Body: | Psychiatry is a vicious enemy of Christianity and the Bible.
You are a sinner and fully responsible for your actions. (2 Corinthians
5:10)
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Psychiatry is Anti-Christian
Psychiatry is Atheistic
Psychiatry is Humanistic
"For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may be recompensed for his deeds in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad." (2 Corinthians 5:10)
Introduction:
1. See also: "Not guilty for reasons of insanity" plea.
2. The mental health industry has widely promoted the false idea
that bad and undesirable behaviours associated with insanity are not due to
personal fault, but brain malfunction, while praising the same individual
for good and desirable behaviours that have their origin in freewill.
a. The hypocrisy and scientific contradiction of no fault bad
behaviours attributed to biology vs. meritorious good behaviours which are
never attributed to brain function, but freewill, should sound the alarm of
junk science.
b. "the psychiatrically correct and compassionate concept of
mental illness has been that it is a "no-fault" disease. Morally, the
doctrine means that if a person succeeds in life, he deserves credit for
his achievement; if he fails, he must not be blamed because he is a victim
of mental illness. Medically, it means bracketing mental diseases with
bodily diseases and declaring them "no-fault diseases."" (Coercion as Cure,
Thomas Szasz, 2007 AD, p 36)
3. The historical foundation of psychiatry detaching personal
responsibility from the sinful actions of a person had their origin as far
back as Johann Heinroth (1818 AD).
a. Heinroth takes the unusual position that although man becomes
mad on his own free will choices, once full insanity has set in, the man
becomes "unfree" and is no longer to be held responsible for his crimes.
This is the earliest concept of the insanity plea in Germany. About 50
years later, the insanity plea was first used in England. "But we must not
forget that in a true mental disturbance each of these disorders must occur
to an extent equivalent to complete, permanent loss of freedom ... For the
moment at which unfreedom makes its appearance and clearly manifests itself
by unnatural, i.e., unreasonable, actions, behavior, words, glances, or
gestures, that is the moment of this procreation. From this moment on, the
man has lost claim to the kingdom of freedom, to the kingdom of the
spirits, at least for as long as he remains in this cycle. He is an
automaton: his thinking, his sensation, his activity, proceed in a
mechanical manner, no matter whether it appears as if they were determined
by himself. They are in fact determined by urgent impulses only, if they
are controlled at all." He argues that the murderer who is insane cannot be
held responsible for reason of insanity: "A murderous or a predatory
attack, or a public insult and abuse can set a man entirely beside himself;
and this is confusion in the highest degree. ... This condition is unfree,
and a man cannot be held responsible for the consequences thereof, except
if it can be proved that the condition was self-inflicted, or else that he
could have prevented it from arising. ... The state of a compulsive urge
occurs if somebody, without being confused, is still unable to resist the
urge to commit an illegal action. The urge itself is called compulsive,
since it is not voluntary but is guided by a compulsive stimulus. Heinroth
states that the mad doctor alone determines if a person is "unfree" and can
invoke the insanity plea. "This will be easy for the physician to determine
once he has observed the type and the degree of the unfree state." Heinroth
has 9 type of insanity, all of which are unfree: "Insanity, Dementia, Rage,
Melancholia, Idiocy, Apathy, Insane melancholia, Confusion, Timidity"
Finally, Heinroth employs all the forms of "moral treatment" that all the
other mad houses were using. He gives great details on how to run an asylum
and specifies a building that could be viewed in hind sight as a torture
chamber: "A special building must be set aside for the physical treatment
of the mentally disturbed. This building should have a special bathing
section, with all kinds of baths, showers, douches, and immersion vessels.
It must also have a special correction and punishment room with all the
necessary equipment, including the Cox swing (or, better, rotating
machine), Reil's fly-wheel, pulleys, punishment chair, Langermann's cell,
etc." (Textbook of Disturbances of Mental Life and Soul, Johann Heinroth,
1818 AD)
4. "An 1846 caricature by Honore Daumier (1808-1879) is an early
example of the commonsense insight into the truth about psychiatry as
excuse- making and social control. The scene is a prison cell. The unkempt
prisoner sits on a cot, his dandified lawyer standing before him. "What
really bothers me," says the prisoner, "is that I have been accused of
twelve robberies." "Twelve of them," replies the lawyer. "So much the
better. I will plead monomania." This joke has since become the everyday
reality of our age." (Psychiatry: The Science of Lies, Thomas Szasz, 2008
AD, p 18)
5. "Krafft-Ebing (1840-1902) was an early practitioner of the art
of transforming, with the aid of Latin and a medical diploma, behaviors
considered sinful into sicknesses." (Psychiatry: The Science of Lies,
Thomas Szasz, 2008 AD, p 9)
6. Much later, Freud blamed sinful behaviour, outside of
freewill, on the unconscious mind. Even those who were faking mental
illness were merely doing what their unconscious mind was forcing them to
do. So even someone who is knowingly and deliberately faking an illness to
avoid service in the war was viewed by Freud as not being responsible for
his actions.
a. In Freud's view the conscious mind was merely a puppet and the
unconscious mind was the strings.
b. "The soldier in whom these affective motives were very
powerful and clearly conscious would . . . have been obliged to desert or
pretend to be ill. Only the smallest proportion of war neurotics, however,
were malingerers; the emotional impulses which rebelled in them . . . were
operative in them without becoming conscious to them." (Sigmund Freud,
Memorandum on the Electrical Treatment of War Neurotics, 1920 AD, SE,
17:213)
c. "By creating imaginary entities-"id," "ego,"
"superego"-Freud alienates us from the simple truth that mental illnesses
are endogenic (self-caused) phenomena that belong in the same class as do
other medicalized endogenic phenomena, such as malingering and murder, and
differ radically from exogenic (externally caused) phenomena, such as
malaria and melanoma. Promising to demystify mental illnesses, Freud
deepens the mystery by attributing the "etiology" of the "illness" to the
patient's "unconscious mind." The result is a split between acts and
agents, creating, as Sartre aptly puts it, lies without liars. (see:
Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness: An Essay on Phenomenological
Ontology, p 51)" (Psychiatry: The Science of Lies, Thomas Szasz, 2008 AD, p
51)
7. Psychiatrists do not have the power to thwart the judgement of
God and hand out "Get out of Judgement, Free" community chest cards in
their little game.
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A. Freedom comes from confession and personal accountability:
Listening to God. You certainly ought to "listen to your feelings"
and be honest about them. "When a person assumes responsibility for his
feelings," writes psychiatrist David Viscott, "he assumes responsibility
for his world." But don't stop there: Take time to listen to God, and
receive His words of encouragement. (W. W. Wiersbe, Be obedient 1991, Gen
15:1)
"G. L. Harrington, in a V. A. hospital in Los Angeles, for example,
worked with 210 male patients in Building 206. Building 206 was the end of
the line. All hope for these men had been given up. Many could not even
take care of their most elemental needs. Previously there had been an
average of only two releases from Building 206 each year, but after the
first year of Harrington's responsibility program, 75 men were released
from the hospital, and the next year he predicted that 200 would be
released-that is, almost a complete turnover. Glasser, in the Ventura State
School for Girls in California, showed an 80 per cent success with hardened
sociopaths in a structured total responsibility program. By success,
Glasser means no return and no future violations of the law. This writer
was able to view at first hand the quick and dramatic results of Mowrer's
program in Illinois." (Competent to council, Jay Adams, p15)
"Biologically based brain diseases are convenient for families and
practitioners alike. It is no fault insurance against personal
responsibility. We are just helplessly caught up in a swirl of brain
pathology for which no one, except DNA, is responsible. Now, to begin with,
anything that has an anatomically defined specific brain pathology becomes
the province of neurology (syphilis is an excellent example). So, to be
consistent with this "brain disease" view all the major psychiatric
disorders would become the territory of our neurologic colleagues. Without
having surveyed them." (L.R. Mosher, Psychiatrist, resignation letter from
the American Psychiatric Association, 1998)
B. Psychiatry blames everyone except the sinner:
Psychiatry's practice of blaming others for our actions and rejection of personal accountability is opposite to Christianity
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"I went to my psychiatrist to be psychoanalyzed To find out why I
killed the cat and blacked my husband's eyes. He laid me on a downy couch
to see what he could find, And here is what he dredged up from my
subconscious mind: When I was one, my mommie hid my dolly in a trunk, And
so it follows naturally that I am always drunk. When I was two, I saw my
father kiss the maid one day, And that is why I suffer now from
kleptomania. At three, I had the feeling of ambivalence toward my brothers,
And so it follows naturally I poison all my lovers. But I am happy; now
I've learned the lesson this has taught; That everything I do that's wrong
is someone else's fault." (Anna Russell, folk song, "Jolly Old Sigmund
Freud")
"But MPD [Multiple Personality Disorder, ie. Sybil] was not the only
victim-making technology of this retooled industry. Other formats emerged,
all with an underlying framework that defined the patient as good but
damaged by trauma and therefore a victim in need of the psychologist's
help, and someone else as bad, a perpetrator, an enemy. Whether it was an
alcoholic parent, an abusive spouse, a perverted teacher or doctor, a rude
store clerk or an annoying or harassing colleague, the patient was always
the innocent victim; the other was the malevolent cause." (Manufacturing
Victims, Dr. Tana Dineen, 2001, p 260)
"typical Mental Health organization propaganda: "Sympathetic
understanding, the kind you give to a person when he is sick with a
physical illness" is what the mentally ill person must have... You make
allowances because you know he's sick, that he can't help his sickness,
that he needs your sympathy and understanding. The person with a mental
problem is also sick and most of the time he can't help it either." (Harry
Milt, Director of Public Information for the National Association for
Mental Health, in a pamphlet entitled "How to Deal With Mental Problems,")
"Thus when we read in the paper that the alcoholic, the rapist or
vandal . . . will be given "psychiatric care," we are assured that the
problem is being effectively dealt with and we dismiss it from our minds. I
contend that we have no right to this easy absolution from responsibility."
(Dr. H. J. Eysenck, 1n Time Magazine, February 14, 1964, p. 43.)
"Psychiatrists have been trying ... to dull, if not actually
extract, the teeth of the law-and this is on the distinctively Freudian
assumption that it is entirely natural for the criminal to act as he does
and quite unreasonable for society to make him stand trial for being his
antisocial self. (Richard T. LaPiere," (Psychiatry and Responsibility,
1962), p. 80.)
"First of all, there is little you can do as ministers for people in
a mental hospital. Secondly, what you can do is support the patient's right
to feel injured by others. Thirdly, it is important to understand that in a
mental institution people with guilt no longer are subjected to rebuke from
others outside, the pressure is off, and in this way they quietly lose
their guilt and get well. Fourthly, we must consider people in mental
hospitals not as violators of conscience but as victims of their
conscience. Finally, when we look at their erratic behavior, it seems to be
sin, but it isn't; the patient is not really responsible for his actions.
He can't help what he's doing; he's sick Often he blames himself for what
he can't help, for what isn't his fault, and this is a cause of his
problems. Consequently bad behavior as blameworthy is taboo in a mental
hospital. The usual religious approach of responsibility, guilt, confession
and forgiveness is no good here. The patients' conscience are already too
severe. These people are morally neutral persons, and all we can do is be
ventilators for them." (Mental Health Institute for pastors." The summary
address of the chaplain from a state mental hospital, 1965)
"the therapist's attempts to excuse the patient's negative and
undesirable behavior on the ground that it was determined by the past and
so he had no reason to feel guilty about it" (Lawrence LeShan, "Changing
Trends in Psychoanalytically Oriented Psychotherapy," Mental Hygiene, July
1962, pp. 454-463).
C. Bible Verses that we must take responsibility for our own sins through
confession:
Blame shifting was man's first response to sin: Adam blames Eve, Eve
blamed the serpent. None said, Its my fault!
"The man said, "The woman whom You gave to be with me, she gave
me from the tree, and I ate." Then the Lord God said to the woman,
"What is this you have done?" And the woman said, "The serpent
deceived me, and I ate."" (Genesis 3:12-13)
Aaron claimed the golden calf just popped out of the fire all by
itself!
"Aaron said, "Do not let the anger of my lord burn; you know the
people yourself, that they are prone to evil. "For they said to me,
'Make a god for us who will go before us; for this Moses, the man who
brought us up from the land of Egypt, we do not know what has become of
him.' "I said to them, 'Whoever has any gold, let them tear it
off.' So they gave it to me, and I threw it into the fire, and out came
this calf."" (Exodus 32:22-24)
Saul said the people made him sin. He denied personal responsibility
and he was removed as king:
"Then Saul said to Samuel, "I did obey the voice of the Lord,
and went on the mission on which the Lord sent me, and have brought back
Agag the king of Amalek, and have utterly destroyed the Amalekites. "But
the people took some of the spoil, sheep and oxen, the choicest of the
things devoted to destruction, to sacrifice to the Lord your God at
Gilgal." Samuel said, "Has the Lord as much delight in burnt offerings
and sacrifices As in obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold, to obey is
better than sacrifice, And to heed than the fat of rams. "For rebellion
is as the sin of divination, And insubordination is as iniquity and
idolatry. Because you have rejected the word of the Lord, He has also
rejected you from being king."" (1 Samuel 15:20-23)
"For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that
each one may be recompensed for his deeds in the body, according to what he
has done, whether good or bad. " 2 Corinthians 5:10
Apostle Peter was condemned for hypocrisy:
"But when Cephas came to Antioch, I opposed him to his face,
because he stood condemned. For prior to the coming of certain men from
James, he used to eat with the Gentiles; but when they came, he began to
withdraw and hold himself aloof, fearing the party of the circumcision. The
rest of the Jews joined him in hypocrisy, with the result that even
Barnabas was carried away by their hypocrisy." (Galatians 2:11-13)
Conclusion:
1. The psychiatry's industry pattern of denying personal
responsibility is purely satanic. It is opposite to what God commands.
2. Only when we make confession of our own sins can we be free
from the guilt.
3. See also: "Not guilty for reasons of insanity" plea.
By Steve Rudd: Contact the author for comments, input or corrections.
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