Apparently, there’s been a pendulum swing once again in the way primary schools are teaching mathematics. The good old fashioned, tried and true, common sense way that I grew up on is out. They are back to applied mathematics. It’s clear from the questions my son asks me when he is doing his homework. “How many dimes are in a dollar?” “Where are the dice?” “How many eggs are in a dozen?” “ How do I divide a pizza into quarters?”
This past week the question was, “What’s a trio?” You know, I said. “Like The Three Magi.” He gave me a blank stare. “The three what?” He asked. “Never mind”. I said. More evidence that my biblical illustrations are not for everyone. “How about The Three Stooges?” I proposed. Another blank stare. “What’s a stooge?” He asked. “Never mind that either.” I said. “How about The Three Musketeers?” I ventured. This made a trio of blank stares. What’s more, he began to get frustrated. “Ok, I got this,” I said, rising to the occasion. “The Three Little Pigs. The Three Bears. The Three Billy Goats Gruff.” I was finally on a roll. “Oh, I get it. It’s a group of three.” “Exactly!” I exclaimed.
Come to think of it, there’s another trio from the Bible that springs to mind -- the alien, the orphan, and the widow. In fact, this is the most prevalent trio in the Old Testament; the reason being, that according to the Old Testament, the alien, the orphan, and the widow are the three groups most vulnerable to social injustice.
It’s not hard to see why. Aliens are those who are forced by one pressure or another from their homeland. Then and now, wherever they seem to go, they are unwelcome. They are feared. They are suspected. They are resented. They are blamed. They are scapegoated. Vulnerable to social injustice.
And then there are widows. Back in the biblical era there was no such thing as an Oprah Winfrey or a Condoleeza Rice -- powerful and successful women making it on their own. Women back in the biblical era were wholly dependent upon men to survive. This is why the loss of a husband was often catastrophic for a woman. A widow had no means of support or protection. Vulnerable to social injustice.
And finally, orphans. Orphans need little explanation. Orphans are children whose families have either died or abandoned them, leaving them all alone to fend for themselves in life. Enough said. Vulnerable to social injustice.
So the Old Testament again and again offers this trio as the three groups most vulnerable to social injustice. Look out for them, the Old Testament demands. Intercede for them. Protect them. Care for them.
When we take the New Testament into account, the trio could well become a quartet, because Jesus adds one more group to the alien, the orphan, and the widow. Jesus adds the mentally ill.
Consider our Gospel Lesson. Jesus exorcised a demon from a young boy. A demon? But this is because in the biblical era, diseases that caused delusions, hysteria, mania, paranoia, hallucinations, depression, psychosis, and fits -- in other words mental illness -- were deemed to have been caused by demons. Treatment reflected this. Holes were drilled into skulls so that the demons could escape. The bottom line is when Jesus exorcised the boy’s demon, he was healing his mental illness.
And it wasn’t just here that Jesus exorcised a demon. Jesus exorcised demons more than he did anything else. As he made his way throughout Galilee, he encountered two who were demon possessed living among the tombs, then he encountered one who was demon possessed who was too mute, then he encountered one who was demon possessed who was both deaf and mute, then he encountered the demon possessed daughter of a Canaanite woman. He healed them all. He then commissioned his disciples to go out and do the same. This is because just as the Old Testament apprehended the vulnerability of the alien, the widow, and the orphan, Jesus apprehended the vulnerability of the mentally ill.
Yes, the mentally ill are vulnerable -- doubly vulnerable in fact. There is the vulnerability rendered by the disease itself -- the impairment of behavior and perception and personality. But too, there is the vulnerability rendered by the way mental illness has been “treated,” and treated down through history. There have been countless books written about historical treatments for mental illness. I’ve read as many as I can. I have loved ones who are mentally ill, so I am always seeking knowledge. Those who had holes drilled in their heads were the lucky ones. I will spare you the details of a book I read recently about treatment for mental illness in the Medieval Period. Although things have scarcely improved with time. I recently read another book about treatment for mental illness in the twentieth century. In hospitals and institutions, under the guise of science, treatment included being chained, starved, beaten, imprisoned, electrocuted, sterilized, experimented on, isolated, lobotomized, and murdered. It makes you wonder if those who imposed such treatments were not more mentally ill than their victims. And all this because they were afflicted by a disease, a disease over which they had no control or responsibility.
Yes, Jesus apprehended the vulnerability of the mentally ill, and this means we must too. The question then becomes, once we apprehend their vulnerability, what can we do? There are steps we can take. Personally, we can continue to raise our consciousness and the consciousness of those around us. We can enter into the struggle of the mentally ill people in our lives - regardless how messy it gets or how pointless it seems. As Shakespeare said, “Where there’s life there’s hope.” We can offer our support to those who are struggling with the mentally ill people in their lives.
As a church, we have recently entered into an alliance with the Fox River Valley Initiative which is organizing a coalition of local churches to press for legislation that provides treatment centers for the mentally ill which aim to keep them off the streets and out of the prisons, where so many end up.
There are indeed steps we can take. But is it enough? No of course not. It’s not enough. Especially considering it from a historical perspective. Especially considering the mentally ill down through the centuries and the barbaric treatments they endured. No and no again. It’s not enough.
But that’s ok. Because we are Christians. This means we are called to embrace the lost cause. We are called to fight the losing battle. We are called to the exercise in futility. Because in truth there are no lost causes or losing battles or exercises in futility. Every effort we make on behalf of Jesus Christ reflects his ultimate victory out into the world. We must never lose sight of this fact, or lose faith in it. And all those who have suffered and died the insane ravages of mentally illness are, through him, free from their disease and eternally restored to who God created them to be. May God bless the mentally ill, and may God bless our efforts on their behalf. Amen.