DEMONS OF THE MIND, DEMONS OF THE HEART
Rev. Dr. Joyce Antila Phipps
Texts: Job 3:1-26; Luke 4: 31-44
In his play, The Jew of Malta, Christopher Marlowe presents Barabas, the richest man on Malta, faced with a demand by the Christian rulers to part with half his treasure to buy off an impending Turkish invasion. Refusing to part with any of his wealth or to convert, Barabas finds all of his wealth and his home confiscated. As with Job, Barabas is beset with three friends who counsel him to be patient. The confiscation of literally all that he has, drives him to entreat his only child Abigail, who when in the opening soliloquy, he compares her to Iphigenia one shudders, to pretend to be a nun to find the gold hidden in the house and to bring it to him.
His rage also drives him to a more sinister form of vengeance as he sets up the son of the governor and a rival for Abigail’s love to kill each other in a duel. When Abigail learns of this, she enters the convent in payment for her father’s sins, and again his rage wrecks a terrible vengeance. He poisons his daughter and the convent. His hate and desire for vengeance leads him to allying himself with the Turkish invaders and then in his attempt to destroy the city, he falls into boiling oil. His hate has consumed him. It is a parable for our times.
The loss of all that we have rings to mind the cry of Job: “Let the day perish in which I was born…Let that day be darkness. Why is light given to one who cannot see the way, whom God has fenced in?” Although Barabas has only lost his wealth to this point, his cry is just as plaintiff: You partial heavens, have I deserved this plague? What, will you thus oppose me, luckless stars, To make me desperate in my poverty? And knowing me impatient in distress, Think me so mad as I will hang myself, That I may vanish o'er the earth in air And leave no memory that e'er I was? No, I will live; nor loathe I this my life. And since you leave me in the ocean thus To sink or swim, and put me to my shifts, I'll rouse my senses, and awake myself.
And awake himself he does to hate and vengeance – demons of the heart and demons of the mind. These are the same demons that seize us now in a world that has little room for the healing power of love. These are the same demons that Jesus addresses in the man possessed, and they are the same demons that strive to possess us.
We think that we are not capable of such hatred – the kind of hatred that spews forth the destructive vengeance created by Barabas the Jew. We do not set our children up to cause the deaths of others; we do not poison our children; we do not pit group against group or betray others into the hands of death. We are not like those who created and benefits from the chaos and terror; nor are we like today’s robber barons who extract minerals from Third World countries leaving little besides environmental degradation; nor do most of us even support the death penalty for heartless or brutal murderers. No, we do not have those demons.
But each of us does carry some hidden demon within us; each of us has demons inside our minds or our hearts, something that we loathe or hate, and those demons are destructive for at any time they can rise up and control us. For most of us, they are usually little things, items that most of us would consider inconsequential. But it is the very insidiousness of anger that is so destructive.
The world is so complex today, or at least it seems so. It was no less complex in the past; look at Barabas the Jew, finding himself caught in ancient hatreds. As he states in his opening soliloquy: These are the blessings promised to the Jews, And herein was old Abrams happiness. …Who hateth me but for my happiness? Or who is honoured now but for his wealth? Rather had I, a Jew, be hated thus, Than pitied in a Christian poverty; For I can see no fruits in all their faith, But malice, falsehood, and excessive pride, Which methinks fits not their profession.
As I saw in Jerusalem and Bethlehem, one just cannot return to what once was. The same is true of our individual lives. Even after Jesus has healed the man possessed by unclean spirits, he will not be able to return to what once was for his experience of having been possessed shapes his response to the events in the future. And the same is true of us.
So what is our hope? Are we to be like Job and Barabas, decrying our fate? Do we allow anger or hate to consume us? Is there a way to move beyond our all too natural feelings of anger, bitterness, betrayal, and even hate? These are natural feelings whether we want to admit it or not. How do we move beyond the prison they have put us in?
We make blanket assumptions about people or groups because of the complexities of the world. Our minds find it difficult to grasp the events that transpire at what seems to be such a quickening pace. As one writer said, we need to retool our minds – our hearts – to learn how to live together, whether that is in a small community like the family or church, or a larger community like the nation or the world. We cannot simply rely on what has been handed down to us. We need to write a new language to address the ugly face of our past prejudices. And we all have some prejudice; none of us is free.
Recognizing the prejudice, the anger, the bitterness, or the hatred – giving it a name helps. Just as Jesus called to the demons, we need to call to our old prejudices to free ourselves from them, no matter what they are. As many of you know, my mother’s family is from the South and I grew up hearing the vilest of things about people of color. I must have been around ten or so when I realized how prejudice and hate affected the people who held those hatreds. It twisted them, just as the demons in our minds and hearts twist us. Although I put away that prejudice, I am sure that in the deep recesses of my heart I have others yet to be named. Naming them, learning how to address them as Jesus addressed the demons creates the possibility of living beyond the stereotypes in my mind.
I said that Marlowe’s play was a parable for our times. It is indeed a parable of how hate destroys the hater and all around. Moving beyond stereotype, prejudice, and our natural desire for vengeance is indeed difficult. We must do this individually and as a society – and as a Nation.
Let us pray: God of amazing grace, open us to the possibilities of your ever-present love through Christ Jesus, the man who healed the sick in body, mind, and spirit, and who brought us a new way of experiencing your love through the realm of justice, mercy, and love. Amen.