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Sondra Wheeler [4]Sondra Ely Wheeler [3]Sondra E. Wheeler [2]
  1.  77
    Prayer as Therapy: A Challenge to Both Religious Belief and Professional Ethics.Cynthia B. Cohen, Sondra E. Wheeler, David A. Scott, Barbara Springer Edwards & Patricia Lusk - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (3):40-47.
    Scientists seeking hard evidence of prayer's curative powers misunderstand the nature of prayer in the Western theistic traditions. Yet theistically consonant ways in which religious belief may influence health do not figure as they should in current professional practice.
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  2. Stewards of Life: Bioethics and Pastoral Care.Sondra Ely Wheeler - 1996
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  3.  45
    Walking a Fine Line: Physician Inquiries into Patients' Religious and Spiritual Beliefs.Cynthia B. Cohen, Sondra E. Wheeler & David A. Scott - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (5):29-39.
    Modern physicians are taught that they should not involve themselves in their patients’ religious concerns. Many worry that doing so would be intrusive, manipulative, difficult, and embarrassing. Patients, however, often want their physicians to explore questions of religion and faith with them. If these questions are broached in a sensitive and flexible way, they can be a natural and appropriate part of the physician‐patient relationship.
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  4.  12
    Contemporary Ethics from an Ambiguous Past.Sondra Wheeler - 2005 - Christian Bioethics 11 (1):69-76.
    Kaveny recommends models drawn from the Gospel of John and the practices of the early church for modern Christians in their response to older women and their health needs. She draws upon a historical reconstruction of the early Christian Order of Widows to propose a normative standard of care for elderly women, one that attends seriously to their bodily needs but also to their needs for inclusion and engagement in the social and vocational world both as givers and recipients of (...)
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  5. Christians and family.Sondra Wheeler - 2005 - In Gilbert Meilaender & William Werpehowski (eds.), The Oxford handbook of theological ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 343--359.
     
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  6. What We Were Made For.Sondra Wheeler - 2007
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  7. Book Review: Brent Waters, This Moral Flesh: Incarnation and Bioethics (Grand Rapids, MI: Brazos Press, 2009). 205 pp. $21.99/£12.99 (pb), ISBN 978-1-58743-251-4. [REVIEW]Sondra Wheeler - 2011 - Studies in Christian Ethics 24 (2):266-268.
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