Dr. John Christopher

Dr. John Christopher was born in Salt Lake City on 25th November 1909. As a young child he wanted to become a doctor and told his mother ‘I will be able to heal people without cutting them up, there will be natural ways of doing it.’ A prophetic statement that would describe his life’s passion.

When he was sixteen years old a ‘different’ type of doctor visited his sick mother. He was an iridologist and herbalist and John was fascinated, as the man prescribed wholesome changes in diet and gave his mother some herbal remedies. John told his mother “that’s the kind of doctor I’m going to be when I grow up”. He then worked to finish his high school studies.

Herbs and good food gave his mother a new lease of life but now chronically sick these came too late and John watched his mother die from complications of diabetes and Brights disease. He prayed for help that one day he would be able to save someone else from the agony his mother had endured, the mother who had lovingly adopted him and his siblings from a young age. John began to read many good books. One of them, ‘The Doctrine and Covenants’, spelt out the churches health code in a few brief paragraphs. He then vowed to follow the health code strictly, and developed for himself a diet of fruits, vegetables, grains, nuts and seeds.

As a young man with poor health the improvement in his health was staggering. In 1943 he began giving lectures to small groups of people interested in making dietary changes to improve their health. He married on 19th August 1944 to Wendella Walker who was an avid supporter of his ideas about health and a loyal companion throughout their marriage.

John became the only practising herbalist in the US Army during World War II. After treating a soldier with ‘untreatable’ impetigo. From his experiences as an Army herbalist (as a conscientious objector he could not fight but was allowed very unusually to practice herbal medicine after ‘proving himself’ he created one of the most miraculous of his formulas, Bone, Flesh and Cartilage. He formulated it in capsule and ointment form so that healing could take place both internally and externally.

Dr. Christopher later returned to Utah, where he was able to establish his first multidisciplinary clinic, staffed by fourteen professionals. The clinic offered masseurs, zonal therapists and a chiropractor. At its peak the clinic staff treated between thirty and forty patients a day. During this phase of his life he also found the time to complete a naturopathy degree from Iowa’s Institute of Drugless Therapy, and a Herbal Pharmacists degree from the Los Angeles Herbal Institute. Because of legislation at this time he was forbidden to practice his healing art; and was time and again thrown in prison, fined and has to restart his clinics. So he had to give up for fear of not being able to take care of his family and therefore he had to abandon his patients that he loved. He did the only other thing he knew in order to carry on his work through legal channels; he began teaching.

It was in Salt Lake City that his School of Natural Healing was established, in 1953. It was eventually also established in England.

Sadly as a man no longer very young, John Christopher tripped over a boulder covered by snow and stayed in a coma for 6 months before dying in 1983, this legacy is literally that he reached tens of thousands more people than he ever could in his humble practice.

He never took credit for a miracle. There were plenty of healings and some of them defied science. There were many that were indeed miracles, but John never took the credit for them. He told any who would listen that he never cured anyone. He gave the credit to the efforts of his patients, to the herbs and to the Lord.