According to Mark’s gospel, Jesus did a number of things after he
was baptised. He travelled around the cities and towns of
Galilee, preaching that the reign of God was at hand, so everyone had
better get ready. He also healed many who were sick, beginning
with Simon Peter’s mother in law, who was in bed with a fever when
Jesus came to visit her. But what Mark seems to be overwhelmingly
keen to tell us about Jesus is that he was an exorcist, a man who casts
out “unclean spirits” or “demons”. In the passage we read a
moment ago, all the city of Capernaum came to the house where Jesus was
staying, bringing their sick and their demon-possessed. There we
are told he ‘cast out many demons, commanding them not to speak because
they knew him’. Towards the close of the passage, as Jesus
prepares to travel around Galilee for the first time, Mark has Jesus
say that he is off to preach and to exorcise. This, then,
is Mark’s summary of Jesus’ mission: to preach the good news and to
cast our demons. To preach and to cast out demons.
Now I’m not sure what you imagine these unclean spirit or demons to be,
but I hazard a guess that, like me, you’ve had different theories at
different stages of your life. When I was a child I imagined that
a person was a bit like a car, with a personal soul or spirit sitting
at the wheel making sure that the driving went smoothly so that there
would be no accidents. What happened with demon-possession, I
thought, was that some other soul or spirit, some personality that
didn’t belong in the car, would jump in on the passenger side at a set
of lights and lunge for the steering wheel. What followed, I
surmised, was a titanic struggle between the personality that belonged
and the personality that didn’t belong, to get control of the
car. I also theorized that if I was ever possessed by a demon, I
would not be strong enough to get rid of him, so I would have to call
on Jesus to help me. And Jesus would. ‘Cause demons were
afraid of Jesus. The bible said so.
When I’d grown up a little and was reading lots of pop psychology at
Uni, I developed my theory a little further, largely in dialogue with a
book called People of the Lie, by M. Scott Peck. In that book,
Peck argued that there were two kinds of demons. One was not that
dissimilar to the one I already believed in: a disembodied
personality which came from somewhere else with the express purpose of
taking over the running of someone’s life. Peck, a psychiatrist,
claimed to have come across such personalities on more than one
occasion. But the other kind of demon he talked about was not of
this kind. It was simply a human personality gone seriously
wrong. A human personality, inhabiting a human body, who did evil
things but without any trace of regret or pangs of conscience. An
example he gave in the book was of a man who gave a gun to his teenage
son for his 16th birthday. Now, in American culture that is not
such an unusual thing, especially if you live in the rootin’ tootin’
shootin’ southern counties. The difference in this instance was
that the boy’s older brother had shot himself with that same gun . .
. on his 16th birthday.
The idea of a human personality turned evil whittled away at my
demon-theory for a few years, especially while I was studying pastoral
psychology at Theological College. There I read the psychological
theories of Carl Jung, along with the many theological theories of
personality which Jung had clearly influenced. For these
writers, the demonic was an aspect of every person’s personality.
Hidden in shadow, hidden in each person’s unconscious, were undesirable
forces that usually went unacknowledged, and yet were very much part of
us. Most of the time, said Jung, we “project” these forces onto
others; that is, we dupe ourselves into thinking that it is other
people who behave badly or with evil intent, when in fact it is
ourselves. By blaming others we avoid having to acknowledge the
fact of our own responsibility. The goal of spiritual growth,
says the Jungian school, is to “withdraw” our projections, or to “make
friends with our demons”, a difficult process that involves
acknowledging that one can never rid the world of evil without first
acknowledging one’s own evil tendencies. Much of contemporary
practise in both pastoral counselling and spiritual direction takes its
lead from these insights.
Of course, I have changed my mind again. One does.
One must, in order to grow. But this time the change comes from
another direction. Not from the latest psychological theories,
although I’ve read some of them. This time the change has come
through a re-engagement with the Scriptures, and with the stories of
Jesus’ ministry and mission in particular. What I realize now is
that while there is certainly a great deal of truth in the various
psychologies I’ve mentioned, it is not necessarily the truth as the
Scriptures understand it. And I am convinced that what the church
needs now, more than anything else, is a reengagement with the riches
of its own truth, preserved for us in Scripture and
tradition. For without a deep and transformative engagement
with this truth we may still, perhaps, be human beings, but
perhaps we shall not be the human beings that God promises we may
be. Certainly, we shall not be Christian human beings, full of
Christ, possessed (if you like) by him alone.
So, what does Mark, the writer of the first Gospel, say about
demons? Well, he says a number of things, if you are prepared to
read carefully. What he first says is that demons are bad for
people, and they are very common. As common as sickness.
They are oppressive spirits which, like sickness, make people’s lives
miserable. Note, if you will, the way in which Mark talks about
demon possession and sickness as if they are almost the same
thing. They are not the same thing, not exactly, which is why
Mark distinguishes them by name. And yet he mentions one in a
pair with the other on most occasions; and on some occasions—as with
today’s passage, where Jesus ministry is summarised as the twofold
activity of preaching and exorcism—demon possession seems to represent
sickness as well. Why is that? Because demon possession is
like being sick. It can happen to anyone. It’s not
something you necessarily choose for yourself. But the effects
are awful, painful, miserable.
The second thing Mark says about demons is that they are often
multi-voiced or multi-personalitied. Take, for example, the story
of Jesus first miracle, an exorcism in the synagogue. Here the
possessed man calls out to Jesus in a multiple voice: “What have
you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth?” (1.24). Compare that with the
story of the demoniac amongst the tombs of the Gerasenes. When
Jesus asks the demon’s name, it replies: “My name is Legion, for
we are many”. This last story is particularly revealing, I
think. For it tells us that demons have something to do with a
people being colonised by foreign powers, foreign armies. Let me
explain.
You will remember that Jesus ministry took place in a police-state,
much like the police state of, say, Chile under Pinochet, or Russia
under Stalin. No citizen could walk more than a couple of blocks
without running into a Roman soldier, a legionnaire, who belonged to a
massive force of men who had occupied the countryside, and ruled it
with absolute power. The people suffered terribly under this
yoke. They suffered like Russian citizens suffered under
Stalin. A woman or boy could be raped or otherwise molested by a
solider, and have no recourse against him. A Jewish man could be
commanded to carry a soldier’s pack for him, or to murder someone for
him, or to do almost anything that solider wanted, and that man could
do nothing about it. Jewish people were paid to inform on each
other, to betray each other in order to save themselves from trumped-up
charges. In an environment like that, people could not avoid the
constant sense that they were not the masters of their own
bodies. Their lands, their homes, even their bodies and minds,
had been colonised and possessed by the Roman hordes. Like ants,
they overran the land in Legions, and the consequences were truly awful.
So what does Mark mean, when he talks about demons? One should
remember that he is most likely writing his Gospel just after Roman
siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE. For Mark, the demons symbolise
the devastating effects of the Roman colonisation of his own,
Jerusalem-based community. Poverty. Hunger.
Disease. Mental illness. Despair. Distrust.
Lies. Envy. Greed. Murder.
War. The kinds of demons one can still see today in Africa, in
South America and South Asia, and even here in Australia, amongst
Aboriginal people and seekers of asylum. The kinds of demons one
sees amongst the colonised.
It is instructive to note that it is not only Mark who took this
view. It was also the view of the Christian communities which
survived the destruction of Jerusalem, but continued to live under the
yoke of Rome. In the second, third and fourth centuries, as the
Church developed its baptismal rituals, an important part of the
preparations was a regular liturgy of exorcism. Here the
baptismal candidates, or catechumens as they were called then, would be
questioned by the bishop with regard to the way they lived their
lives. Here the key question was, “Are you living your life under
the fear of Rome, or are you giving your life into the freedom of
Jesus?” At each questioning, as the many layers of Rome
and Roman influence were uncovered, there would be an exorcism, a
liturgy in which the colonising demons would be symbolically cast out,
and the catechumen’s ears and eyes sealed with the cross against the
reinvasion of the hordes.
As we approach Lent and (in a few protestant churches) our own rituals
of exorcism, let me ask you this. In what ways have the demonic
forces of our own culture and time colonised your own lives? In
what ways have they whittled their ways into your heart and made you
afraid, afraid perhaps for your financial future, or for your social
and vocational “success,” or that of your kids? How have you
taken on board the values of these demons, acceding to their demands
because you feel there is no other way—no other way than to live as
under-resourced nuclear families, stuck in under-supported bubbles
which put both marriages and childrearing practices under unbearable
pressure; no other way but to buy unaffordable houses a very long way
from where our friends and neighbours and support networks live; no
other way but to work longer and longer hours and build bigger and
bigger prisons, and protect ourselves against the practise of
hospitality and compassion?
If the demons have indeed colonised your own heart and mind, as they
have colonised mine, then I have a message for you, a message from
Mark’s gospel. This is not the only way. There is another
way, another possibility. For what Mark also says about the
demons is that they know Jesus, they fear him, and they obey him.
Jesus has the authority to drive the demons away. For in the end,
they are chimera, shadows which recede when the light of Christ’s truth
is brought to bear. The Lenten season, which approaches fast, is
an invitation and an opportunity; for in Lent we hear the call of God
to take our baptismal vows seriously— to turn from evil, to cast aside
the colonising influences of our culture and times, and turn instead to
Christ—his will and his way. The promise of Easter lies before
us: that if we die with Christ, we shall also live with him; that if we
lose ourselves, our colonised selves, for the sake of Christ and his
gospel, then we shall find ourselves anew, in a new form of a human
life and community we could not have imagined before. So.
If the demons have hold of you, turn to Christ. He will drive
away the demons and fill you with his Spirit. His truth will set
you free.
In the name of God—Earth-maker, Pain-bearer, Life-giver, Amen.