traveled, came where the man was; and when he saw him, he took pity on him.
He went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he put the man on his own donkey, brought him to an inn and took care of him.
The next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper. 'Look after him,' he said, 'and when I return, I will reimburse you for any extra expense you may have.'"
|
|
In the 4th century, under the ministry of
St. Jerome,
a wealthy Christian widow named
St. Fabiola
gave money to build a hospital for the poor in Rome and cared for the sick herself.
|
|
Around the same time,
St. Basil
distributed food to the poor of Caesarea, then built
a poorhouse, hospice, and hospital.
In 325 AD, the
Council of Nicea
directed that every city having a cathedral should also have an infirmary or
hospital,
as people traveling on pilgrimages would often arrive ill.
|
|
The word
"hosp"
is Latin for
"traveler,"
the root word of:
- hospital,
- hospitality,
- host,
- hostel, and
- hotel.
Hospitals
were
staffed by religious orders.
In the 6th century, the
Benedictine Order
had every monastery establish an infirmary.
|
|
When Muslim warriors invaded Christian Syria in 634 AD and then conquered Byzantine Christian Jerusalem in 638 AD, the
hospitals
needed to be defended, giving rise to the order of
Knights Hospitaller.
|
|
The
Benedictine Monastery
in Salerno, Italy, founded
the oldest and most famous medical university in Western Europe.
Most
universities
were started in
monasteries and cathedrals, notably:
- Bologna
- Paris
- Naples
- Toulouse
- Oxford
|
|
Charlemagne
decreed that the
hospitals
which had fallen into disrepair should be restored.
|
|
In the 1300's, the
Bubonic Plague,
or
Black Death,
ravaged Europe
killing 75 million people.
Crops were left standing in fields as there was no one to harvest them.
|
|
With often no one to bury the dead, an order of Catholic men called
"Alexian Brothers"
collected the bodies and gave them a Christian burial.
They also ministered to the dying who were banished from the cities.
|
|
One of the oldest hospitals in Europe was the
Hôtel-Dieu
in
Paris,
founded in 660 AD.
Beginning in 1217, the
Hôtel-Dieu
(hostel of God) was staffed by
Catholic Sisters
following the
Rule of St. Augustine.
|
|
In 1633, the
Sisters of Charity
began helping at the
Hotel-Dieu of Paris.
They then established numerous hospitals and schools for the poor throughout France.
|
|
Other Catholic religious orders, such as the
Trinitarians,
collected alms and sailed to North Africa to ransom Europeans who had been kidnapped into Muslim slavery.
In 1605,
St. Vincent de Paul
was sailing from Marseille, France, when he was captured by
Muslim Barbary pirates
and
sold into
slavery
in
Tunis, North Africa.
A
fter two years, he was able to convert one of his master's wives to Christianity, and then his owner.
In 1607, he escaped back to Europe, and started
religious orders to care for the poor
in
hospitals.
|
|
In this era, the
wealthy
had
doctors
visit them at their
homes,
but the
poor
were primarily cared for at
Catholic
hospitals.
By 1789, there were 6,000
Sisters of Charity
running 426 hospitals in France.
They also ran
hospitals
in countries across Europe, such as Poland, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, and Silesia.
A New Testament verse inspiring the nuns was I Timothy 5:9-10:
"... a
widow
be taken into the number ...
well reported of for good works
... if she have
lodged strangers,
if she have washed the saints' feet,
if she have relieved the afflicted,
if she have diligently followed
every good work."
|
|
During the
atheistic French Revolution's Reign of Terror,
mobs broke into the mother house of the
Sisters of Charity.
The
authorities demanded the nuns deny their faith
and
submit to the new secular government.
When they chose to keep their faith, the secular government
rounded them up and shot them
in front of firing squads or
beheaded them
with the guillotine.
|
|
In 1793,
France's new anti-Christian government
tried to disband the order.
The order survived, and in the 19th century the nuns spread healthcare for the poor across the world, including:
Portugal, Hungary, England, Scotland, Ireland, North and South America, Turkey, Syria, Egypt, Persia, Abyssinia, China and Jerusalem.
|
|
Geoffrey Blainey
wrote in
A Short History of Christianity
(Penguin Viking; 2011, p. 214-215):
"(The Catholic Church) conducted
hospitals
for the old and
orphanages
for the young;
hospices
for the sick of all ages; places for the lepers; and
hostels
or inns where pilgrims could buy a cheap bed and meal. It supplied food to the population during famine and distributed food to the poor."
|
|
More Catholic religious orders
were formed to care for the sick, nurse the ill, change bed pans, and start leper colonies, such as:
- Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul (founded 1633);
- Sisters of St. Joseph (founded 1650);
|
|
- Sisters of Mercy (founded 1827);
- Little Sisters of the Poor (founded 1839);
- Sisters of Providence (founded 1843);
- Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine (founded 1851);
|
|
- Fr. Damien's colony for lepers in Hawaii (founded 1864);
- Sisters of St. Mary (founded 1872);
- Sisters of the Little Company of Mary (founded 1877);
- Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother (founded 1883).
|
|
In an era when
most women had family obligations
and could only
volunteer temporarily as battlefield nurses,
the
sisters
were systematically
trained in nursing skills
and
serve sacrificially
their entire lives.
|
|
Nursing pioneer
Florence Nightingale,
who cared for the British troops during the
Crimean War,
1853-1856, once said:
"What training is there to compare with that of a
Catholic nun."
|
|
The
nuns' habit
developed into the
nurses' outfit
with its distinctive cap.
|
|
Beginning in the early 1800s, with the
Second Great Awakening
and the
Industrial Revolution,
hospitals
were also founded by
Protestant Christian denominations,
most notably
Seventh Day Adventists, Baptists, Episcopalians, Lutherans, Methodists
and
Presbyterians.
|
|
Whereas
Catholic healthcare
began with the focus of
preparing a person's soul for death and meeting God
in "the hereafter,"
Protestant healthcare
focused more on "the here and now," being motivated to
clean up the slums in crowded cities
and send
medical missionaries to undeveloped countries.
|
|
America's first hospital
was
Pennsylvania Hospital
founded in 1751 by
Dr. Thomas Bond
and
Benjamin Franklin
"to care for the sick-poor and insane who were wandering the streets of Philadelphia."
|
|
The
Hospital
cornerstone recorded text composed by
Franklin:
"In the year of Christ,
1755 ... This building, by the bounty of the Government and of many private persons, was piously founded, for the
relief of the sick and miserable.
May the
God of mercies
bless the undertaking!"
|
|
In "Some Account of the
Pennsylvania Hospital
from its first rise (in 1751), to the beginning of the fifth month, called May 1754,"
Benjamin Franklin
stated:
"It would be a neglect of that justice which is due to the
physicians and surgeons
of this
hospital,
not to acknowledge that their care and skill, and their punctual and regular attendance, under the
Divine Blessing,
has been a principal means of advancing this charity to the flourishing state in which we have now the pleasure to view it.
Relying on the continuance of the
Favour of Heaven,
upon the future endeavors of all who may be concerned in the management of the institution, for its further advancement, we close this account with the abstract of a sermon, preached before the Governors."
|
|
The
second oldest hospital
in America was
New York-Presbyterian Hospital
founded in 1771, founded by
Samuel Bard,
who was a personal physician to George Washington.
|
|
The
third oldest hospital
in America,
Massachusetts General Hospital,
was founded in 1811, being significantly financed by
Jewish residents Moses Michael Hays,
a neighbor of Paul Revere, and
Abraham and Judah Touro.
|
|
In 1809,
Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton
brought the
Sisters of Charity
to the United States.
Beginning in 1829,
Sisters
who immigrated largely from France and Ireland founded 299 hospitals in America in the 19th century, including:
- Mayo Clinic,
- St. Vincent's,
- Baltimore Infirmary, and
- hospitals for the working classes in Buffalo, Philadelphia and Boston.
|
|
In 1830,
Sisters of Charity
established the
first hospital west of the Mississippi River
in St. Louis, Missouri.
|
|
When
St. Louis
suffered devastating
cholera epidemics
in 1832 and 1849, which killed thousands, the
sisters risked death caring for diseased patients,
as described by
Bishop Rosati:
"Patients were visited
by us
day and night
with the greatest alacrity and
without any fear of death."
Four Daughters of Charity died.
|
|
At the request of President Lincoln, over 200
Sisters of Charity
served during the Civil War on battlefields and in military hospitals.
|
|
Just as
Clara Barton,
founder to the American Red cross,
had volunteered and cared for troops during the Civil War, so did
eight different orders of Catholic nuns,
numbering over 600 and comprising over a fifth of all female nurses.
|
|
A
monument
was erected in Washington, D.C., to the
"Nursing Nuns of the Battlefield,"
with the inscription:
"They comforted the dying, nursed the wounded, carried hope to the imprisoned, gave in His Name a drink of water to the thirsty.
To the memory and in honor of the various orders of sisters who gave their services as nurses on battlefields and in hospitals during the Civil War.
Erected by the ladies Auxiliary to the Ancient Order of Hibernians of America. A.D. 1924. By Authority of the Congress of the United States."
|
|
During the Civil War,
U.S. Surgeon General Hammond
reported to
President Lincoln
that volunteer nurses "cannot compare in efficiency and faithfulness with the
Sisters of Charity."
|
|
Over 250
Sisters of Charity
served during the
Spanish-American War of 1898,
where diarrhea, dysentery, typhoid fever, and malaria killed more soldiers than combat.
|
|
Beth Israel Hospitals
were founded for growing
Jewish
immigrant populations in:
- New York's Lower East Side, 1890;
- Newark, 1901; and
- Boston, 1916.
|
|
Wealthy individuals donated and provided in their wills to continue these religious ministries of charity.
Catholics, Protestants and Jews
pioneered
free healthcare for the poor "uninsurable"
because they were motivated by
Judeo-Christian religious convictions.
|
|
Physicians
took an earlier version of the
Hippocratic Oath,
in which
medical skills would not be used
to
euthanize
a patient or commit an
abortion:
"I will give no deadly medicine to anyone ... furthermore, I will not give to a woman an instrument to produce an abortion.”
Modern revisions of the oath have not only removed these values, but removed a physician's freedom of conscience to not participate in them.
|
|
The New York Times
wrote, August 20, 2011, that
Catholic nuns
were trained to "see Jesus in the face of every patient."
Mother Teresa
reaffirmed this with the
Sisters of the Missionaries of Charity
being dedicated to: "Wholehearted and Free service to the poorest of the poor."
They began by gathering the sick from the gutters in India, and bathing them, clothing them, and ministering to their needs.
|
|
Mother Teresa
stated:
"I see Jesus in every human being. I say to myself, this is hungry Jesus, I must feed him. This is sick Jesus. This one has leprosy or gangrene; I must wash him and tend to him. I serve because I love Jesus."
It is ironic that in the recent
government takeover of healthcare
in America that the
government would force religiously motivated providers
to
abandon the very spiritual convictions
which
created healthcare in the first place.
|
|
The
Judeo-Christian religious convictions
which
motivated people of faith
to
selflessly provide free healthcare
for the
poor
for over a thousand years are now considered insignificant by
utilitarian central planners.
|
|
President Trump
declared January 22, 2018, as
National Sanctity of Human Life Day,
stating:
"Reverence for every human life,
one of the values for which our Founding Fathers fought, defines the character of our Nation. Today, it moves us to promote the health of pregnant mothers and their unborn children ...
Medical advances give us an even
greater appreciation for the humanity of the unborn.
Today, citizens throughout our great country are working for the cause of life and
fighting for the unborn,
driven by love and supported by both science and philosophy.
These compassionate Americans are volunteers who
assist women through difficult pregnancies,
facilitate adoptions, and offer
hope to those considering or recovering from abortions.
They are medical providers who, often at the risk of their livelihood, conscientiously refuse to participate in abortions ... Thankfully,
the number of abortions,
which has been in
steady decline since 1980, i
s now at a historic low."
|
|
At the time of the Revolutionary War, the United States had a population of
3 million,
which was:
- 98 percent Protestant,
- 1 percent Catholic,
- 1/10th of 1 percent Jewish.
|
|
After the
Great Irish Potato Famine,
1845-1849, immigration raised the
Catholic population
in America to over
20 percent.
In modern America, the
Catholic Church has the largest membership,
and is the
nation's largest medical care provider
with 624 hospitals and 499 long-term health care facilities.
|
|
As of 2018,
10 of the 25 largest health-care networks
in the U.S.are
Catholic affiliated,
including:
- Catholic Health Initiatives-78 hospitals
- Ascension Health-67 hospitals-Daughters of Charity, Congregation of St. Joseph, Sisters of St. Joseph
- Trinity Health-44 hospitals, 379 Clinics, Catholic Health Ministries
- Catholic Healthcare West-41 hospitals, Sisters of Mercy
- Catholic Health East-34 hospitals, 9 religious congregations & Hope Ministries
- Catholic Healthcare Partners-33 hospitals, Sisters of Mercy, Daughters of Charity
- Providence Health & Services-26 hospitals, Sisters of Providence, Sisters of the Little Company of Mary
- Marian Health System-25 hospitals, Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother
|
|
On May 21, 2012, the
Archdiocese of New York
filed a
historic Federal lawsuit
against the HHS mandate:
"In order to
protect our religious liberties
from
unwarranted and unprecedented government intrusion,
the Archdiocese of New York has filed suit in federal court today seeking to
block the recent Health and Human Services mandate
that
unconstitutionally
attempts
to define the nature of the Church's religious ministry
and would
force
religious employers to
violate their consciences."
|
|
The
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
stated October 12, 2012, regarding a supposed "exemption" to the HHS mandate:
"Last night, the ... statement was made during the Vice Presidential debate regarding the decision of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
to
force
virtually all employers to include
sterilization and contraception,
including
drugs that may cause abortion,
in the
health insurance coverage
they provide their employees ...
That exemption ... does not extend to 'Catholic social services,
Georgetown Hospital'
... or any other religious charity."
|
|
Georgetown Hospital
was founded in 1898 as part of
Georgetown University.
Georgetown University
was named for
George Washington.
|
|
Georgetown University
was founded JANUARY 23, 1789, by
John Carroll, America's first Catholic Bishop.
Regarding freedom of conscience,
Bishop John Carroll
sent a report to Rome in 1790:
"In 1776,
American Independence was declared,
and a revolution effected, not only in political affairs, but also in those relating to
Religion.
For while the thirteen provinces of North America rejected the yoke of England, they proclaimed, at the same time,
freedom of conscience,
and the
right of worshiping the Almighty,
according to the spirit of the religion to which each one should belong ..."
|
|
Bishop Carroll
continued:
"Before
this great event, the
Catholic faith
had penetrated
two provinces only, Maryland and Pennsylvania.
In
all the others
the
laws against Catholics were in force.
Any priest
coming from foreign parts, was
subject to the penalty of death;
all who professed the Catholic faith, were not merely
excluded from offices
of government, but hardly could be
tolerated in a private capacity ...
By the
Declaration of Independence,
every difficulty was removed:
the
Catholics were placed on a level with their fellow-Christians,
and every political disqualification was done away."
|
|
Regarding religious freedom,
Bishop John Carroll
wrote in the
National Gazette,
1789:
"The establishment of the American empire was not the work of this or that religion, but arose from a
generous exertion of all her citizens
to redress their wrongs, to assert their rights, and lay its foundations on the soundest principles of
justice and equal liberty ...
An earnest regard to preserve inviolate forever, in our new empire, the
great principle of religious freedom."
|
|
John Carroll
was the cousin of
Charles Carroll,
the
only Catholic to sign the Declaration of Independence,
the
longest living of the signers,
and the
wealthiest man in America.
|
|
John's brother,
Daniel Carroll,
was
one of two Catholics to sign the U.S. Constitution,
who
provided the land
where the Capitol is built
and was elected a Congressman.
|
|
John's nephew,
Robert Brent
was the first mayor of Washington, DC, being
reappointed by Jefferson and Madison.
John Carroll
founded the
nation's first Catholic seminary,
parochial school system,
and persuaded
Elizabeth Seton
to
start a girls school in Baltimore.
In 1776, the Continental Congress had
John Carroll
accompany
Ben Franklin
to Canada in an attempt to persuade that country to join the Revolution.
High esteem for
Bishop John Carroll
led several States to extend equality to Catholics.
|
|
Bishop Carroll
wrote of
Catholics who fought in the Revolution:
"Their blood flowed as freely (in proportion to their numbers)
to cement the fabric of independence
as that of any of their fellow-citizens.
They concurred with perhaps greater unanimity than any other body of men, in recommending and promoting that government, from whose influence America anticipates all the blessings of justice, peace, plenty, good order and civil and
religious liberty."
|
|
Bishop Carroll
wrote:
"Freedom and independence,
acquired by ...
the mingled blood of Protestant and Catholic fellow-citizens,
should be
equally enjoyed by all."
|
|
Assuring protection for
freedom of conscience,
President George Washington
wrote to
Bishop John Carroll,
March 15, 1790:
"America, under the smiles of a
Divine Providence,
the protection of a good government, and the cultivation of manners, morals, and piety, cannot fail of attaining an uncommon degree of eminence ...
All those who conduct themselves as worthy members of the community are
equally entitled to the protection of civil government.
I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations in examples of justice and liberality ..."
|
|
Washington
continued:
"And I presume that your fellow-citizens will not forget the patriotic part which you took in the accomplishment of their Revolution, and the establishment of their government;
or the important assistance which they received from a nation in which the Roman Catholic faith is professed."
|
|
Charles Carroll
paid for the building of
a large house
for his son, which was later
donated
to be the main campus of
Johns Hopkins University,
with its world-renown
Schools of Nursing and Medicine.
|
|
Dr. Ben Carson,
U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development,
was
Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery
at
Johns Hopkins Hospital
from 1984 until his retirement in 2013.
|
|
George Washington
ended his letter to
Bishop John Carroll:
"May the members of your society in America,
animated alone by the pure spirit of Christianity,
and still conducting themselves as the faithful subjects of our free government, enjoy every temporal and spiritual felicity."
|
|
American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
|
|
Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
|