Are you saying a Christian, say 100 years ago, would have believed as you do about the separation of psychosis and demon possession?
And again, the percent of psychotic folks refractory to meds is extraordinarily small. If the very common occurrence of demon possession in Matt and Mark, weren't the psychotic folk of today, who were they?
Peace, Ian
No, I think our knowledge of medicine has improved since 100 years ago, and certainly has improved since 2000 or 1000 years ago.
That knowledge has been part of the Church's experience.
Five hundred years ago we all thought that the sun orbited around the earth, then people like Copernicus and Galileo showed us otherwise. Now, as Christians, we have no trouble accepting the findings of Copernicus and Galileo into our understanding of the natural world. In the time of St. Augustine it was considered far-fetched to conceive that there were people who lived on the opposite side of the globe, as the equator was considered to be an impassible zone and thus nobody could live beyond it. We attributed disease to the theory of the four humors until relatively modern times, then we discovered germ theory.
We incorporate our knowledge of the natural world into our understanding of the world, while holding firm to the teaching and faith we have received from the beginning. That's how Christianity has always done things.
But, yes, a hundred years ago psychosis probably wouldn't have been viewed as demonic possession, we have been aware of mental disorders for quite some time, though our understanding about them has drastically improved over the past century.
So, again, I will affirm the points which I've already stated. Exorcism is only applicable for demon possession, and demon possession is a rare and specific thing that is fundamentally
not physiological.
If you want to argue that demons may exploit us in our weaknesses, including mental and/or bodily maladies, then I wouldn't disagree. But that's not demon possession. The devil is a liar and a scoundrel, and of course he tries to exploit our weaknesses, our struggles, our fears, our anxieties. He exploited Eve in the Garden by undermining her trust in God's promises.
But that's a very different thing than possession, a demon literally taking possession within a human being. That is exceedingly rare, and good churches make every effort when dealing with claims of possession to rule out other possible causes. Because if someone is suffering and struggling with mental illness and we start acting as though it is demon possession, that is only going to wreak further harm upon the person's injured mind--that is only going to cause harm and additional trauma. It's not just bad practice, it's literally dangerous.
The Church is called by her Lord to minister to the physical, emotional, psychological, and spiritual needs of people. Frivolous exorcism is not ministry, but harm.
-CryptoLutheran