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Our Great Physician doesnā€™t parcel out healing grace in measured quantities.

The Bannerā€™s ā€œReformed Mattersā€ column recently offered differing views on how we as Canadians and Americans can best meet the biblical principle of providing health care for those in need ( by Henry Holstege and Bob Ritsema, and by Jordan J. Ballor). That all Godā€™s children should have access has always been a fundamental Christian tenet. Jesus himself eagerly provided health care to those who asked. And Scripture does not record that they were billed accordingly.

Decide for yourself which approach best works out that principle. But allow me to toss a few practical observations into the conversation. I grew up in Canada and pastored churches there for over two decades. I also spent seven years in the U.S. as a student and then another 10 years stateside working for the denomination. So Iā€™ve experienced firsthand the universal health care approach used in Canada and the free market approach in the U.S.ā€”though Iā€™m certainly no expert.

For what itā€™s worth, some observations as a health care recipient and a longtime pastoral visitor. One heads-up: Iā€™ve been living north of the line since well before the (also called Obamacare) kicked in.

  • Overall, both countries provide excellent health care by competent and devoted professionals.
  • Medical professionals make much more money in the U.S. but also have much higher costs.
  • The U.S. system has more of the expensive ā€œtoysā€ like MRI machines, and they use them more oftenā€”maybe too oftenā€”to keep from being sued. Balance that against wait times in Canada being so long that often Canucks hop the border to get their ā€œpicturesā€ takenā€”accompanied, of course, by a fat wallet to pay for the privilege.
  • My naĆÆve perception is that more widely available technology in the U.S. may extend an average lifetime by some months. But that extra lifespan is spent on filling out form after form after form. In Canada you just flash your health cardā€”then wait in line.
  • In the U.S. your work (if you are blessed with such) pays for your health care and you copay plenty for it. If youā€™re uninsured, you get dinged extra for medical services because youā€™re ā€œout of plan.ā€ In Canada you pay for medical services through taxes, including heavy ā€œsinā€ taxes on such items as gasoline, alcohol, and cigarettes.

Two things I like better about the Canadian system: it covers (almost) everybody and it allows medical professionals, not bureaucrats, to decide on appropriate treatment.

Maybe youā€™ve heard the story of a dearly departed who knocked on the pearly gates and requested admission. When the gatekeeper asked about her profession, she answered that she had been an HMO administrator. ā€œHmm,ā€ the angel said, ā€œIā€™m not sure if I can let you in. Let me check the policy.ā€ He returned with a wry smile. ā€œYes, you may stay . . . for three days.ā€

Praise the Lord that our Great Physician doesnā€™t parcel out healing grace in such measured quantities. Wonder what that means for health care?

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