The Bible and Mental HealthSample
Seeing the invisible
Given that around one in five adults struggle with their mental health, you would think that talking about it would be commonplace. That, however, is not the experience of most sufferers.
It may be OK to share feeling low or anxious. Still, statistics tell us that most of those who struggle tend to struggle alone and say little – particularly if they are affected by severe mental ill health, such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Stigma and prejudice get in the way of truth-telling and human solidarity.
These issues are not new. Countless stories in the ministry of Jesus show Him breaking down the barriers that stigma puts up – around those who were disadvantaged, people with disabilities, women, or foreigners. Here, in the story of the man born blind, the prejudice of the disciples is laid bare with a question that associates illness and sin. The man’s affliction is physical, but those with mental health challenges often encounter the same questions and attitudes. Jesus responds swiftly and decisively denies the link between sin and illness.
But there is more to the man’s predicament than his physical condition. The man has a family, parents, and community, yet he is reduced to begging by the side of the road. Why was he left to do that? Did others assume he was incapable of doing anything else?
His difference isolated him and led others to make assumptions about him. Soon, they reduced him to only one thing – his disability. The community stopped seeing him as a full person with much to give. He just became ‘the blind man.’ His isolation and begging were not a direct result of being blind but a combination of physical ailment, social prejudice, and alienation.
Jesus responds to the whole man. First, Jesus ‘saw’ him. Jesus did not simply pass by but saw him. Jesus then treats him as someone with agency and abilities and invites him to participate in the healing action by going to the pool and washing the mud off. And what’s more, Jesus challenges the community to learn to see him differently: not as ‘the blind man,’ but as someone whose life can witness to ‘the glory of God.’
How do we nurture this ability to see whole persons to discern God at work in every life? And how do we respond to the whole person rather than reduce people to a condition that affects them?
Action
Look around on your front line. Who might feel isolated, invisible, or overlooked? How could you see them and encourage them?
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This devotional journey was originally published as part of our Word for the Week blog series.
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About this Plan
Our culture is facing what many have called a mental health epidemic. For the one in five adults globally who struggle with a mental health issue, the world can feel like a threatening and unsafe place, and 'life to the full' can feel a long way off. What does speaking of ‘good news’ mean when we or those around us are struggling?
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