Along with other religious leaders, Moses, Jesus, Joseph Smith?
Isn't this a more likely explanation than divine intervention?
A man in his late 20s with paranoid schizophrenia
explained during a neurological evaluation that he
could read minds and that for years he had heard voices
revealing things about friends and strangers alike. He
believed he was selected by God to provide guidance
for mankind. Antipsychotic medications prescribed by
his psychiatrists diminished these abilities and reduced
the voices, and therefore he would not take them. He
asked, “How do you know the voices aren’t real?” “How
do you know I am not The Messiah?” He affirmed, “God
and angels talked to people in the Bible.”
Later, we reflected on what he had said. He raised
poignant questions that are rarely discussed in academic
medicine. Every day, physicians, nurses, psychologists,
and social workers alike encounter and care for people
who experience psychotic symptoms. About 1% of emergency room visits and 0.5% of all primary care visits in
the United States are related to psychotic symptoms.1,2
As many as 60% of those with schizophrenia have
religious grandiose delusions consisting of believing
they are a saint, God, the devil, a prophet, Jesus, or some
other important person.3 Diminished insight about
having a mental disorder is part and parcel of the
condition, occurring in 30%–50% of persons with schizophrenia.4 How do we explain to our patients that their
psychotic symptoms are not supernatural intimations
when our civilization recognizes similar phenomena
in revered religious figures?
Psychiatry Online
If Jesus, the Second Comming, showed up today. Would he be put on Meds?
To me, this speaks volumes of an overzealous medical field.
Doctors and nurses ought only to prescribe medication when a person is a danger to themselves or other people.
Let's look at both leaders in their historical context, shall we?
Jesus was at best, suicidal. But we aren't even sure of that, or just his desire to confront Rome. For you see, at the time, Rome was an absolute power, a dictatorship that was crucifying people who didn't get with the program. No, this wasn't some spevial punishment for Jesus. They did this for anyone that pissed them off. The thing is, if Jesus was in fact the Son of God, the meds probably wouldn't even work.
But he never claimed to be the Son of God. His followers claimed it of him. He said his Father was God, but everyone's Father in Judaism is God. He said he was the Son of Man, but this passage comes from the Valley of Dry Bones. Basically Jesus would pass review for psychosis with flying colors, particularly because he was a normal person living in an abnormal time. A time of Roman oppression. Yet he handled this with far less fear or violence than even a regular person.
Now let's look at Muhammad. You ever heard the expression, "And let not it be said, and to your shame, that all was beautiful before you came"? Well uhhhh, Muhammad grew up a trader for like his father-in-law or uncle or whatever, and lived at a time when Mecca was a haven for religious tolerance. This town had Christians, Zoroastrians, Jews, polytheists, and Muhammad's family were believed to be uncategorized monotheists. All of these were living peacefully together when this man declares that he was on this mountain and some angel appeared to him. When look at context, suddenly notions of schizophrenia disappear. His story is nearly the same as Joseph Smith, it's the claim of a person who wants to use religion ad a tool for power. He claims this for 15 years, making a nuisance in this tolerant town, before they finally have enough and throw him out. Then he finds people who angry, desparate, and greedy in Medina and quickly convinces them that his religion will allow them to do violence, to raid from others, and to have many wives and young as possible if they follow him. Neither man is schizophrenic, but Muhammad woyld be a good candidate for dangerous psychopathy, the sort of person who would hurt people minding their own business. I'd strongly recommend a lobotomy.