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         Counsels on Health
      
      
        sin-pardoning Saviour. Not only should he give instruction from the
      
      
        word of God, line upon line, precept upon precept; he is to moisten
      
      
        this instruction with his tears and make it strong with his prayers, that
      
      
        souls may be saved from death.
      
      
        In their earnest, feverish anxiety to avert the peril of the body,
      
      
        physicians are in danger of forgetting the peril of the soul. Physicians,
      
      
        be on your guard, for at the judgment seat of Christ you must meet
      
      
        those at whose deathbed you now stand.
      
      
        The solemnity of the physician’s work, his constant contact with the
      
      
        sick and the dying, require that, so far as possible, he be removed from
      
      
        the secular duties that others can perform. No unnecessary burdens
      
      
        should be laid on him, that he may have time to become acquainted
      
      
        with the spiritual needs of his patients. His mind should be ever under
      
      
        the influence of the Holy Spirit, that he may be able to speak in season
      
      
        the words that will awaken faith and hope.
      
      
        At the bedside of the dying no word of creed or controversy is to
      
      
        be spoken. The sufferer is to be pointed to the One who is willing to
      
      
        save all who come to Him in faith. Earnestly, tenderly, strive to help
      
      
        the soul that is hovering between life and death.
      
      
        Direct the Mind to Jesus
      
      
        The physician should never lead his patients to fix their attention on
      
      
        him. He is to teach them to grasp with the hand of faith the outstretched
      
      
        hand of the Saviour. Then the mind will be illuminated with the light
      
      
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        radiating from the Sun of Righteousness. What physicians attempt to
      
      
        do, Christ did in deed and in truth. They try to save life; He is life
      
      
        itself.
      
      
        The physician’s effort to lead the minds of his patients to healthy
      
      
        action must be free from all human enchantment. It must not grovel to
      
      
        humanity, but soar aloft to the spiritual, grasping the things of eternity.
      
      
        The physician should not be made the object of unkind criticism.
      
      
        This places on him an unnecessary burden. His cares are heavy, and
      
      
        he needs the sympathy of those connected with him in the work. He is
      
      
        to be sustained by prayer. The realization that he is appreciated will
      
      
        give him hope and courage.