Zeno Charles-Marcel, health ministries associate director of the General Conference speaks to hospital administrators and health ministries directors from throughout the territory during Inter-American Division’s Health Symposium on July 29, 2023. [Photo: Libna Stevens/IAD]

August 9, 2023 | Miami, Florida, United States | Marcos Paseggi, for Inter-American Division News

“Do not underestimate what God has ordained as a means of reaching people,” said Zeno Charles-Marcel, health ministries associate director of the General Conference, in addressing Seventh-day Adventist health leaders and advocates at the Inter-American Division (IAD) Health Symposium in Miami, Florida, United States, July 29, 2023. Charles-Marcel presentation delved into what Adventist health leaders are calling “the sanitarium of the 21st century”—those lifestyle service centers where health practitioners can share with others some of the knowledge that the Seventh-day Adventist Church has known for more than a century.

Sharing God’s instructions

“We have a specific set of instructions,” he said. “The promise is that if we follow these things, we will prevent much suffering, reduce the risk of premature death and the risk of many of the diseases that plague humanity today.”

Charles-Marcel explained that in everything we do, we are announcing a new world when all old things will pass away. Only then things will return to perfection. “But while we are here, we have a work to do, and our work is not finished yet,” he said, adding, “God has given us the keys to the vault to reduce the pain and suffering that many will have, and in so doing stimulate [their] spiritual inquiry.

According to Charles-Marcel, only a merciful God could give us the tools we can employ to reduce suffering. “And we have this hope that we will be able to fulfill, by God’s grace, what He’s asked us to do.”

Lifestyle medicine and the health message

At the same time, he pointed out, lifestyle medicine is not the health message in itself. It’s just a modality of treatment, a modality for prevention, a modality to intervene and interrupt the course of disease. “It is not the health message, but it is part of the health message,” emphasized Charles-Marcel.

In an on itself, lifestyle medicine does not have the same goal, he explained. “The goal of the health message is the soul, every aspect of a person,” he said. “It should work [with] everything complete, everything functioning the way God intended it to function. This is the goal that we have.”

“We have been given the keys to self-sustaining, God-providing ways to help people, and they will seek us out, and they are willing to pay for it,” said Zeno Charles-Marcel, health ministries associate director of the General Conference. [Photo: Libna Stevens/IAD]

The role of lifestyle medicine

The focus on wellness is something that has caught on all around the world, Charles-Marcel reported. Organizations not connected to the Adventist Church are capitalizing on this approach. He shared impressive data about the money people invest every year in feeling better. They include medical spas (US$68-70 billion), mental wellbeing ($131 billion), prevention and personalized medical care ($375 billion), and traditional and complementary healthcare ($413 billion).  Also, wellness alternatives such as zen, meditation, yoga, and others ($436 billion) and people willing to learn about healthy eating and nutrition ($946 billion).

Many Adventist cooking schools, however, are now closed, acknowledged Charles-Marcel, because “we think nobody is interested, but it is not so,” he said.

“We have been given the keys to self-sustaining, God-providing ways to help people, and they will seek us out, and they are willing to pay for it,” Charles-Marcel said. Of course, he added, “we are not in this just as a business because there’s money in it. On the contrary, ministering to people is our purpose; the goal is the soul, and they are willing to pay us to help them to do that.”

Beyond the emergency room

In the second part of his presentation, Charles-Marcel shared a couple of moving examples about how sharing the health message transformed countless lives.

The first was about Brenda, a diabetic woman doing very poorly after his doctor said there was nothing else he could do. One day, Brenda saw an ad that eventually led her to an Adventist physician and clinic. The implementation of Bible-based Adventist health principles did not only turn her life around but also transformed her family. Eventually, she and several family members became Seventh-day Adventists.

“Brenda is an example of what happens when we are able to spend time with the family, which is one of the things that wellness centers, and lifestyle centers and health spas can afford but can’t be done in an emergency room.”

Even though the goal is always the soul, it’s incorrect to evaluate wellness center by the number of converts, emphasized Charles-Marcel. “We are planting seeds; we are awakening the spirit of inquiry; we are reforming health practices, and we are reforming the practice of medicine when we are using these approaches; we are educatin, not only the patients but also the physicians.”

From a lost cause to health advocate

Charles-Marcel also shared the story of Maria, an extremely obese woman with congestive heart failure, diabetes, high blood pressure, and huge legs filled with fluid, among other ailments. Her endocrinologist, a Harvard professor with a private practice, told her there was nothing else he could do.

Trying to do something to save her, her family gifted her with a program at an Adventist health center where Charles-Marcel was serving. “We prayed, and we did what we needed to do,” he shared. “Not only physicians, but therapists and even the cooks worked on Maria’s behalf, and the angels were working alongside us.”

Charles-Marcel said she made wonderful progress. Health center staff even invited her to their houses, and she enjoyed spending time with Adventist families. “When she was finished, she went back home a new person. She lost 50 pounds [22.7 kilograms] and the family had to bring her new clothes because the old ones just fell off.”

The next time she visited her renowned endocrinologist, the doctor was amazed. As he had patients with similar conditions as Maria, the doctor invited Maria to volunteer and talk to those patients in his office. “When he scheduled those other patients, he also scheduled Maria, and had Maria teach them what we had taught to her. Now she is a volunteer to help other people who have the same situation that she had,” Charles-Marcel shared.

“God has given us this message to share with the world,” he said. “If we love people, how can we keep this to ourselves? Our sanitariums and health centers are one of the best ways to meet people and share with them. I pray that in this conference, you can get new tools and the spark of health evangelism.”

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