Madness, Sanity & ITS
Unfathomable Dichotomy
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
July 18, 2015
For
the past several years, I have been pondering why religion, which once was so
controlling of me has become peripheral and pusillanimous, concluding that it has
lost its moral authority and vigor having confused its belief system with the
phenomenon of believing.
A belief system and believing are not
the same. Everyone has to believe in
something to function, but less and less people need a belief system to do so.
This is not an imperative. What is vital is the capacity, indeed, the audacity
to believe in something greater than the self.
* * *
At
one point in my life, I felt the belief system of Roman Catholicism as if it were etched on
my soul. Then I experienced South Africa
and the apartheid policy of the Afrikaner government (see blog: South Africa, Mindset & Self-Image –
March 30, 2008). I was a young man sent
to South Africa by my company to facilitate the formation of a new company.
Since
this missive is about “Sanity and Madness
& Its Dichotomy,” it relates
to a particular brand of a belief system, in this case that of being born in America and reared in Roman Catholicism.
Once
in South Africa, belief no longer proved efficacious, but played havoc with my
conscience, as I took these beliefs to be real, when they were a fallible
fragile set of abstract ideas not to be trusted.
Confident
that I had the hubris to do the job, I relied on being American armed with American
technology. This I believed was
sufficient to deliver structure and order to the limping universe I encountered
in my work here as elsewhere.
The conceit of my Catholicism and American ethnocentrism provided the
impertinence to enter South Africa knowing nothing about the country or her
people.
This bankrupt recipe nearly
destroyed me (see my novel, A Green
Island in a Black Sea, 2014), but ultimately launched me instead into a world of ideas outside myself, giving me the power to write books and articles on what I have
seen and done.
Who
could have been more pitiful or pathetic than I was?
I had been on automatic pilot with a belief
system that found me believing the world revolved around me and my American and
Roman Catholic sphere. When it was
shattered, for a long while I lost my capacity to believe in anything,
especially myself.
Believing
is more important than any belief system.
It
was 1968, only twenty-three years since the end of the Second World War.
Earlier,
in the late 1950s, I was a sailor on the flagship of the United States Navy Sixth
Fleet in the Mediterranean on the USS Salem CA-139, a heavy cruiser with 1,400
men aboard.
The
Sixth Fleet with 50,000 men and more than 50 ships including aircraft carriers,
battleships, cruisers, destroyers, destroyer escorts, submarines and LSD’s, and
hundreds of aircraft paraded up and down and across the Mediterranean Sea as if
it were its own private marina.
With
this arrogance in my innocence, I failed to comprehend reality as I was too
wrapped up in my American glory and the infallibility of my Catholicism to be
sensitive to the peoples encountered across Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
When
we conducted military exercises in the Mediterranean, this foolishness became
euphoric. The sun would be blocked out by
the armada of planes across the sky, while the shoreline would be blurred by the
flotilla of American ships that swelled in the Mediterranean to nearly one hundred
showcasing America’s might.
Once
on liberty in Beirut, Lebanon and wandering into the poverty section of the
city, I unwittingly engaged in snapping picture after picture of the people and
the squalor that they called home.
Several
Lebanese youngsters climbed on me, on my shoulders and back, not to hurt me,
but to stop me from taking more pictures.
We had a language barrier but I had never seen such palpable hatred in
people's eyes.
That
image of calloused disregard for people’s feelings has stayed with me for more
than half a century. What is worse, I
didn’t think at the time I had done anything wrong.
Gradually,
however, over time once I experienced more life, I came to realize that what I
took to be my sanity was my madness, and that it was not only my madness but
that of my American and Catholic culture.
On the other hand, paradoxically, even more gradually, I came to realize
that my madness is where my sanity resides.
DEGREES OF MADNESS
From
the perspective of eight decades of living, I find my behavior as a young
member of the United States Navy in the Mediterranean in the late 1950s and as
a young executive of an American company in the late 1960s in South Africa not as
reprehensible as I did initially, but more as a misplacement of several degrees
of madness for madness is as essential to well-being and
functioning as is sanity.
Madness
in our culture, however, is linked to mental illness, which I have come to distrust as
mainly psychobabble generated by a profession of educated mental health practitioners
operating beyond good sense with impunity.
Mental
health has become iatrogenic as the cure is often worse than
the imagined disease.
This
has led me to ask the question:
How
is it possible to be sane in a culture that denies its madness while being as irrational
or wacko as is our own?
THE
GENESIS OF A BELIEF SYSTEM AND ITS DIFFERENCE WITH BELIEVING
In
pondering this dichotomous riddle, I’ve come face to face with my
Judaic-Christian culture, and now realize it survived best in the past when its
leaders were blessed with madness.
This
is evident in my reading of book after book about early Christianity, a project
launched in the 1970s after returning from South Africa, and one that continues
to this day.
What
I think these Christian scholars miss is that they see themselves outside the
culture from which their scholarship springs.
Consequently, no matter how vigorous the research, contamination permeates
the works.
I
am again talking about madness and sanity.
A
sane perspective dominates the scholarship of these studied perceptions when it was
madness that gave birth to our Judaic-Christian culture 2,000 years ago, a
madness that has become critical, indeed, fundamental to our survival
notwithstanding Western Civilization’s emphasis on its sanity at the expense of
this madness.
For
the past few years, I have been reading these scholars on the early Christian
Church, trying to resolve the dichotomy between what Jesus said, what he preached and
believed to be his mission, which has not survived, and how diametrically opposed
to this theology was that of Paul’s, which not only has survived but has become
the essence of Christianity, be it Catholic, Protestant, Greek or Russian Orthodox.
Consequently,
for all intent and purposes, there is no Jesus in Christianity, only Paul and
the Jesus that he has created.
My
sense is that both Jesus and Paul demonstrated a kind of madness that was
essential to their brand of leadership.
Jesus
was a Jew, thought like a Jew, behaved like a Jew, and the parameters of his
mission were in the strictest sense in the context of that Judaism.
There is no evidence anywhere that Jesus thought
beyond that particular faith and culture, therefore, that he thought beyond anything other than
continuing in the tradition of the prophecies of the Old Testament.
Paul,
on the other hand, was a diaspora Jew and reared in the tradition of Hellenistic
Judaism as a Roman citizen.
What
Paul possessed was not Palestinian Judaism but the eclectic madness of
Hellenism, Judaism and Romanism in the crucible of an irrational temperament as
his mission went beyond Judaic culture and embraced the much larger Gentile
world.
It
was this cauldron of emotional fervor that pulsates through Paul’s “Letters to the Romans,” the only extant
record of the first century of the Common Era (C.E.), Anno Domini (A.D.) or
Christian Era (C.E.), whatever you prefer.
The
New Testament is the compilation of an oral history in which there is no
definitive proof of a single author.
While beautiful as it reads, it cannot be verified historically except
in a most liberal interpretation of scripture.
Given
this, Christianity like other belief systems has been motivated to pursue war,
carnage, torture and annihilation of nonbelievers simply because they chose to
believe in different things and in different ways.
No
culture escapes this madness. It is part
of its genius.
People
need their myths and illusions to cope with reality as the mechanism of
survival, while zealots of any belief system have little tolerance for either
nonbelievers or other belief systems. It
is this and for no other reason that religion has gotten a bad name.
Ergo,
the question of whether God is dead or not is irrelevant. As long as MAN IS on this planet as a functioning human being, God exists. God is part of the madness of man’s sanity.
As
I read what Jesus is alleged to have said, it seems to be highly rational, but
with the madness of the idea that he was the Son of God and the Son of
Man.
Madness,
you see, is quite engaging. It is
essential to our leaders. Today we call such
madness charisma. It is the magnet that
takes us out of ourselves in order for us to see into ourselves.
This
charisma comes in many forms. Abraham
Lincoln had it in his quietude and relentless determination to preserve the
nation as a whole. A melancholy man, Lincoln
used his madness to get beyond the biases and conceits of the people of his
time, and for that we Americans celebrate him to this day.
Look
at leaders of any period, and were it not for madness, they would not be
remembered. Too much sanity produced a General
George McClellan of Lincoln’s time and a Jimmy Carter of ours.
Without
the spur of madness, Prime Minister Winston Churchill could never have gotten
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt off the dime and engaged. People point to December 7, 1941, and the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, but that was anticlimactic as historians have
shown.
If
you think I exaggerate, read biographies of Napoleon, Stalin, Hitler, Lincoln
and Churchill, indeed, of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Gandhi and many
others. I assure you if they have
penetrated your consciousness it was with their madness, not their sanity.
BI-POLAR
NATION?
Plato
understood the importance of madness, and in his writing he described what
today we might call our “bi-polar” nation, for this madness is apparent in our creativity
on the one hand, and in our paranoid leadership on the other.
A
polarized culture, such as ours, fails to understand the fundamental importance
of madness as a bridge to its sanity.
Evidence
that we have misconstrued this polarization is seen in the anesthetizing of our
youth when these young people show signs of creativity and/or leadership, that is, a difference with the herd.
Alas,
when people, young or old move away from the herd, we dispense a retinue of prescriptions
of mind numbing drugs to reduce them to manageable complacent zombies.
These
remedies are not dispensed by criminals but by mental health professionals who
fail to understand the importance of our delicate brain chemistry between
sanity and madness.
Without
this madness complemented by sanity, there would be no science; no religion,
and no culture to speak of.
Fortunately,
sanity and madness is working overtime in us all, as it is part of our survival
mechanism.
CAMPAIGN
POLITICS & QUADRENNIAL MADNESS
Should
you question the legitimacy of my thesis here, observe presidential politics
over the next two years in pursuit of the party nomination for the Presidency
of the United States.
Aspiring
candidates of the Democratic and Republican Party will display bi-polar behavior
to the umpteenth degree and no one will accuse them of being smitten with attention
deficit disorders, which they will clearly resemble.
Instead
these aspiring politicians will medicate us with their brand of madness to
induce amnesia if not catatonia as they intoxicate us with the absurdity of
their pontifications.
The
“Theatre of the Absurd” will be on
display with candidates without a prayer of winning the nomination spending millions
of dollars gratuitously and maddeningly to advertisers on television and millions
more traveling to every nook and cranny of the nation attempting to cajole the
populace to take them seriously as candidates in this climate of quadrennial
madness.
But
rest assured, the one that will succeed will not be the sane one, but the mad
one with the most convincing lies.
* * *
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