I am not a doctor. I am not a psychiatrist or psychologist. I am a pastor who has enjoyed a life of searching the Word of God, the Creator of all life, and seeing it’s positive effect in my life and in the lives of others. There is an extremely logical and rational conclusion of the previous statements: to ignore or neglect or reject the Word of the Creator must result in a faulty approach to facing the issues of life.
I was with a group of pastors recently when there was a conversation about PTSD. I hear of PTSD frequently, but know very little about it. It is usually mentioned in connection with military people, although in this pastoral group it was in the context of first-responders. About the same time as this conversation I was reading Jeremiah and Lamentations. The thought occurred to me: Jeremiah was a candidate for PTSD. I wondered if Lamentations might be helpful for people with this disorder.
What is PTSD? Here’s the doctors I tend to trust, the folks from Mayo Clinic. It’s from their web page.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental health condition that's caused by an extremely stressful or terrifying event — either being part of it or witnessing it. Symptoms may include flashbacks, nightmares, severe anxiety and uncontrollable thoughts about the event.
Most people who go through traumatic events may have a hard time adjusting and coping for a short time. But with time and by taking good care of themselves, they usually get better. If the symptoms get worse, last for months or years, and affect their ability to function daily, they may have PTSD.
Getting treatment after PTSD symptoms arise can be very important to ease symptoms and help people function better.
Further “Googling” revealed a fairly consistent pattern for identifying if a person has PTSD. There are four categories of symptoms, and if you have some experience of each of these categories you have PTSD. The four are: 1) Intrusive memories (regularly reliving the traumatic experience); 2) Avoidance (altering your life so as to avoid situations that bring back the event); 3) Negative changes in thinking and mood (ongoing fear or blame, detachment from friends, etc.); 4) Changes in physical and emotional reactions (trouble sleeping, irritability, fast heartbeat). Again, this all came from the Mayo web page. I saw others that were similar so I take this as a common understanding of a very real problem.
The next question is, did Jeremiah have a traumatic event as spoken of by the medical people. Today’s passages from the Psalms can help us here. Jeremiah was not the only one to see what happened to Jerusalem in 587BC. The Psalmists also saw this, as their words indicate. I can’t tell you whether Asaph or Jeremiah had PTSD, in other words whether they experienced continual symptoms. But I can say that they saw something deeply traumatic. The actual day of the destruction of the temple is remembered today in Israel as Tisha B’Av. It is a day of mourning for Jews, of course. It is not just that Asaph and Jeremiah saw people killed mercilessly, and their sacred city and temple destroyed. They also saw something that challenged their very concept as the people of God. They were part of a chosen people, special to the LORD in certain ways, and now it seemed that all that was gone.
You might imagine a house fire where all of one’s connections with the past, with pictures and memoirs and special knick-knacks destroyed. Except multiply it by a very large number and you might get a thought about what these people experienced at the hand of the Babylonians. The holy city and the temple of Solomon destroyed, the Davidic king’s descendants killed and the king blinded and taken to Babylon to die. Not to mention the raping and killing of people they knew and loved. As we said, we do have candidates for PTSD.