Darkness is My Only Companion, Kathryn Greene-McCreight, (Grand Rapids: Brazos press), 176 pages, (Currently £7.91 from Amazon) – review copy courtesy of Brazos Press, for which thanks.
When Martin Luther said ‘Affliction is the best book in my library’, he wasn’t suggesting it was the most enjoyable book to read, but that it was the one from which he learned most. The word ‘affliction’ is now a bit old fashioned, and perhaps not even politically correct as a description of the conditions many people have to learn to live with. That Kathryn Greene-McCreight begins her story with Psalm 88, a Psalm of Lament, she acknowledges, that the condition with which she struggles, bipolar disorder, is an affliction. The title of her book is directly taken from Psalm 88, Darkness is My Only Companion. Throughout the book these words are a recurring motif as she reflects theologically and courageously on the kaleidoscope of dark and glittering colours that have made up her inner life and determined the quality and direction of her outer life.
Bipolar affective disorder, formerly called manic depressive syndrome, is not simply the swing between chronic sadness and temporary elation. It is a profoundly complex mental illness in which several factors are implicated, including neurobiology, chemical imbalance and genetic considerations. Those who live with this condition and those who care for them are aware of how far this condition reaches into the deepest places of human personality, often with disruptive and anguished consequences. That is what makes this book such an important contribution to pastoral theology. This is an honest report from someone whose illness has taken them to those darker more distant corners of human experience, when the impact of the condition seriously challenges those powerful instincts for life, security and the daylight of ‘normality’. And it is written by an Episcopal priest who is a scholar theologian with a PhD from Yale, married, a theological educator, a mother, and thus self-evidently able to include in her life much that would be expected in those without such a serious illness.
But the book is written as a Christian response to mental illness, and as a description of the realities and consequences of such a potentially disruptive condition. She takes on the glib irresponsible (and pastorally insensitive) affirmation of the perennially cheery Christian. And when various well meaning studies on how spirituality reduces the incidence of depression are published by a church seizing on apologetic ammunition because ‘religious people are less depressed, less anxious, and less suicidal than nonreligious people’, she becomes rightly angry and impatient. But her annoyance is channelled again and again in this book into constructive reflection on what it is like to have a mental illness, and also be a person of faith. Here is her own starting point for going public on what it is like to cling to faith in the loving reality of God when her inner world is filled with emotional forces that threaten her very sense of being?
Often those Christians who are depressed or otherwise mentally ill…feel guilty on top of being depressed, because they understand their depression, their lack of thankfulness, their desperation, to be a betrayal of God. For mentally ill Christians belief in God is no longer objective but becomes subjective, interiorised, and thereby drawn into the circle of doubt.
And the questions that arise from that circle of doubt are theological, personal, pastoral, and above all crucial, because in seeking to answer them, she is seeking an understanding of God, her faith, her illness and herself that will be to the benefit of the Body of Christ – within which all sorts and conditions of people are to be held, in a love that holds on even when we feel ourselves falling.
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