How do we, as good, Bible believing Baptists, place judgment on people with mental illnesses when it is no fault of the ill person at all?
A mental illness is no different from having MS or diabetes.
But yet, I hear so many "good" Baptists making snide remarks about mentally ill people.
I was born with a mental illness that I receive disability for. I worked for 35 years but when i got into my 50's my condition was so severe that i could not work anymore. A couple of people on the BB knew me when I was the most ill and know that what I am saying is true. I have been on meds for 3 years, i go to both secular psychiatrists and Christian counselors, and my life is much improved, even close to normal, but i have to work at it very hard to maintain it.
Let me add here that my IQ is well over 140, and I scored 98 1/2 percentile on my ASVAB test when I went into the Army, so intelligence has nothing to do with it. I am not stupid, but I do have a mental illness.
Why do "good" Baptist Believers make snide comments about people like me? Would they like it if they were sick and people made fun of them? I expect this from the world in general, but I would think that "good" Baptists would educate themselves and treat people with mental illnesses with the same respect they would anyone else.
Thank you for listening to my rant, and now, let me know how you feel about people who are mentally ill.
John
I re-posted the original op so folks could look again at the intent.
I have been reading, again, through the various posts on the thread.
I see the tremendous thoughts and support for those who are evidently having problems in mental areas.
I have a question that perhaps needs to be on a different thread, and if so let me know.
First the scenario:
Years ago, a married man underwent tremendous psychological changes due to both illness and injury. He retained the same IQ, but emotionally and his personality were no longer what he once was - he was completely different.
Basically, he could express no emotional feelings or respond with any affection or inflection. Other than give direct noninflected answers, with no analytic understanding of body language, appropriateness, or other cues that provide social interaction framework, he appeared to be normal. No smile, no frown, no awareness of how others might perceive something, nothing of emotive support to give to wife, family, friends... He was not a danger to society, but cold - heartless. No medication would help, and there was no improvement that would ever be a part of this person's living. The brain was damaged - repair was impossible.
Because he was no longer that person (and no hope of recovery), his wife for her own protection and that of their child moved out and away. Her concern was the emotional detriment would damage the child and her beyond what she could stand.
Staying within the OP parameters:
What responsibility do you suppose the church has in ministerial support for this person?
What would you do to provide for the needs of the family both physically and spiritually?
If this person were to visit your gathering, how might you respond to the person who would show no personality?