Sunday, February 1, 2015

The Authority of Jesus to Heal the Inner Self

4 Epiphany B  February 1, 2015
Deut. 18:15-20  Ps. 111
1 Corinthians 8:1-13   Mark 1:21-28


Does everyone know what the DSM is?  It is abbreviation for the Diagnostic and Statistic Manual for Mental Disorders.  It is the official classification of Mental Disorders compiled by the American Psychiatric Association.  After various censuses of the mentally ill in the United States and classification systems, in 1952 the DSM-1 was voted into existence as a way to standardize within the mental health community the various designations for mental health disorders so that members of the community could have a common language of diagnosis to allow standardization in treatment.  One cannot find in the latest manual, the DSM-5 a condition known as demon possession.
   The DSM was born in the era of modern science and the assumption was that the methods of the natural sciences could be used in the human sciences of sociology, anthropology and psychology.  So the DSM is based upon finding "this worldly" answers for mental disorders as either the result traumatic events in one's developmental history or as having a genetic or physiological explanation due to the chemistry of the brain.
   We know that systems of classifications of mental health, physical health and spiritual health have varied according to the time and place cultures where behaviors have been observed and classified.  We know that systems of classification have changed because they have proven to be wrong or prejudiced and just plain wrong.
  What if we were to try to reconstruct the operative DSM manual during the time of Jesus?  In his time the religious authorities were the omni-competent authorities who designated certain mental conditions as being caused by demon possession or as the results of unclean spirits.  The unclean spirit designation fit within the purity code of Judaism and in this code all manner of behaviors, states of being, food, and clothing were given a classification of being pure or impure, clean or unclean.
  To have one's spirit be designated as being unclean was like being a social leper.  Lepers were designated as unclean and quarantined and to be unclean in one's inside was also a condition to be quarantined.
  How dare this man with an unclean spirit enter the synagogue?  Every society is quite uncomfortable with people who have internal disorders which cause them to act out and make everyone else frightened and uncomfortable.  Modern societies built asylums, psychiatric care facilities both to treat and to quarantine those with mental health issues designated as social problems.
  We as readers of the Gospel can misread this Gospel to be mainly about Jesus as an exorcist as part of his earthly ministry.
  We can forget that these Gospels were written many years after the life of Jesus and they present narratives of the life and ministry of Jesus with a teaching purpose.  I find it particularly interesting that the Gospel stories about unclean spirits and demons often have the possessed subjects being used for the demons to talk to Jesus and recognize his authority.
  So here's the scenario: Jesus and the early churches lived under the authority structures of the Caesar and the Roman Empire.  Surely, power and authority came from armies and political power, so how could Christians make the claim that Jesus was in any way a Messiah, a kingly one like David, or a better version of being Son of God than the Roman Emperors who were declared by their senates to be sons of divine beings?
  The early church believed and practiced the reality of an interior kingdom.  They believed that the battles of life had to be won within this interior kingdom and this kingdom was as real as the external kingdoms of the world.  St. Paul who wrote the definitive theology of the early Christian church, wrote that we don't fight against flesh and blood.  Our beef is not with the Caesar; we are fighting the inward puppeteers which he called principalities and powers of darkness.  The early church believed in the power and the strength of these interior puppeteers.
  When the theology of Paul came to the presentation of the narrative of Jesus, Jesus was not presented as a competitor to the Caesar as a king with armies, Jesus was presented as one who was involved in a greater cosmological battle.  The ministry of Jesus begins with him encountering the great Interior Puppeteer, Satan, who wanted to pull the strings and make Jesus act according to his will, but Jesus resisted this great interior accuser and puppeteer.  And because he did so he began a ministry with this incredible charismatic authority.  So the demons spoke to Jesus through their possessed subjects as way in literary form to indicate the ruling authority of Christ within the interior life.
  Power is a neutral notion; it becomes understood in the motives which direct it.   Power can be understood as the coercive power of suppression and oppression.  Jesus was said to have power or authority.  The word here for authority Greek is "exousia."  This kind of authority is the performance of a winsome charisma such that one is persuaded to submit to the one who manifests such authority.
  This is the kind of authority which we like.  We do not regard the authority of coercion to be valid since genuine authority needs to include the free participation.  People who act from controlling impulses have lost their freedom; they can't help themselves.  The whispering authority of someone who loves and cares for us is the most profound authority of all.  We willingly submit and give ourselves over to the whispering authority of love.
  In life sometimes the coercive authority of power is needed to defend the helpless, but the preferred mode of authority is the whispering loving authority of someone who gives to us and empowers our freedom to resist interior tyranny and begin to act as peaceful and loving free agents towards what is excellent and good.

  Today, we live in a world with many expressions of tyrannical and coercive powers from without.  We can know inward coercive powers of addiction and anxious acting out or fearful depressions.  And so we all need to know the interior Risen Christ as the one who can whisper us to true freedom.   This interior Risen Christ is often best known when people model whispering behaviors with each other within community and fellowship as we mutually persuade each other to be the best people we can be together as the body of Christ.  May God helps us be people who have been whispered towards loving and free excellence and may we know a calling to be people who whisper other people in the name and authority of the Risen Christ.  Amen.

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