Even though we are made up of trillions of cells, most of us give our individual cells about as much thought as a piece of sandstone thinks about individual grains of sand.
Enter the new technologies of imaging, which open new worlds. As never before, we can see the very small and the very distant.
On December 3, the American Society for Cell Biology announced the winners of the Celldance 2011 Film and Image Contest Winners.
Take a look. Unless you’re a cell biologist, it will change the way you see the world. It will re-define your relationship to your own body. It will open new vistas on the much quoted “fearfully and wonderfully made.” If only the psalmist could have seen this!
My favorite is the first place winner, “Cancer Dance.” I say “favorite” with a great deal of qualification. It’s hard to look at this film. If you know someone who has faced cancer—and who doesn’t—what you see in this film will shock and anger you. And then you have to think: cancer is happening inside all of us pretty much all the time. Fortunately, it doesn’t get the upper hand…unless it does.
When I teach the introduction to theology, I talk about God, creation, pain in nature, and human suffering at the hands of nature. Cancer is the main example. Describing this disease theologically is a real challenge. Quite simply, cancer uses the mechanisms of life to destroy lives. It turns everything good bad.
I once asked an oncologist friend who is a Christian: “When you look at a cancer cell, theologically, what do you see?” He was so astounded by the question that he couldn’t answer.
Now, thanks to this video, you can ask yourself that question. Theologically, what is going on here? What the bleep is going on here? Why would God design such a system?
So from now on, when I teach theology, I’ll run the video. I won’t have answers. I will hope my students will learn that their standard answers might not be so useful after all.
Finally let me add that I am looking forward to the publication of a book called Chance, Necessity, Love: An Evolutionary Theology of Cancer. It’s the work of Leonard M. Hummel, who teaches Pastoral Theology and Care at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, and Steve James, Associate Professor of Molecular Biology at Gettysburg College. I’ll update when the book is available.
Here again is the LINK to the videos. Each one is a winner. We nonscientists owe a great debt to the hardworking young researchers who spent hours showing us what we’re made of. For a theologian, it's a revelation.
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