Monday, January 29, 2024

On Demons and the Church's Response to Mental Illness

'Jesus and his disciples went to Capernaum; and when the sabbath came, he entered the synagogue and taught. They were astounded at his teaching, for he taught them as one having authority, and not as the scribes. Just then there was in their synagogue a man with an unclean spirit, and he cried out, “What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are, the Holy One of God.” But Jesus rebuked him, saying, “Be silent, and come out of him!” And the unclean spirit, convulsing him and crying with a loud voice, came out of him. They were all amazed, and they kept on asking one another, “What is this? A new teaching—with authority! He commands even the unclean spirits, and they obey him.” At once his fame began to spread throughout the surrounding region of Galilee.'

--Mark 1: 21-28


One Sunday shortly after I was ordained I went to lunch at Chipotle, because I was brainwashed into thinking that stuff was good for me! As I stood in the line, the server asked me if I was a real priest, and though I later wished I’d had a snarky comeback, I was hungry and just told him that, yeah I was. “There’s something I’ve always wanted to ask a priest,” he said. Oh boy. “Have you ever done, like, an exorcism?!” “No,” I said, “I’d have to call my bishop.”

That is, actually, what we’re supposed to do. Our Episcopal Book of Occasional Services, from which we get the likes of Tenebrae, Lessons & Carols, and Stations of the Cross, has a total of three sentences in the section called Concerning Exorcisms, and the instruction is clear that a priest is to tell their bishop, who then determines if an exorcism is needed and who will do it. And that’s that. I can’t say I’ve ever made that call, though I’ve been somewhat tempted. The ancient church even taught that in baptism an exorcism actually takes place when the catechumen is washed in the holy waters; this is still the teaching of the Orthodox faith, and I’ve even heard many of my Episcopal colleagues share it.

There’s a whole film industry based around exorcisms, with The Rite (my personal favorite), The Conjuring, and of course the SEVEN films in The Exorcist saga. What is it about these stories that captures our minds? Maybe because we want to believe that true evil does exist, which helps explain how a world that God pronounces as “very good” can be assaulted by the likes of war, famine, poverty, and injustice? Maybe we are drawn to them because in the end the demons are defeated, at least until the next movie? 


Poster for The Exorcist (1973)


The first miracle performed by Jesus in the synoptic Gospels is an exorcism. In the synagogue at Capernaum, a place in which Jesus spent so much time that there’s a sign there today declaring it the “Town of Jesus,” a man with an unclean spirit, a demon, suddenly shows up. His first words are directed at Jesus, tinged with fear, “What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us?” The demon even knows who Jesus is, the Holy One of God. In a scene that could’ve been directed by William Friedkin, Jesus calls the demon out of the man, leaving everyone there amazed. 

We don’t know the nature of the man’s demon, though in this and other examples throughout the Gospels – like the Gerasene demoniac called Legion whom Jesus casts out into a herd of pigs – modern scholars have speculated that what the ancient world called demons were in fact very real medical conditions like paranoid schizophrenia, bipolar, or dissociative personality disorder. We don’t talk often about mental health in the Church - we should - and when we do we don't often do so with the pastoral sensitivity that fully respects the dignity of those for whom mental illness is an ever-present part of their lives. Regrettably, the institutional Church for centuries dealt with people suffering from and living with such conditions as if they were, in fact, possessed by demons, curable only through exorcisms in the name of Jesus. And when the exorcisms didn’t fix the problem society, with the backing of the Church, resorted to treatments like shock therapy, or throwing folks into sanitariums that hid the mentally ill away from the world, the way Jesus’ own society often cast people away into the catacombs, out of public view. 

In reading this story of Jesus’ first exorcism, I’m struck by the way he engages the man. We can imagine the people there having a number of reactions – some looking away, some eager to kick this guy out of their house of prayer and study, some terrified that he’ll hurt someone. Jesus, though, meets the man, not with fearful violence, but with compassionate conviction. He doesn’t see a stranger, an “other,” he sees someone in need of mercy. 


A very old, unknown Greek icon of the exorcism at Capernaum.


Consider that the man asks if Jesus has come to destroy him. Perhaps he has sought help from the rabbis and other learned people in the synagogue, only to be sent away time after time. I wonder if he showed up that day knowing that Jesus would be there, hoping that maybe this man could help him. He throws up to Jesus a cry for help, a rock-bottom, if you will, and like most of our own cries for help it’s not as simple as, “I’m having a problem, please help me,” but instead it’s an agonizing plea of fear, which no one but Jesus understands. In the example of this man, we are reminded that there is no weakness, no shame, in seeking out someone out for help.  We are reminded that houses of prayer, study, and worship should be the very places where folks in such states should find rest, comfort, and support. And our prayer is that we may meet a brother or sister in pain the same way Jesus does, without judgment, shame, or fear, and with compassion, mercy, and love.

I do believe demons are real, but I believe they have more to do with power, prestige, and possessions than real psychological and emotional conditions that fearful folks – including church leaders - have called demonic because they don’t want to actually face them. It seems they're fine with the demons that fill their bellies, prop them up as "big deals," and maintain their positions of authority.

There are folks in churches every week who have struggled for many, many years. We might, at one time or another, have even used the word “demons” to describe those struggles: mental illness, addiction, PTSD, trauma, the list goes on, though it should be reiterated that such conditions are not, I repeat, not demonic. It’s taken me years to come to terms with my own PTSD and various traumas, and I’m still working on them, but when I finally managed to seek help I found it, in therapists, spiritual directors, and people who met me with love. There is no shame in what has happened to me, or to any of you, and there is no shame in asking for help, though sometimes, like the man in Capernaum, we may be afraid that asking will destroy us.

I have seen tremendous faith displayed by my siblings in Christ who have lived much of their lives on the outskirts of society, made to feel shame and weakness, or, God-forbid, told they are possessed, because of their conditions, even by religious leaders. If you are someone who has been wounded by the institutional Church in such a fashion, I am sorry. I pray we learn from and honor the courage that it takes to face and deal with struggles of all kinds, to heal from them, whether physically, emotionally, or spiritually. I would like to think that the man in the Capernaum synagogue received all three of those healings that day from Jesus.

Whatever kinds of struggles you might be facing, brothers and sisters, I pray you will have the courage and the humility to ask for help, and the grace to show others around you how to do the same. And if you are one of the people who are “well” – whoever that may be, I don’t know – perhaps you will see the fears and struggles of others for what they truly are, something to be commended and uplifted, rather than pitied or feared. May you meet anyone who is struggling with the same compassionate conviction of Jesus, and love one another through our wide variety of complex and complicated struggles. For all of us, that is good news


Monday, January 22, 2024

The Kingdom of God Has Come Near (No, Really!)

'The word of the LORD came to Jonah a second time, saying, “Get up, go to Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim to it the message that I tell you.” So Jonah set out and went to Nineveh, according to the word of the LORD. Now Nineveh was an exceedingly large city, a three days' walk across. Jonah began to go into the city, going a day's walk. And he cried out, “Forty days more, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!” And the people of Nineveh believed God; they proclaimed a fast, and everyone, great and small, put on sackcloth.

When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind about the calamity that he had said he would bring upon them; and he did not do it.'

--Jonah 3: 1-5, 10


'After John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God, and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.”
As Jesus passed along the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the sea—for they were fishermen. And Jesus said to them, “Follow me and I will make you fish for people.” And immediately they left their nets and followed him. As he went a little farther, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John, who were in their boat mending the nets. Immediately he called them; and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men, and followed him.'

--Mark 1: 14-20


He said that the Kingdom of God has come near.  Really?  Are ya sure, Jesus?  I look around and sometimes have a really hard time believing that. I see a world, much like the one Jesus knew, where the poor are beaten down, the rich just keep getting richer, and the measure of a nation is the size of the might if its military, not the size of mercy in its heart, where folks with great power, privilege, and possessions lord those things over others and generations are caught in cycles of poverty, war, and injustice.  I don’t know about you, but sometimes it’s hard for me to believe that the Kingdom has already come.  


But that’s what he said.  The very first words out of Jesus’ mouth in the very first Gospel is this:  the Kingdom of God has come near.  The Greek word that’s used here is engizo, which is a pre-sent-tense verb that means something is here, it’s present, it is at hand. This is why translations like the King James Version or the English Standard Version say that the Kingdom is at hand.  It’s here, Jesus is saying, right now!  You don’t have to keep wishing and hoping for it in the far off future. You just need to live your lives as if it were a present reality.


So much of what we hear preached and taught about our faith seems based on the promise that the Kingdom is coming; after all, we say it in the Lord’s Prayer—“thy kingdom come,” future tense—and we have the promise of it in our Nicene Creed—“his kingdom will have no end.”  It’s sort of engrained in us to look to the future, as though the Kingdom of God is something that is far off, distant, and on the horizon. Someday it will come, we say, and so we keep waiting and hoping while we resign ourselves to remain here in this cruel, suffering world.


A wise teacher once admonished a would-be student.  “All his life has he looked away to the fu-ture, to the horizon,” said the teacher, poking the student with his cane.  “Never his mind on where he was, what he was doing!”  The student’s name was Luke Skywalker, and the teacher’s name was Yoda.  Luke had always dreamed of something bigger than himself, some grand and glorious destiny as a galactic hero, but what he didn’t realize was that what he was looking for was right there inside him all along.  He wanted to gain knowledge of and strength in the Force and become a great Jedi, but the Force wasn’t something to obtain.  It was something in him and around him.  He just never let himself see it because he was looking so far off.  If you’ve seen the Star Wars sequel trilogy you know that, even as an old man, Luke still has a hard time seeing the reality that is right in front of him.  


Teacher and student.


Brothers and sisters, the reality that is right in front of us is that the Kingdom of God is not some far-off, distant dream for which we hope and pine.  No, it is here!  It is in you, and it is around you.  You don’t have to travel far to find it, and you don’t need to sit around and wait for it to be revealed to you. We can all know the present reality of the Kingdom.  We can be participants in it if we only allow ourselves to do so.  I wonder:  do you know that the Kingdom is already here?


I know that the Kingdom of God is here whenever I see someone in tears as they find comfort and solace from one of our St. James' prayer ministers. I know that it is here when I’m together with folks from a variety of worship communities at a Black Pentecostal church proclaiming with tambourines, dancing, and ‘Amen’ after ‘Amen’ that justice will roll down like waters. I know it is here when a stranger walks up to me in the bakery or coffee shop and asks for a prayer or even, as one random person did, hand me $20 and say in that wonderful northeastern accent, “Here, Father, this is for the church!”without even knowing which church I am affiliated with.  Yeah, the world is filled with cruelty and suffering - and we pray for an end to that cruelty and suffering when the Kingdom comes in its fullest form -  and yet even still I know the Kingdom is here in these and so many other examples. What's more, I know that there is nothing on this side of the Kingdom that can change that fact! 


The thing about Greek that I find so cool is that a present-tense verb doesn’t just mean that some-thing is happening exclusively in the present moment, but also that it will continue to happen into eternity until something compels it to stop.  So when Mark uses the verb engizo to say the Kingdom has come near, he means it’s come and it’s going to continue coming, on and on, into eternity.  The Kingdom of God is here, and it ain’t going nowhere, brothers and sisters!  We need only have eyes to see it and ears to listen for it.  Kingdom senses, if you will, to participate in it.


And when we have Kingdom senses, unbelievable, unimaginable things can happen. Take the story of the people of Nineveh. The reluctant prophet Jonah proclaims that in 40 days they will be destroyed. Without any call for repentance from Jonah the people, of their own accord, let their eyes and ears be opened and choose for themselves to repent and seek divine forgiveness. They admit their faults. They say they’re sorry. They perform the customs of the day, taking on sack cloth and ashes and fasting. And something unbelievable, unimaginable happens: God’s mind is changed. It doesn’t happen anywhere else in the whole Bible! And it serves as an example for us that nothing is impossible when we have eyes and ears and hearts attuned to the Kingdom; for if God’s mind can be changed, so can ours; if the people of Nineveh, capital of the oppressive Assyrian Empire, can repent and change their ways, so can we. There is nothing that is impossible when we have Kingdom senses and we know that it is in our midst.


It is especially tempting during times of transition to, likewise, look to the future for the Good News to come our way, to pine and hope for long-term stability, for the perfect scenario that will be everything ok. That’s totally natural during any such times of our lives, and yet even still, brothers and sisters, I pray you know that the Kingdom has come near to you. In moments of grief, as well as joy, the Kingdom has come near. Sure, we wrestle with the already-not yet, the tension that the Kingdom is coming in its fullest version later yet while still being a present reality. But what would it look like for you if you knew in your heart that the Kingdom has come near to you? Maybe you’ll know deep in your soul, despite all the anxiety and fear around you, that God is good—all the time!—which means that all things that come from God are good.  This world is good.  You are good.  And the Kingdom, which is here right now, is very, very good!  


So where have you seen the Kingdom?  Who are the folks who have shown you glimpses of it? Maybe you’ll hold them in your prayers today. What unbelievable, unimaginable things can you start to believe and imagine are possible? What you seek is not so very far away, but it is right here, and it is good.  The time is fulfilled, Jesus said then and still says to us now, and the Kingdom of God has come near.