Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Psychotherapy and Personal Experiences |
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Throughout the New Testament it can be seen clearly that
Jesus not only taught people and called them towards
love, repentance, peace and justice, but that He also
revealed with His life and His miracles the truths of
God’s new world - which He Himself had inaugurated. He
also fought the battle head-on against the old world,
and confronted the unjust structures and principles, the
insidious interests and the hypocrisy of the people of
His time. Not only with them, of course, but also with
the God-opposing forces of evil spirits, whose authority
He finally defeated with his sacrifice on Golgotha and
His Resurrection from the dead. After all, “…for
this was the Son of Man revealed: to abolish the works
of the devil” (1 Jn. 3,8).
One such example of healing and liberation of a person
subjected to Satan is the incident with the
demon-possessed young man of Gadara (the Gadarene
youth), which is quoted immediately below. But it is
necessary to mention that before performing the miracle,
Christ had calmed the stormy sea (evidencing His
authority over nature) and had also resurrected the
daughter of Jairus (evidencing His authority over death,
as He is the Leader of life). With the present incident
(which of course is not the only one in the Gospels) He
evidences that He has dominance over the kingdom of
demons, thus proving He is undeniably the true God.
The Gadarene (or Gergesene) incident was as follows: When Jesus happened to visit the city of Gadara (or Gergesa) by boat, He was met by a man (in Matth. 8:28 two men are mentioned) possessed by an unclean spirit and who dwelled inside tombs (which at the time were carved out in caves). Even chains could not hold him, because he had often snapped them and loosened himself from his bonds, and no-one had the strength to subdue him. Day and night he wandered around the tombs and the mountains screaming out loud and wounding himself on the sharp rocks... When he spotted Jesus (the unique physician of souls and bodies) coming from afar, he ran towards Him and prostrated himself to worship Him, but a loud cry came forth from within him by the demon, saying: “What have I to do with You, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I beg you to God, don't torture me.' This was because Christ had said to him: “Get out, you unclean spirit, from this man!”. Then Jesus demanded: “What is your name?”' And the demon inside the man replied: “They call me ‘Legion’, because we are many…” (a Legion was a military body of about 6,000 infantry and 300 cavalry). So they begged Jesus persistently to not send them out of the land (or into the abyss, according to Luke 8:31). But there happened to be a large herd of pigs grazing on the nearby mountain slopes, so the evil spirits begged Him with the following request: “Send us to the pigs and allow us to enter them.” Christ allowed them to do so (thus evidencing the power of God and the truth of His word), because He had felt compassion for that unfortunate man. Indeed, the legion of demons rushed into the herd of pigs, which then rushed towards the cliff and fell into the sea. The herd of pigs numbered about two thousand – all of which drowned in the sea. (Symbolically, to the Jews, the sea represented the forces of chaos and destruction.)
After this shocking phenomenon, the swineherds went off
to the locals - both to those in the city and in the
fields - and announced what had transpired. The
inhabitants went there to find out what had happened.
They approached Jesus and saw the demon-possessed man,
now seated calmly, clothed and cognizant, and they were
overcome with fear.
They immediately began to beg Jesus to leave,
beyond their borders (more afraid of undergoing worse
evils, yet also remaining in their faithlessness, by not
believing in Him). When
Christ boarded the ship to go to Capernaum, the former
demoniac begged to go with Him (He was dazzled by
Christ’s grandeur, but he also remained afraid that he
would again find himself in the same evil situation).
However, Jesus did not agree to this request; instead,
He instructed the man: “Go to your home and your
kin and announce to them what the Lord has done to you
in showing His mercy”' And the blessed man left
and began to preach in Decapolis what Jesus had done for
him and everyone marveled [see Mark. 5,1-20 and 9,14-29/
Matt. 8,28-34 and 16-17/ Luke 8,26-39 and 9,37-42].
From the aforementioned text, quoted with minor
variations by Matthew, Mark and Luke, the following
truths are extracted:
It is clearly obvious in the Tradition of the Church and
in the New Testament:
(a) that there exists an invisible spiritual world -
holy and satanic, angels and demons - of which the
Church has had experience throughout time, especially
the ascetics, the monks, but also those who strive to
apply God's will to their lives and surroundings, and
(b) that even demons submit to Christ as to an almighty
God. The Devil appears very early in the Holy Bible,
from the fall of the first-fashioned couple, as having
entered human history and striving to destroy man with
every possible manner, 'like a roaring lion'
(1 Pet. 5,8).
In the same manner that an open wound without care and
antibiotics becomes infected, likewise the first couple
left their minds and hearts exposed to the influence of
evil, causing them to succumb to the snares of the
antichrist spirit. This particular passage proves that
demons do indeed have a personal consciousness and will
- and are not just a mental construct that implies
something evil. The 'devil' is called so because he
slanders and vilifies the acts of people before God;
furthermore, the word 'satan' in Hebrew implies the one
who opposes and resists the plans of God - the adversary
and the opposer. In addition to Judaism and
Christianity, Satan is presented
under various names; in Buddhism and Islam
as moving viciously and insidiously against good and
embodying absolute evil.
The demonically possessed are not psychopaths.
Demonic possession is one thing, and madness,
schizophrenia or any other kind of illness is another
thing. In the New Testament such situations are clearly
distinguished, so that we have no right to accuse the
era of Jesus of being in ignorance. We will mention only
two examples, according to Mark 1,32 & 1,34, where the
following are said:
“32 At evening, when the sun had set, they brought
to Him all who were sick
AND
those who were demon-possessed. 33 And
the whole city had gathered together at the door. 34 And
He healed many who were sick with
various diseases,
and He also cast out many
demons; and He also obstructed the demons from
speaking, for they knew He was the Christ.”
As we can see, the demons mentioned in the Gospels can
converse with Christ, they can be extracted from people,
and they also acknowledge Christ as God - in fact they “believe
and tremble”, according to the Apostle
Jacob (James),
but they do not produce any fruits of repentance because
they have become fixed in evil :
“19 So then, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift
to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath; 20 for
the wrath of man does not earn the righteousness of God.
(James 1:19).
Elsewhere in the Bible they approach and venerate Jesus,
they recognize that He has authority over them and they
plead for the revoking of their punishment (see e.g.
Luke 8:28, Mark 5:6, Matth. 8:29, Matth.8:31). All these
are personal reactions that cannot be attributed to the
usual forms of mental illness. In many cases, the
possessed persons have revealed to bystanders certain
secret personal acts they have committed, names of third
parties and their personal information, etc. - phenomena
that cannot be interpreted through common sense or only
biologically. According to the consensus of the saints
and the Fathers of the Church, the worst form of tyranny
is that of the devil over man, which of course has
gradations and can be observed in different forms, such
as the instances of pride, irreverence, wickedness,
enslavement to passions, heresy, faithlessness,
idolatry, etc.
In our country, unfortunately thousands of sorcerers,
mediums and visionaries who are working and “helping”
unsuspecting fellow-humans – either as individuals or in
the form of a society – are
The young man of the gospel narrative, enslaved as he
was to the devil, suffered from anti-sociality,
aggression, internal splitting and conflicts,
destructive drive, lack of personal cohesion, loneliness
and isolation, given that passions in Orthodox
psychotherapy are the perversion of mental forces and an
escalating inertia towards the "likeness" (= the path to
theosis-union with God). These are the consequences of
evil inside man, which also seep into the environment in
the form of suffering, disease, hunger, hatred, war,
terrorism, anarchy, rape, suicide, etc., as they have
their origin not in God, but in the wicked invisible
spiritual world. Christ
offers victory over the dark and inhuman powers and the
possibility of inner cohesion, freedom and personal
worthiness, through His Grace, the Mysteries
(Sacraments) of the Church - especially Confession and
Holy Communion - love and Christian ascesis (humility,
fasting, prayer, religious worship, vigils, etc.),
without which, and without the observance of Christ's
commandments, everything only seems to
be achievable magically, that is, without our synergy
(collaboration). Moreover,
according to the Lord's words, "this 'genus'
of demons can only be expelled 'by prayer and fasting'"
(Matthew 14:21).
Faith in Christ - or faithlessness - is a personal
choice by people, because there are also people who,
albeit witnessing miracles in their lives and around
them, do not wish to know Christ and meet Him on a
spiritual level. Also,
many of them are not moved by the serious problems of
their fellow human beings, but live only for their own
interests. In our above example, they are represented by
the ingrate Gadarenes, who, instead of thanking the Lord
(and repenting) for redeeming a fellow citizen - and
ridding them of a public danger as was the
demon-possessed man – they sent away and scorned Christ
en masse, probably because He was also hurting their
financial interests – that is, the swine trade which was
forbidden to the Jews during that time.
Christ then
departed very discreetly, faithfully observing people’s
free will to choose the course of their life.
The former devil-servant and now a Christ-servant named
Christodoulos (which implies a truly free person in
Christ) and a sober young man, became a town crier
proclaiming the wonders of God to his neighbors and the
surrounding villages (and to the Gentiles of course), as
instructed by the Lord. The healed and Grace-filled man
- having found hid old, normal self - now exudes Grace
and a divine calmness, and is no longer a danger to
others. After all, Christ also uses as His collaborators
people who are faithful to His will. This is indicative
of the fact that we too have a duty to become town
criers of God's love - and His apostles, in words and in
deeds, personalizing the importance of each case and
acting with discernment and meekness.
Wherever hatred, destruction, aggressiveness, injustice
and strife prevail, and love, freedom and peace flee,
there also is where the devil reigns, as Christ is being
persecuted.
Wherever God retreats (when He is consciously denied by
people, as He does not force anyone's will), there evil
gains ground as a presence .
Just as darkness does not exist by itself but is
actually the absence of light, so evil materializes when
good is absent. On
the contrary, Christian life is characterized by unity,
philanthropy, reconciliation, love, sanctification. This
is the environment in which God reposes and Christians
are characterized as His children.
Christ, finally, is the liberator of souls and bodies.
Conflict with the evil spirit ended, with the
resurrected God-Man as victor. Christ came 'to
put an end to the works of the devil' (I
John 3:8) and human nature was redeemed, with His
incarnation as the beginning of salvation.
However, for the worthiness of the human person, a daily
struggle is demanded. The inner and outer change of the
formerly demon-possessed person underlines that in God’s
new world, which is already taking place en route and
heading towards the future, every form of evil will
recede.
The Church is Christ’s corpus/body 'extending throughout
the ages' (St. Augustine). It is the psychosomatic
heavenly Inn - an infirmary for souls and bodies,
according to the patristic interpretation of the Good
Samaritan parable.
Only in there will man find true and eternal repose,
with evil being persecuted and the soul at peace, since
the Church communicates not only lovingly and
fraternally with fellow human beings, but also through
the ecclesiastic Mysteries together with the saints and
the angels of God.
REFERENCES
:
§ Wikipedia, entry “Devil”
§ Logos and Existence', Kon/nos Grigoriadis, vol. A, ed.
B, ed. The Transfiguration of the Savior, Ath. 2001
§ 'Jesus Christ, the New World of God and Us', published
by Patakis, 2004
§ 'Orthodox Messages', Stavros Fotiou, published by
Grigoris, Ath. 2000
§ 'Christ and the new world of God', Nikolaos Neurakis,
Ath. 1989
§ 'Christ and the new world of God', Savvas
Agouridis-Socrates Nikas, OEDB, Ath. 1993
§ «Ôhe
four Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles», by Timotheus
Kilifis, Vol.Á´,
4th ed., Athens 1999
§ «The Gospel of Matthew», Nicjolas Sotiropoulos, O
STAVROS publications, Athens. 1981
Translation by A. N. |