I have noted before that fundamentalists get all worked
up about evolution and how it contradicts their inerrant interpretation of the
Bible, while they do not seem at all upset by medical science and psychology,
which contradict their fundamentalist assumptions even more. I wish now to
present some actual data to back up this claim.
The Gospels of the New Testament contain numerous
accounts of Jesus healing the sick and
casting out demons, sometimes simultaneously. In several places (Matthew 10:1;
10:8; 23:24; Mark 1:32; Luke 6:17; 8:2) the writers describe Jesus as healing
diseases, pains, demoniacs, epileptics, and paralytics—demons are thrown right
into the list of diseases. In many cases, but not all, demon possession is
indicated as the cause of disease. This being the case, creationists should
reject medical science which attributes contagious diseases to germs and other
diseases to things that have gone wrong inside the body. They have not,
however, done so.
What I wish to do now is to provide a complete list of
Jesus’ healings, and indicate which ones were and were not attributed to demon
possession. In order to do so, I have tried to determine which of the parallel
Gospel accounts refer to the same event, so as not to double-count them. And
here they are (demonic events in bold).
|
Event
|
Matthew
|
Mark
|
Luke
|
John
|
1
|
Healing a leper
|
8:1
|
1:40
|
5:12
|
|
2
|
Centurion’s servant
|
8:5
|
|
7:1
|
|
3
|
Peter’s mother-in-law
|
8:14
|
1:29
|
4:38
|
|
4
|
Same day:
demoniacs
|
8:16
|
|
|
|
5
|
Gadarene swine
|
8:28
|
5:1
|
8:26
|
|
6
|
Forgave the paralytic
|
9:2
|
2:1
|
5:17
|
|
7
|
Resurrected ruler’s daughter
|
9:18
|
5:21
|
8:40
|
|
8
|
Woman with hemorrhage
|
9:20
|
5:24
|
8:43
|
|
9
|
Two blind men
|
9:27
|
|
|
|
10
|
Dumb demoniac
|
9:32
|
|
11:14
|
|
11
|
Man with withered hand
|
12:10
|
3:1
|
6:6
|
|
12
|
Blind dumb
demoniac
|
12:22
|
|
|
|
13
|
Canaanite woman
with demon daughter
|
15:21
|
7:24
|
|
|
14
|
Epileptic boy
falling into fire
|
17:14
|
9:14
|
9:37
|
|
15
|
Blind men near Jericho
|
20:30
|
10:46
|
|
|
16
|
Demoniac near
Capernaum
|
|
1:21
|
4:31
|
|
17
|
Deaf dumb man, Decapolis
|
|
|
7:31
|
|
18
|
Blind man at Bethsaida
|
|
8:22
|
|
9:1
|
19
|
Young man in his funeral
|
|
|
7:11
|
|
20
|
Another woman with flux
|
|
|
13:10
|
|
21
|
Man with dropsy
|
|
|
14:1
|
|
22
|
Ten lepers
|
|
|
17:11
|
|
23
|
Official’s son
|
|
|
|
4:46
|
24
|
Lame man at Bethsaida
|
|
|
|
5:2
|
I cannot be sure of some of the classifications; item 23
might be the same as item 2, but I have erred on the side of caution in favor
of fundamentalists; item 2 refers to a servant, item 23 to a son, which most of
us believe could just be a garbled transmission of the account, but fundamentalists
do not believe such a thing is possible in the Bible. I have omitted the famous
account of Lazarus, since it was considered an example of a resurrection, not a
healing.
The point here is that seven of the 24 healings were
specifically described—in all the parallel accounts available—as the casting
out of demons. This is 29 percent. If you count the stories separately, 14 out
of 46 involve demons, which is 30 percent. That is, in roughly one-third of the
healings, exorcism was involved. In one of them (14), clear symptoms of
epilepsy are described.
And yet biology curricula at taxpayer-supported colleges
and universities never include demonology. Never. Certainly not one-third of
the courses, or one-third of any course, or even a single mention. Nor do
medical schools. How can creationists put up with this? Why doesn’t the
Oklahoma legislature pass bills that require OU Health Sciences Center to at
least include demonology as one possibility to be mentioned in their courses
about infectious disease and endocrinology and neurology? And psychology! Let’s
not even get into psychology! All the things the Bible attributes to the
spirit, psychologists attribute to the brain!
Lest you think that I looked through the Gospels just to
find ammunition against creationists, let me assure you that I looked through
them (I have read them several times) with great enjoyment. When I read about
the life and sayings of Jesus, I am really uplifted. His words, even though
processed by oral transmission for over two centuries before being written
down, are astonishing and refreshing—in marked contrast to the grim negativity
of the gun-toting modern fundamentalists, whom I believe would drive Jesus out
of their churches. Maybe the fundamentalists should actually read Jesus’ words,
which flatly contradict most of their political opinions.
You might want to read the Gospels. At least, how can you
resist reading about the woman with the demon daughter?
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