On disability and
ableism.
The Gospel passage set
for Holy Communion today is Mark 9.41-50. But in order to understand them, we
need to look at the chapter as a whole. As always, much is lost in translation.
The chapter begins with
Jesus going off with three of his disciples. When they return to the others,
they find a father who has brought his son to be healed. His son has a spirit
that causes him to be mute, and to experience seizures marked by foaming at the
mouth, shaking, and rigid limbs. Mark does not record this as demonisation, but
as a characteristic of the child’s own human spirit, and Jesus later confirms
this to his disciples (who have assumed that it was a demonic issue and had
failed to address it) saying that this condition runs in families, and cannot
be addressed by any means, if not by prayer.
When Jesus asks the
father for more information, he learns that the condition has often caused the
boy to fall into fire or water. When Jesus speaks, with authority, to the
condition, calling this part of the child’s breath out from him, the boy falls
into another, severe, seizure, so much so that he appears to onlookers to have
been left dead; but then he comes round. He will not fit again.
Following this episode,
the disciples argue among themselves as to which of them is the greatest. Jesus
slaps them down (technical term).
Then John seeks
approval by informing Jesus that they had seen someone casting out demons in
Jesus’ name, but had told him to stop, because he wasn’t one of the Twelve.
This is the immediate context of the verses set for today. Jesus again slaps
them down.
Jesus states that it if
anyone, by their actions, scandalises those seeking to follow him (are you
listening, John?) it would be better (beautiful, honourable, praiseworthy: much
lost in translation) for them to have a millstone tied around their neck and be
thrown into the sea (to lose control of their limbs and fall into deep water,
as had happened many times to the boy they had recently encountered).
Jesus then goes on to
state three times that those who are disabled (with impairments to arms, legs,
and sight) and who live lives that display their trust in the beauty and honour
of God the King (so, not simply by virtue of having a disability) are beautiful
and worthy of honour and praise; in marked contrast to those who are
able-bodied, and who, by their scandalous way of life (so, not all able-bodied
people) demonstrate that they deserve being thrown out into Jerusalem’s rubbish
dump (Gehenna) where waste and dead animals and sometimes people were burned in
fires that were kept alight continuously (again, note the connection to the boy
with seizures).
This has little,
directly, to do with a post-mortem hell, though Gehenna is also the sight of
divine judgement of the unrighteous at the resurrection of the dead. It has
more, directly, to say about our attitude towards disability and our
internalised ableism.
There is not only room
for disability within the vision of the kingdom of God, but a place of honour.
There is no room for
the idea that being able-bodied is an indicator of divine approval. Indeed,
those who are able-bodied (and here we might add all forms of body that are more
enabled in our society than others, such as male bodies, white bodies,
heterosexual bodies, young bodies) to be aware of their scandalous attitudes
and behaviour, that cause others to fall away from following Jesus.
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