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This is an excerpt from Jim Spencer's book, Hard Case Witnessing. We highly recommend his books and ministry. You may contact Jim at his website, www.mazeministry.com. Acupuncture What is acupuncture? Most
Americans have heard of it. Many have received acupuncture treatment for a variety of
ailments, or to help stop smoking or lose weight. The people I ask generally assume it has
something to do with the nervous system: A needle is inserted into a nerve pathway, which
interrupts pain or alters the flow of electro-chemical energy. That, however, is not what
acupuncture is. Let's hear it from an acupuncturist, Dr. Ruth Lever, author of Acupuncture
for Everyone: Acupuncture . . . is a
single therapy, using the insertion of needles into the skin to treat a variety of
ailments which might be treated by Western doctors with drugs or surgery. . . . The reason
it is able to treat all ailments in the same way is because it sees them as stemming from
the same causea disruption to the energy flow or vital force of the body (p. 11). Well, our first question
should be: "What is the vital force that acupuncture interrupts?" Dr. Lever
confirms that it is the Oriental concept of Chi (pronounced chee): The Chinese see the whole
functioning of the body and mind as being dependent on the normal flow of body energy, or
life force, which they call Chi (pp. 4243). Chi, Dr. Lever says, is a
"universal energy which surrounds and pervades everything." Furthermore,
"My Chi is not distinct from your Chi." Chi is like light energy or radio waves,
but it cannot be seen or felt. And it does not disappear at death: "There is a
constant interchange between the Chi of the body and the Chi of the environment" (p.
43). Lever says the Chi force
is related to the Eastern concept of Yin and Yang. Chi circulates throughout the body
along "meridians." These meridians cannot be located physically, nor identified
electronically. The description of the vital force of the body sounds very much like the
soul or the spirit. In fact, the Oriental originators of acupuncture declared Chi to be
the spiritual essence of not only the body, but the universe. It is obvious that the
simplest exploration of acupuncture demonstrates that it is a spiritual, not a physical
phenomenon. If it is a spiritual phenomenon, where is the Scripture sanctioning it?
Where is the protection of the blood of Christ in it? Those involved in
acupuncture are involved in spiritual manipulation of the body. That is the essence of the
occult. There is not, in acupuncture, even the pretense of legitimate science. Many people ask about acupressure.
(or reflexology) It is precisely the same as acupuncture without the needles, using
the same spiritual "meridians." Copyright, Jim Spencer, 1991 |
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