What have you to do with us?

by Christa Compton on February 01, 2024

Note: Last Sunday’s gospel told a story about a man with an “unclean spirit,” which can be understood in our own time in a variety of ways. One of those possibilities is described by Pastor Talitha Arnold in her online Still Speaking Daily Devotional for September 10, 2018.
 
“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?”  Mark 1:23-24
 
Jesus had just come out of the wilderness, called his first followers, and was in the middle of his first sermon in Capernaum. Then a man “with an unclean spirit” showed up yelling, “What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth?” What a way to start a ministry!
 
Actually I can’t think of a better story to begin the good news of Jesus Christ. His first miracle isn’t walking on water or feeding the multitudes. It’s healing someone with “an unclean spirit,” a 1st century description of mental illness.
 
Then, as now, such persons were often among the most isolated and vulnerable people of their communities. Yet there are more accounts of Jesus’ caring for persons with mental illness than all other healing stories combined. That says something about his ministry—and also ours.
 
Moreover when Jesus met the man in the Capernaum synagogue or other persons with “unclean spirits” or demons, he didn’t condemn or judge them. He didn’t address their faith issues or need for forgiveness as he did in other healing stories. Instead he differentiated between the “unclean spirit” and the person it was attacking, a person who deserved his compassion and help. If such understanding was important for Jesus, then it’s important for the Church.
 
Jesus began his ministry by healing the man “with an unclean spirit.”…In our time, as in Jesus’, persons with mental illness and those who love and care for them, often echo the Capernaum man’s cry, “What have you to do with us?” “Quite a bit,” Jesus answered unequivocally. That needs to be our answer, too.
 
I am grateful to Pastor Arnold for this reflection. If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call or text 988 for the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. You can find more information here: https://988lifeline.org. And I am here to provide spiritual support as you grapple with these real and difficult challenges.

Tags: mental health

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