…This is where reading scripture can get tricky for us. We hear a lot of possession stories in scripture described in ways that seem to indicate mental illness to our modern ears. In Jesus’ day, it was common to think illnesses of every kind came from demons or demonic spirits. That was the norm, for the terrible and the inexplicable. In some ways, the belief in demons provided an explanation for the unavoidable trials and sorrows people experienced, things that made life painful, difficult, and sometimes, cut it short.
We have modern medicine to cast out many, if not most of those ailments. There are medications and therapy to give folks who struggle with mental illness or depression at least a fighting chance to live at peace with themselves. But life isn’t perfect yet. We still experience and witness things that bring us down. Depression that convinces us nothing will ever change, and there’s no reason to try. Illness that seems responsive to the latest drug or procedures, but which returns, or never truly leaves. Not to mention, systems that oppress, dominate, and harm, treating human beings as cogs in a machine, or worse, as animals, vermin, only worthy when they are useful. And such systems transcend place and time—here and now, there and then, they were and are active. No wonder the concept of “demons” is so strong in scripture. When faced with these kinds of intractable problems, we can understand why people would attribute them to supernatural forces…
Image: Friesach, Konrad von. Jesus Casts Out the Unclean Spirit, the Cathedral of Gurk, Carinthia, Austria, ca. 1450. from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=56402 [retrieved January 6, 2024]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fastentuch_Gurker_Dom_Daemonenaustreibung_30032007.jpg.
Read more