In medicine, there’s a rhythm we grow accustomed to—diagnose, treat, move on to the next patient. But for me, beneath that rhythm, there’s always been a quiet hum: belief. Not the kind that seeks to explain every event or outcome, but the kind that reassures you that even when things go wrong, you are exactly where you need to be.
Faith in God didn’t arrive through one grand moment for me. It was a slow realization, woven through small instances of failure and frustration. When something slipped through my hands—an opportunity, an outcome I worked hard for—I often felt the sting of disappointment. But somewhere along the way, I stopped seeing those moments as endings and started recognizing them as beginnings. Every time something felt like a loss, it was as though God was simply clearing space for something better.
This belief has reshaped my perspective in ways I never anticipated. When things don’t go as planned, I don’t see them as setbacks anymore. I see them as part of a larger journey I may not yet fully understand. It’s a perspective I take into my work as a physician. There’s comfort in knowing that not every outcome is in my control, but I still have a responsibility to keep moving forward, learning, adapting, and growing.
Recently, I’ve come to see how this faith in God also helps me connect with my patients. When a patient faces bad news or uncertainty, I don’t always have the answers. But I know that my role is not just to treat them but to walk with them, trusting that we are both on a path where something greater is at work. It allows me to offer more than medical advice—it allows me to offer hope, even when the outcome remains uncertain.
Each challenge I’ve faced has helped me grow, not because I always had the strength to overcome it, but because I believed that something better was on the horizon. Faith doesn’t take away the hardship; it helps me see beyond it. It keeps me grounded in the belief that, even when life takes unexpected turns, there’s a purpose guiding each step.
I’ve realized that, just like in medicine, you can’t always predict the course of life. But faith in God offers a sense of calm amidst the unpredictability. It reminds me that even when I face professional or personal challenges, I’m never truly alone. There’s always something working in the background, turning missed opportunities into greater ones and failures into lessons I couldn’t have learned any other way.
In the end, faith in God doesn’t replace the science of medicine—it complements it. It allows me to keep going when the path is unclear and to help my patients do the same. Every challenge becomes part of a larger journey of growth, healing, and hope, reminding me that medicine, like faith, is about believing in what we cannot always see but trusting that it will carry us forward.
Vivek Podder is a physician in Bangladesh.