Sacred Spaces, Clinical Encounters
This paper synthesizes Dr. Julian Ungar-Sargon's theological and healing essays with comparative scholarship to develop an integrative framework for understanding the sacred dimensions of medical practice. Modern healthcare increasingly operates within a paradigm of scientific reductionism that can inadvertently reduce patients to collections of symptoms and laboratory values. Drawing upon hermeneutic philosophy, phenomenology, and theological perspectives, we argue that authentic healing emerges from recognizing the sacred-profane dialectic inherent in therapeutic encounters. The analysis explores four key domains: hermeneutic approaches to medical practice that emphasize interpretation over mere technical application; the sacred-profane dialectic in therapeutic spaces that transforms ordinary clinical settings into healing environments; evidence distortion in clinical decision-making that acknowledges the interpretive dimension of all medical knowledge; and a theological framework for physician-patient relationships grounded in covenantal rather than contractual models.