Friday, May 31, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 8)

 




This is a continuation of my critique of Mr. John MacArthur's "Anxiety-Free Living" sermons. This is not an attack on him personally. I greatly respect the man's bold stance against our culture and undying love for Jesus. However, I do not agree with what he is saying in these two sermons because he is trivializing the real struggles of people who suffer from mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders. My issue with his stance is that he has a huge influence on many people, but his views are very damaging. This is why I am critiquing his sermons. No Bible teacher is above criticism, no matter how famous they are. I would hope that if I ever get out of line someone would critique me. That is how we become better Bible expositors. The passage of Scripture that Mr. MacArthur is basing his two sermons on comes from Luke 12:22-34. In that passage, Jesus Christ is saying that we do not need to worry because God will always provide for us. The Lord beautifully uses the analogy of the birds and lilies, saying that they neither toil nor spin yet God feeds and takes care of them. Jesus tells us that we are much more valuable than they are, so this means God will definitely take care of us. I have no issue with Mr. MacArthur's interpretation of this text. God's sovereignty over creation will indeed provide for us. However, where I disagree with Mr. MacArthur is in fact that he thinks that anxiety disorders display a lack of trust in God's sovereignty. The truth is, that Christians can wholeheartedly trust in His sovereign care, yet they can still deal with panic attacks, PTSD, Social Anxiety, and other mental illnesses. The fact that many Christians still deal with those disorders is in no way a reflection of how much they trust God. 

The next part of his first sermon that I'd like to address comes toward the end. He says the following, 

If He gave you life, He will sustain that life and He will provide all you need if you continue to honor Him, right?  The Lord's providence in the food supply is staggering, isn't it really?  It's just staggering.  The variety is just beyond belief, abundant, boundless, self-perpetuating, renewable food supply.  There's more than enough potential for this planet to provide food for the whole world.  You say, "What about famine?"  Famine has nothing to do with the capability of this planet to produce.  It has to do with false religion, such as in India where they feed grain to rats and cows.  It has to do with war and social politics in Africa.  It has to do with communism where they tell people not to work as a way to protest against the people who rule over them and consequently they turn verdant fields into dust bowls.  It has to do with laziness.  It doesn't have to do with potential.  The earth is still filled with food.  God has created a boundless, boundless supply and He provides it for His faithful people.  That's why David said, "I've never seen the Lord's people begging bread."  If you belong to Him, He takes care of you until His work for you is finished.  In Psalm 34:10, "They who seek the Lord shall not be in want of any good thing.  Young lions lack and suffer hunger, but not those who seek the Lord."

First off, Mr. MacArthur is correct when he says that God will provide for us since He gave us life. Mr. MacArthur is correct when he says that the Lord's food supply is staggering and that God has more than enough resources to provide for our needs. The problem with what he is saying is the fact that he assumes that Christians who suffer from anxiety disorders are not "continuing to honor Him". Mr. MacArthur is basically assuming that any Christian who suffers from mental disorders, such as anxiety disorders, is not honoring the Lord. This is an especially heinous accusation because any Christian who trusts in God wholeheartedly, yet suffers from Panic attacks or PTSD, will begin to think that there is something wrong with them after hearing this sermon. Mr. MacArthur is basically saying that Christians who suffer from PTSD or Panic attacks really do have something deficient in them. He makes it seem so easy to just "turn off" PTSD, Panic Attacks, or even Social Anxiety. In reality, it is not as easy as he makes it seem to be. If it were that easy, then there would be no Christian who suffers from those disorders. The fact that there are millions of Christians worldwide who suffer from various mental illnesses is a testament to how difficult it is to "turn off" mental disorders. The truth is, that Christians can wholeheartedly trust in the Lord's sovereign care and still suffer from PTSD or Panic Attacks, and there is absolutely nothing wrong, or deficient, in those Christians. 

The next part of this sermon that I'd like to address is couple of paragraphs after the last one. He says the following, 

Third point, just introduce this, worry is a failure to understand divine privilege.  Worry is a failure to understand divine privilege.  Look at verse 25.  I'm just going to introduce this. This is very interesting.  "Which of you by being anxious can add a single cubit to his life span?"  You know what a cubit is?  It's a measurement from the tip of your elbow to the tip of your fingers.  Turns out to be about 18 inches. That's how they measured things, in cubits.  So is it saying which of you by being anxious can add 18 inches to your height?  I mean, who wants to go from 5'10" to 7'6"? There's no point in that.  And whoever thought you could do it by worrying?  No, He's not talking about that, he's using cubit simply as a metaphor for length and He's talking about the length of your life, not your height.  And He's simply saying, "Do you think by worrying you're going to add to your life span?"  This is a matter of divine privilege.

I wholeheartedly disagree with him concerning worry being a "failure to understand divine privilege". Sure, normal worry is a failure to understand God's sovereign care. However, please keep in mind what Mr. MacArthur is talking about here. The whole sermon is concerning anxiety disorders, such as PTSD, OCD, Panic Attacks, and Social Anxiety Disorder. Mr. MacArthur is essentially saying that any Christians who suffer from these disorders do not comprehend, nor do they trust God's sovereignty. In other words, if a Christian woman is raped and later experiences PTSD from her rape incident, Mr. MacArthur would say that she does not trust in God's sovereignty. If a man experiences Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and feels the need to perform certain rituals, then Mr. MacArthur would say that he does not trust in God's sovereignty. If a woman deals with Panic Attacks or Social Anxiety Disorder, Mr. MacArthur would say she fails to understand "divine privilege". The fact that Mr. MacArthur assumes that trusting in God's sovereignty would immediately shut off all of these disorders is evidence that he trivializes the real-life experiences of millions of Christians who truly suffer from these disorders. God is not honored when people like Mr. MacArthur stand in their pulpits and tell millions of Christians worldwide that they are second-rate citizens in the Kingdom of God just because they suffer from certain disorders. I do not believe that there is anything wrong with Christians who suffer from anxiety disorders, nor do I think they do not fully trust God's sovereign care. I believe Mr. MacArthur is setting up a false dichotomy when he insinuates that you either trust God or suffer from mental illnesses. The logical third option is that you can trust the Lord AND suffer from mental illnesses. However, while you suffer from mental illnesses, you can choose to glorify God amid your suffering. We all have our own crosses to bear in this life as we follow Jesus. Mental illness is merely one of the crosses that many Christians worldwide must bear. 

This concludes this segment of this series. Please stay tuned for Part 9. 

I would like to thank you all for taking the time to read this blog series. I hope that if you suffer from any mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders, you find this series greatly encouraging for you. You are not a second-rate citizen in God's kingdom. You are wonderfully created by God and you image the divine Creator. You do not need to think that there is anything wrong, or deficient, in you just because you suffer from mental illness. 

May the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all. Soli Deo Gloria! 

-David Lee Chu Sarchet 
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website



Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 7)

 



This is a continuation of my blog series where I critique John MacArthur's two sermons titled "Anxiety-Free Living". This is not a personal attack on Mr. MacArthur. I highly respect the man, despite my many disagreements with him. So, please do not take this series as my attack on him personally. I feel like these two sermons are harmful to any Christian who suffers from mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders. He trivializes anxiety disorders and he needs to be addressed since he has such a huge influence on people's lives. The passage Mr. MacArthur bases his sermons on comes from Luke 12:22-34. In that passage, Jesus tells us not to worry because God is sovereign and will care for us. Jesus uses the analogy of birds and lilies as examples of something insignificant that the Lord takes care of. Then, Jesus tells us we are more valuable than birds and lilies. This means we have even more reason to not worry if we truly trust in God's sovereign care. I do not have any issue with Mr. MacArthur's interpretation of this passage. But, what I do have a problem with is his misunderstanding of anxiety disorder. I will continue to make my point in this blog. The purpose of this blog, and this series as a whole, is to show any Christians who suffer from mental illnesses that not all Christians hold to these harmful views, and that they are not second-class citizens in the Kingdom of God. 

The next portion of this sermon I'd like to address is where Mr. MacArthur says the following, 

Secondly, worry fails to understand divine provision. It fails to understand divine provision.  Look at verse 24, "Consider the ravens (or crows) for they neither sow nor reap, and they have no storeroom nor barn and yet God feeds them.  How much more valuable you are than the birds?"  Now I think He picks birds because they're sort of, I guess, the most fragile. They just are here and kind of gone, but they are a great illustration of divine provision.  Do you know that every crow that's ever lived, every raven that's ever lived God wanted to live?  And for however long God wanted that bird to live, He provided its food.  And if God feeds birds that only in a very modest way, in a very limited way give Him glory, as any of His creation does, don't you think He's going to take care of making sure you can eat, who have the highest and noblest capacity to give Him glory?  This, by the way, is also in Matthew 6:26. It's an analogy from the lesser to the greater, common in Jewish teaching.  Consider the ravens...and I just think this is probably true. Anyway Jesus is teaching in the outdoors typically and wherever there was an agricultural society, wherever there was a field, there were crows.  That's why we have such a thing as a scarecrow.  And that was certainly a problem over there.  By the way, there were more birds in Israel, probably still true, than any place on the planet.  That is because the birds that migrate out of Northern Europe, out of all of Europe and even stretching into the Middle East and the East, if they want to migrate south in the cold winter, they have to go through Israel.  It's the largest area of bird migration on the planet because east is the desert, barren with little or nothing, and west is the Mediterranean. That little land is the most fertile soil in the world.  And it's always been a dense place for bird migration.  The Israeli Air Force has lost more pilots and more planes to birds, decapitating pilots by going through the cockpit because they're flying so fast into a flock, than they have in military combat.  And all the planes that go in and out of Ben Gurion and Tel Aviv where I've gone many times are having to deal with these birds, so they've done migration studies to determine what flocks come at what period of the year and how they come and where they come and where they land and they've relocated pools of water, etc., etc., to protect the jets because the birds get in the engines, and that's obviously a problem.  Massive place of bird migration which fits the biblical scene in Ezekiel and Revelation where the...after Armageddon the carnage of the dead bodies in that part of the world is so great, it says the birds come and eat them.  It may indicate that during that migration season is when that event might happen.  But anyway, birds were everywhere.  And Jesus probably said, you know, "Look at them. They don't sow and reap. You do.  You're out here slaving away, plowing, putting the seed in, watering the seed, coming along to the back-breaking work of harvest, they don't do that and they don't have a storeroom and they don't have a barn.  They're incapable, He's saying, of generating their own food supply.  They are totally dependent on God.  What is provided them by the Creator is all they have.  They don't have the ingenuity or the capability. They only have the capability and the instinct to pick up what's been provided for them.  That doesn't mean they don't work.  Did you ever see a bird lying on its side taking a nap?  I... Birds are in constant motion.

Now, I do not have an issue with Mr. MacArthur telling us that if we trusted in God's "divine priority" we should have no reason to worry. God's sovereign provision should indeed comfort us and give us peace of mind. However, Mr. MacArthur severely misunderstands anxiety disorders. When someone deals with OCD or PTSD, it is not because they have somehow forgotten God's "divine priority" in their lives. People with OCD feel like they have to perform certain rituals or something bad may happen. It is possible that if they believed in and trusted in God's sovereignty they would understand that their rituals have no control over what happens. But, when someone is dealing with OCD, it is not as simple as "just think about His sovereignty" and your OCD will go away. It is just not that easy. As for PTSD, when someone suffers from that, they keep reliving a past traumatic event. It does them no good to think about God's sovereignty when their mind keeps reminding them of their past trauma. Sure, the knowledge of  His sovereign care can help them eventually heal from their trauma, but their PTSD will not go away overnight. I am in complete agreement with Mr. MacArthur on the fact that the knowledge of God's sovereign provision can help people with anxiety disorders eventually cope and heal. However, I do not like how simple Mr. MacArthur makes it seem. When someone is dealing with an anxiety or panic disorder, mere platitudes to "not worry" or "not be afraid" simply do not work. These people need medication and counseling to help them overcome. 

The next portion of Mr. MacArthur's sermon that I'd like to address appears at the end of the next paragraph. He says the following, 

You don't need to spend your life worrying about whether you're going to have enough, whether you're going to have enough now, whether you're going to have enough when you retire, whether you're going to have enough in the future.  Your God promises to sustain you to the end of His purpose.  And by the way, when that comes, you want to leave anyway, right?  Thomas Watson said, "This life is like an inn. You spend a couple of nights there, but you never forget where your home is."  Paul said, "It's nice to be here, but I would rather depart and be with Christ, but I have to be here for your sake."  But he also knew when it was over and he said, "I've finished the course. I've kept the faith. I've run the race.” I'm ready to go. The time of my departure is at hand.  And until that day, He knew how to be in abundance and how to be in little and God supplied all his needs because He always does that for His own.

On the surface, this seems to be pretty good right? Mr. MacArthur is telling us that we do not need to worry about our lives because God will always take care of His own. I have no contention with this because I know that it is true. God will always take care of His own no matter what. My life is a perfect testament to that truth. However, Mr. MacArthur makes the fundamental mistake in thinking that if someone is dealing with an anxiety disorder they are worrying about whether or not they will have enough. Some people's anxiety does indeed cause them to worry about that. However, when it comes to anxiety and panic disorders, it is a lot more different than that. The person with PTSD is not worrying about whether he is going to have enough for the day. No, he is traumatized by his past events, and he cannot function in daily living because everything he sees or does reminds him of that past event. Mr. MacArthur is wrong when he insinuates that this man with PTSD is only suffering because he is worrying about not having enough in life. The person who suffers from OCD is not worrying about whether or not she is having enough in life. She is worrying about something bad happening that only she can prevent. The person with Social Anxiety is not worried about having enough but about whether or not they can trust being around people. All of these are examples of people who suffer from anxiety disorders that have nothing to do with what Mr. MacArthur is accusing them of. These people are not worrying about "keeping up with the Joneses". Mr. MacArthur's trivialization of their struggles is not only offensive but downright ignorant. 

This concludes this segment of the series. Please stay tuned for Part 8. 

I would like to thank you all for taking the time to read my blog and I sincerely hope this edifies and blesses you, but more importantly, I hope that this gives you a better understanding of mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders. Mental illness is a serious struggle and it should never be trivialized. May the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all!

-David Lee Chu Sarchet
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website



Monday, May 27, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 6)

 



This is a continuation of my blog series where I critique Mr. John MacArthur's two sermons on mental illness, titled "Anxiety-Free Living". In those sermons, he bases them off of Luke 12:24-33 and interprets that passage as saying we should not worry about anything if we truly trust in the sovereignty of God. In that passage, Jesus uses the metaphor of the birds and lilies. Jesus says that the birds and lilies do nothing for themselves, yet our Father takes care of them. In the same way, He says, God will take care of us. I have no issue with Mr. MacArthur's interpretation of this passage. But, I do take issue with his trivialization of clinical mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders. Mr. MacArthur seems to think that anxiety disorders would go away if people just merely "trusted God" as if things were that simple. Mr. MacArthur does not seem to understand the depths of OCD or PTSD. He seems to believe that Christians who suffer from those disorders are not really trusting in God. This is a heinous accusation for him to make because it causes Christians who suffer from those diagnoses to feel like there really is something wrong with them. That is why I decided to write this blog series. I want to let Christians who suffer from these disorders know that they are not second-class citizens in His kingdom. I want these Christians to know that there is nothing wrong with them and that they are not alone. According to the National Association of Mental Illness (NAMI), over 20% of the population has a mental illness. Some estimates say it is over 50%. This means that over 20-50% of the population suffers from a clinical mental illness. Christians who suffer from a mental illness and actually it is quite normal to have a mental illness. But, I digress. I will not focus on the next part of Mr. MacArthur's sermon. 

The next part of his sermon that I'd like to focus on comes near the bottom once more. He says the following, 

Here's another way to say that.  You exist for a higher reason, OK?  You exist for a higher reason.  Life is more than food and you have a body for more reasons than just clothing.  In other words, God didn't make you so that you could be like an animal.  You're not just an eating machine.  You're not just the ultimate end of the food chain.  You're not the final product of evolution.  And your body is not designed as something that's just supposed to be clothed for its environmental protection.  It's really not about that at all.  You're not an eating machine and a mannequin.  You know, it's hard to convince our culture of that.  Food and fashion, food and fashion, OD'd on restaurants and clothes.  But without God, you are an eating machine and a mannequin.  But God didn't give His people life for that reason.  I'm not here just to exist.  It's in God that I live and move and have my being.  But God has a purpose for my life.  I'm under divine priority.  The simple idea is this, folks, get it.  For those who are in the kingdom, if God gave you life, and He did if He wants you to live, and He does if you're alive, if He brought you into His kingdom, and He has, then He has a purpose for you to fulfill in His kingdom to His glory and so He will sustain you to that fulfillment.  OK?

I completely agree with Mr. MacArthur that we all exist for a higher purpose rather than just being an eating machine. I fully reject the evolutionary understanding of human beings. Once we focus on divine priority, as Mr. MacArthur puts it, we should understand that there is more to life. My contention with this portion of his sermon is that he is insinuating that Christians who suffer from mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders, do not understand this nor do they focus on "divine priority". The truth is, that many Christians who suffer from mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders, do understand that there is more to life. They also understand that God has created them for a special purpose too. Knowing and fully believing this truth does not necessarily make OCD and PTSD go away. It is not as simple as Mr. MacArthur makes it seem. The problem with Mr. MacArthur saying that it is this simple is that Christians who suffer from anxiety disorders will hear this, and when their anxiety does not go away, they will then think there is something inherently wrong with them The truth is, Jesus never promises to take away our mental illnesses. He promises us a hard life. That's why He tells us to pick up our crosses and follow Him. Mental illness is simply a cross that many of us have to bear in this life. 

The next portion of his sermon that I'd like to address is the very next paragraph. He says the following, 


I mean, it wouldn't make any sense for God to say, "I will save you and I will give you eternal life, I'll give you spiritual life, and I have a purpose for your life and a destiny and a plan and a purpose and I gifted you and I've called you, and I've laid out circumstances and, man, if you can just keep yourself alive to fill this deal out, this will be really good."  No.  In all honesty, the people who are not in God's family come and go and live and die with no contribution to the divine kingdom.  But those of us who are His are fulfilling divine purpose and that's why you can say with the psalmist, "The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not (what?) want.  He makes me to lie down in green pastures.  He leads me beside still waters.  He restores my soul.  He leads me through the valley of the shadow of death” and out the other side.  The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it, the psalmist says.

The issue that I have with this portion of his sermon is that he is insinuating that people with mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders, do not contribute anything to the Kingdom. Actually, he basically is comparing us to non-believers! It seems like he thinks so little of people like us. This is contrary to Scripture which tells us that the one who seems indispensable should be given more honor. John MacArthur preached a theology that says if you are indispensable then you are not even a believer. Amazingly, people do not walk away from this type of preaching feeling like they are worthless Christians in the Kingdom of God. The truth of the matter is all Christians are important in the Kingdom. We all serve a purpose in this life and the next. No one Christian is more important than the other. Furthermore, if you are a Christian who suffers from mental illness, you are still valuable, and you still serve a purpose. Do not listen to people like Mr. MacArthur who says you serve no purpose if you have a mental illness. Pray and ask the Father what your purpose is and then speak with your elders about what the Lord is revealing to you. Then, go out and fulfill your purpose. I used to think that my life was worthless, but then the Lord revealed to me that my purpose was to become a Christian mental health advocate who would start Christ-Centered Mental Health. My ministry may be small, but I can see the fruit it is bearing. God desires the same for you. He created you for a purpose in this life. Do not allow your mental illness to make you think your life is nothing because that is a lie straight from hell. Mr. MacArthur may not understand this nor does he believe it, but mentally ill brothers and sisters really do have a lot to offer the Body of Christ. 

This concludes this segment of my critique of John MacArthur's sermon. Please stay tuned for Part 7 of this series. 

I would like to thank you for reading this blog series and I hope that this helps you see that your mental illness is not an impediment to living with purpose for God. And if you do not have a mental illness, I hope you can see that what John MacArthur is saying concerning mental illness is not true. May the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all!

-David Lee Chu Sarchet 
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website





Friday, May 24, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 5)

 



This is going to be a continuation of my blog series where I critique Pastor John MacArthur's sermons titled "Anxiety-Free Living". If you have not read the previous blogs, I recommend you do that before reading this. If you do not, then you will be missing some vital context. I will say once more that this is not a personal attack on Mr. MacArthur. I have a lot of respect for the man, despite my many disagreements with him. However, no Bible teacher is without error and because of this no Bible teacher is above being criticized. Since Mr. MacArthur has a huge influence on people, I believe his harmful teachings need to be exposed. That's the purpose of this blog series: expose his harmful teachings so that Christians with mental illness can know that not everyone holds to these harmful views. Mr. MacArthur bases his two sermons on Luke chapter 12:22-34. The context of that passage is Jesus telling us not to worry or be afraid because God will take care of us. Jesus uses the analogy of the birds and lilies as examples of God's sovereign care. I have no issue with Mr. MacArthur's interpretation of this text. What I disagree with him on, and what this series is making clear, is his trivialization of mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders. I will now continue to make my case here. 

The portion of his sermon that I will focus on comes near the end of his sermon. He says the following, 

What Jesus is saying is how desperate are you?  How much do you want to be in this kingdom?  If you're still holding on to money, then according to the parable of the soils, what will happen is the seed will go in, and there will be a little bit of a reaction and response, but the love of riches, the deceitfulness of riches will choke out that seed, choke out that life.  In other words, salvation is for people who are desperate enough to say, "Look, I don't...I don’t care what it costs me, if You want everything I have, I'll give it.  If You want nothing, that's fine, too.  Whatever it is, I'll give it."  And even if You don't ask, like Zacchaeus in chapter 19. The Lord gives the gospel to Zacchaeus and Zacchaeus says, "I'm going to pay back everybody I ever extorted anything from in multiples."  It just came out of his heart.  If you respond to the truth and you come into the kingdom, then you become His to care for.  And in the words of the apostle Paul, he said this, chapter 4 of Philippians, verse 11, "I learned to be content in whatever circumstances I am.  I know how to get along with humble means.  I also know how to live in prosperity.  In any and every circumstance I've learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, of having abundance and suffering."  What's the secret?  Trusting God.  Sometimes you have a lot, sometimes you have a little, but you always have enough.

I do not have any issue with Mr. MacArthur saying that it will cost us everything to follow Christ. I actually agree with him about this. Following Jesus Christ will cost us everything, sometimes even our very lives. If we are not ready to give up everything, including our lives, then we are not fit to follow Jesus. However, my contention with this portion of his sermon is that he is insinuating that people who suffer from anxiety disorders are not willing to give up everything for Jesus. What he is essentially saying is that if you suffer from an anxiety disorder, it is because you have not fully surrendered to Christ. This is a heinous thing to assume about someone. While it is true that we should give up everything for Christ, it is not true that someone with an anxiety disorder is not willing to give up everything for Christ. One can be willing to give up everything for His kingdom and yet still struggle with OCD, PTSD, or SAD. Being willing to surrender all to Christ will not necessarily cure your OCD, PTSD, and SAD. It can help you cope with your anxiety disorders, but it will not make them completely go away without medication and therapy. Also, he says that the secret to living a life of contentment is "Trusting God". That's fine and dandy. However, people with various anxiety disorders do trust God, but they still suffer from their anxiety disorder. Mr. MacArthur is essentially saying that there is something inherently wrong with these Christians, which is the same logic that faith healers use when someone is not healed by them. I know Mr. MacArthur would come against these faith healers, but here he is using the same logic as they do. 

The next portion of his sermon that I'd like to address is just a couple more paragraphs. He says the following, 

So if God gave you life, and He did, if God redeemed you and He did, if God has a purpose for your life and He does, then He will provide what you need to survive.  So be rich toward God and you will have the promise that as you're rich toward God, He'll be lavishly rich toward you.  As long as He has that unfolding plan in your life, He will sustain it.  We have a life, we have a body for the purposes of God to live to His glory, to fulfill His will, to fulfill His plan and as long as that plan is operating, He will sustain us.  You don't have to build bigger, bigger, bigger, bigger, bigger barns to take care of yourself, to protect yourself.  Be wise, be faithful, don't be foolish, be a good steward, do some planning for the future, but you're not the one who has obligated himself to your care, God has.  No need to horde so that you can survive in the future. You will be sustained by the Creator until His purpose for your life ends. He'll feed you till the very, very end.  You could divest yourself of everything, everything you have, that wouldn't change God's commitment to sustain you until it's your time to enter into His heaven.  So you have to understand the priority, right?  And the priority is spiritual purpose.  If you understand that, if you understand God's gifted you, He's called you, He's regenerated you, He's put you into His family, He's put you into a place of witness and ministry and service, and all He wants you to do is live to His glory, and He will take care of your life.  Your life is not about food.  Your life is not about clothing.  It's not about making sure you can survive.  That's God's commitment. That's the priority.  And if you understand the divine priority, that is that you live and exist for the purpose of God, and God will sustain your life until that purpose is fulfilled, then you don't have to worry about it.  Worry then fails to understand divine priority.

Again, on the surface what he is saying is correct. If we truly believed and trusted in God's sovereignty, there would be no need for us to worry. We do not need to build doomsday bunkers underground because we know that God will take care of us. The knowledge of God's divine providence has been one of the most comforting doctrines for me to grasp. So, I initially do not have any issue with what he is saying here. However, my issue is coming from what he is implying. He is implying that people who suffer from anxiety disorders do not properly understand God's providence. He even explicitly says "Worry then fails to understand divine priority". This is especially heinous because it causes a Christian who suffers from PTSD, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, or Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder to feel like a second-class citizen in the Kingdom. Mr. MacArthur is essentially saying that these Christians are sinning by not trusting in God enough. The reality is a Christian can wholeheartedly trust in the sovereignty of God and still suffer from an anxiety disorder because trusting in God will not erase that from them. Trusting in God may work toward helping these people cope, but they will continue to suffer from anxiety disorder. I know of many very godly men and women who wholeheartedly trust in the Lord, but they still suffer from Panic attacks and GAD. Mr. MacArthur would say they are not truly Christians, but I beg to differ. 

This concludes this part of the series. Please stay tuned for Part 6. 

I would like to thank you very much for reading this blog series and I hope that this helps you know that if you are a Christian who suffers from mental illness you are not a second-rate Christian. God loves you because you are in Christ. Because of this fact, you can rejoice. May the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all!

-David Lee Chu Sarchet 
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website




Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 4)

 



This is the fourth part of my blog series where I critique John MacArthur's "Anxiety-Free Living" sermon. I must reiterate that this is not an attack on Mr. MacArthur personally. I highly respect the man for his bold stance against the culture. However, his views on mental health are dangerous to Christians who suffer from mental illnesses, as this series is proving. As Christians, we need to be careful that we are not unintentionally causing harm to the people we are preaching the Gospel to just as much as we are to make sure that the Gospel we preach is in line with the Scriptures. Also, as Christians we reserve the right to critique the teachers we feel are out of line. The purpose of this series is not to malign Mr. MacArthur but to demonstrate that not all Christians hold harmful views on mental illness. His sermons titled "Anxiety-Free Living" are based on Luke 12:22-34. In that text, Jesus is telling us that we have no reason to worry if we trust in the sovereignty of God. Jesus uses the metaphor of the birds and the lilies as examples of why we should not worry. I wholeheartedly agree with Mr. MacArthur's interpretation of this text. Where I disagree with him is his oversimplification of mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders. He pretends that it is easy for someone with an anxiety disorder to not worry or be afraid just because Jesus says so. When someone is dealing with an anxiety disorder, mere platitudes to "not be afraid" or "not worry" are pretty much-pouring salt on an open wound. Furthermore, this sort of rhetoric makes a Christian who suffers from an anxiety disorder feel like they are alone and that something is seriously wrong with them. This is why Mr. MacArthur's sermons on mental health are so dangerous. 

The next part of the sermon that I'd like to address appears close to the bottom. He says the following, 

And He says to His disciples, picking up after the interruption... You remember in verse 13 a man interrupted Him by telling Him He ought to say to his brother, "Give me my share of the inheritance," and Jesus gave the wonderful parable of the rich man who built bigger barns to keep everything for himself and the Lord said, "Tonight, your life will be required of you," and then Jesus said, you know, "You should lay up treasure in heaven,” you should be rich toward God and not selfish, and that's how that story ended in verse 21.  And after answering that young man's plea with that parable, He resumes His teaching but He connects the two together, as verse 22 says.  "For this reason I say to you...."  What reason?  The reason that I've just stated, verse 21, you make a choice in life as to whether you lay up treasure for yourself or are rich toward God, which is just another way to say lay up treasure in heaven, and that's how He said it in Matthew 6:19 to 21.  So you make a choice. Either you are selfish and materialistic and keep everything, or you lay up treasure in heaven.  That's the choice you have to make.  In Matthew 6:24 Jesus said you can't serve two masters. You'll love one and hate the other. You'll hold to one and despise the other. You can't serve God and money.

First off, again I do agree somewhat with his interpretation of this text. You indeed have a choice to make to either serve God or serve money. You can choose to either live for the world or you can choose to live for the Lord. However, the problem I have with this section of his sermon is that he is acting as if someone with an anxiety disorder is "choosing to be materialistic rather than living for God". Christians who suffer from an anxiety disorder are not choosing materialism over God. A Christian can live for the Lord, but at the same time still struggle with OCD or PTSD. Mr. MacArthur's false dichotomy falls far short because he fails to see the nuance here. He wrongly assumes that if Christians are dealing with PTSD because they were abused by a loved one they are seeking to be materialistic instead of "building treasure in Heaven". This is very dangerous rhetoric because it is saying that a Christian dealing with PTSD or OCD is selfish. Mr. MacArthur is essentially victim-blaming a PTSD sufferer and I hope that I do not need to explain to you why that is a bad thing. Another issue I have with this portion of his sermon is that he is assuming that someone who deals with an anxiety disorder is choosing to serve something other than God. Essentially, he is accusing people who suffer from mental illnesses of idolatry, which is a serious accusation. The truth is that people who suffer from mental illnesses are not choosing their mental illness over God. Because we live in a fallen world, Christians can serve God while at the same time suffering from various mental or physical illnesses. 

The next portion of the sermon I'd like to address is two paragraphs after the last one. He says the following, 

Well the answer, of course, that the Lord gives here is this, that God's going to take care of you.  God's going to take care of you.  God is the one who feeds the birds.  God is the one who will raise the grass in the field.  God is the one who knows what you need.  God is the one who will give you the kingdom.  You just came under the care of God.  First Peter 5:7, "Casting all your care on Him, He cares for you."  So if He asks you to give up everything like He did the rich young ruler, sell everything you have, give your money to the poor. Not on your life, he said.  Turned around and walked away for he was very rich.  And he wanted his money and he didn't want to give it away and depend on God.  But on the other hand, Jesus said if you want to come after Me, Luke 9:23, you have to deny yourself.  You have to lose your life.  Or in the words of Matthew 13:44 to 46, you sell all to buy the pearl, you sell all to buy the treasure in the field, you abandon everything.  Or in chapter 9 verses 57 and following of Luke's gospel, Jesus said, "Follow Me," and the man said, "I'll follow You wherever You go."  Jesus said, "The foxes have holes, the birds of the air have nests, the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.”  If you follow Me it may cost you everything.  It cost the apostles everything.  They dropped their nets, dropped everything and followed Him.  He said to another, "Follow Me."  He said, "Wait a minute, I want to go bury my father."  Remember, his father wasn't dead, he wanted to go home and get his inheritance.  He wanted to follow but not until he had all the money he needed.  And He said to another, "Follow Me."  And he said, "I want to go home and say goodbye,” I want to collect some money from my relatives.  And He said, "If you put your hand to the plow and look back, you're not fit for My kingdom."

Again, Mr. MacArthur is absolutely correct in his exegesis of this passage. As Christians, we absolutely SHOULD be willing to give up all we have, including our very lives, for the sake of the Gospel. As a matter of fact, I would say that if you are not willing to give up your very life for Jesus then you are not truly saved to begin with. The apostles readily gave up everything for Jesus just as Jesus gave up everything for us first. For this reason alone, we should be willing to do the same. So, John MacArthur and I are on the same page here. My contention with this portion of his sermon is that he is assuming that people who suffer with mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders, are not already willing to give up everything for Christ. Sure, there may be some of us who are not there yet. However, it is wrong for him to generalize all of us by assuming that if we suffer from mental illnesses we are just unwilling to give up everything for His sake. This is consistent with what he said above about us being selfish and materialistic. So, I have to give him credit for consistency in his sermon. However, I know for myself personally I am willing to give up everything for the Kingdom. My mental illness does not cause me to be unwilling. Furthermore, I know of many other Christians with mental illnesses who are also willing to do the same. So, it is highly offensive for him to insinuate that we are just unwilling to give up everything because of selfishness, especially when I can accuse him of the same thing. As the saying goes, "If you live in a glass house, do not throw stones". 

This concludes this part of the blog series. Please stay tuned for Part 5. 

I would like to thank you for reading this blog series and I sincerely hope that this encourages you to live for the Lord even if you have a mental illness. Do not listen to people like Mr. MacArthur who are only trying to make you feel like a second-class citizen in the Kingdom of God. I hope you enjoy this series and may the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all! 

-David Lee Chu Sarchet 
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website







Monday, May 20, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 3)

 



In this blog, I shall continue my series where I critique one of Mr. MacArthur's sermons on "Anxiety-Free Living". Again, this is not an attack on Mr. MacArthur himself. This is merely a critique of his sermons. Christians should be allowed to critique a pastor's sermons without being accused of attacking the pastor. We live in a day and age when critiquing a pastor is almost seen as unacceptable. The Christians who think this way have good intentions because they do not want to be divisive or controversial. However, if a pastor is wrong concerning a topic, then we should point that out, especially when they have a huge influence on many people. I am afraid that if someone with mental illness stumbles upon these sermons, then they will be led to believe that all Christians think this way, and they will not want anything to do with Christianity. My motive in writing this series is to show people that not all Christians think the way Mr. MacArthur thinks. Most of us are very open and welcoming towards people with mental illnesses and most of us are open to Psychology too.

Anyway, so Mr. MacArthur is basing his sermons off of Luke 12:22-34. In that text, he is rightly interpreting that text as Jesus saying that we should never worry about anything because if we truly trust in the sovereignty of God, then we wouldn't worry. Jesus uses the metaphors of the birds and lilies and how God takes care of them as examples of how God will take care of us too. As I have said in my previous blogs, I have no issue with his interpretation of this text. However, where he makes a fundamental mistake is when he trivializes certain anxiety disorders by making it seem like sufferers of these disorders should not be suffering if they truly believed certain platitudes such as "Do not worry" and "Do not be afraid". He assumes that anxiety disorders would be eliminated if people just believed the Gospel. In my previous blogs, I make the case that it is not that simple for a Christian to just let go of an anxiety disorder and how Mr. MacArthur's sermons can make real Christians who suffer from anxiety disorders, or any mental illness, feel alienated from the Body of Christ. 

The next portion of his sermon that I'd like to address comes from the seventh paragraph in the sermon. There, he goes on to say the following, 

Now you have to understand the promises of God and you have to understand the purposes of God to come to this worry-free, anxiety-free living.  So let me help you with that.  In these verses as they unfold, down all the way to verse 34, there are several points that I want to unpack for you, six of them, and they show that worry rises from a failure to understand something about God.  First of all, let's look at the first one, worry is a failure to understand divine priority. Worry is a failure to understand divine priority.  Let's go back to verse 22.

"And He said to His disciples, 'For this reason I say to you, do not be anxious for your life as to what you shall eat, nor for your body as to what you shall put on, for life is more than food and the body than clothing.'" That's not hard to understand and yet there are some things below the surface there that I think are going to open up a deeper understanding of this.

In this text, Mr. MacArthur repeats that anxiety is a "failure to understand divine priority". By this, he is implying that if Christians truly "understood divine priority", then their anxiety disorders would immediately disappear. He says that if a Christian understood God's sovereignty, then there is no reason for them to have an anxiety disorder. My contention with this is that this totally misunderstands anxiety disorders and what they are about. A Christian can fully trust in the sovereignty of God and fully understand "divine priority" and still struggle with OCD or Panic attacks. The fact that some Christians still deal with OCD and Panic attacks is not evidence that they do not truly trust God. In reality, a Christian can suffer from these disorders and still know that God is in control. Mr. MacArthur is setting up a false dichotomy here by implying that one can either trust God's sovereignty or suffer from anxiety disorders. The situation is a lot more nuanced than that. 

The next portion of Mr. MacArthur's sermon that I'd like to address comes from the eighth section. There, he says the following, 

And He says to His disciples, picking up after the interruption... You remember in verse 13 a man interrupted Him by telling Him He ought to say to his brother, "Give me my share of the inheritance," and Jesus gave the wonderful parable of the rich man who built bigger barns to keep everything for himself and the Lord said, "Tonight, your life will be required of you," and then Jesus said, you know, "You should lay up treasure in heaven,” you should be rich toward God and not selfish, and that's how that story ended in verse 21.  And after answering that young man's plea with that parable, He resumes His teaching but He connects the two together, as verse 22 says.  "For this reason I say to you...."  What reason?  The reason that I've just stated, verse 21, you make a choice in life as to whether you lay up treasure for yourself or are rich toward God, which is just another way to say lay up treasure in heaven, and that's how He said it in Matthew 6:19 to 21.  So you make a choice. Either you are selfish and materialistic and keep everything, or you lay up treasure in heaven.  That's the choice you have to make.  In Matthew 6:24 Jesus said you can't serve two masters. You'll love one and hate the other. You'll hold to one and despise the other. You can't serve God and money.

First, I'd like to point out how this specific text is not even related to anxiety whatsoever. Mr. MacArthur is trying to tie it to anxiety disorders, but when you carefully read it in context, you'll see that it does not have anything to do with anxiety disorders. This specific text is solely about being materialistic instead of being rich in faith toward God. Secondly, he again makes the simple mistake of setting up a false dichotomy by saying that you either trust God and "store your riches in heaven" or you build your riches on earth. This is coming from a man whose net worth is net worth is approximately $14 million. I am not saying that to demean the man. I believe that there is nothing wrong with a Christian being rich, but it is quite hypocritical that he can say that we should not build our treasures on earth, while he is that rich currently. But, I digress. Thirdly, this section reveals even more that he has zero understanding of anxiety disorders. He is essentially saying that a Christian who suffers from OCD or Panic attacks is "Serving two masters". This is a ridiculous thing to even imply. I know of many solid Bible-believing Christians who trust in God's sovereignty and even do work to serve His kingdom, but they deal with certain anxiety disorders that cripple them. As I have already said, there is a certain nuance that Mr. MacArthur seems to be lacking in understanding. He is assuming that there are no solid Christians who suffer from anxiety disorders, which causes me to wonder how the people in his congregation feel about that. I am sure that at least half of his congregation deals with anxiety disorders or other clinical mental illnesses, so this sort of rhetoric most likely makes them feel ashamed. They may even feel like they are worthless Christians. 

I will end this blog here, but please stay tuned for Part 4, which will be available shortly. 

Thank you very much for being willing to read this blog and I hope that you understand that not all Christians are close-minded like Mr. MacArthur. If you are a Christian who suffers from any kind of mental illness, I want you to know that there is hope in Jesus Christ. He has suffered in every way we suffer, yet He was without sin. This means He understands the struggle we go through and He identifies with our pain. We can boldly run to Him. This does not mean that our mental illnesses will go away, but it does mean that we are being held together by His sovereign hand. May the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all. 

-David Lee Chu Sarchet
Christian Mental Health Advocate

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website




Friday, May 17, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 2)

 



In my previous blog titled "Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness Part 1, I began a series where I critique His two latest sermons titled "Anxiety-Free Living". I make the strong case saying that Mr. MacArthur does not understand anxiety disorders, or mental illness in general. As I have said, this series is not an attack on Mr. MacArthur personally. While I do not like the guy personally, I have immense respect for him. So, please do not take this series as an attack. However, as I read his sermon transcripts, I cannot help but find that I have some serious issues with what he is saying. I will go over my issues with his sermons in this series. First, I'd like to post the biblical passage on which he is basing his sermons. The biblical passage is Luke 12:22-34. When we turn to that passage, we read the following, 

"...Therefore, I tell you do not be anxious about your life, what you will wear, nor about your body, what you will put on. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing. Consider the ravens: they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than birds! And which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life? If you are not able to do a small thing as that, why are you anxious about the rest? Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. But, if God so clothes the grass, which is alive in the field today, and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will he clothe you, O you of little faith! And do not seek what you are to eat and what you are to drink, nor be worried. For all the nations of the world seek after these things, and your Father knows that you need them. Instead, seek his kingdom and these things will be added unto you. 
Fear not, little flock,  for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions, and give to the needy. Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a treasure in Heaven that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth destroys, For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" 

As you can see from this text, Jesus is telling us to not worry about anything but to instead trust in the Sovereignty of God. Jesus uses the imagery of birds and lilies to demonstrate the point that while they do not take care of themselves, God still provides for them. He then tells us that we are much more valuable than the birds and lilies, so God will take care of us. I have absolutely no issue with Mr. MacArthur's interpretation of this passage. However, I take tremendous issue with his oversimplification and outright condemnation of those who suffer from various anxiety disorders. Since I have already addressed his oversimplification of anxiety disorders in the previous blog, I will just continue where I left off. In the fifth paragraph of Mr. MacArthur's sermon, he says the following, 

According to Ohio State University, they have a website in which they deal with some of these things, and one of the statements on their website is, "The goal of any treatment is to make anxiety a manageable part of daily existence."  The best the world can offer you is to manage your anxiety.  Jesus offers you to eliminate it.  Does that sound like a good deal?  Get rid of it all together?  Stop it?  In fact, you can...you could basically translate verse 22, "Stop being anxious," verse 29, "Stop worrying," and verse 32, "Stop being afraid."  The world will offer you cognitive behavior therapy, or a long list of drugs.  But our compassionate God offers a far better solution, and that's the elimination of your anxiety altogether.  Stop being anxious! Stop worrying. Stop being afraid!  Worry is a pretty deadly thing.  Roche said, "Worry is a thin stream of fear trickling through the mind.  If encouraged, it cuts a channel into which all other thoughts are drained."  You may start with just a little worry and it can engulf your whole life.  I read this some time ago. I don't know why I read some of the things I read, just curious, I guess.  But I was reading about the Bureau of Standards in Washington D.C. and they set all kinds of standards, and there was one little paragraph in there that said this, "A dense fog covering seven city blocks.” Are you with me? “A dense fog covering seven city blocks, a hundred feet deep, is composed of less than one glass of water divided into sixty thousand million drops.”  Not much there, the paragraph said, but it cripples the whole community.  Well that's what can happen in worry.  You can have something the size of one glass of water cripple a whole community.  The word "worry" actually comes from an old German word, the English word "worry." The old German word is wuergen. It means to choke, or strangle.  It's talking about mental strangulation through fear and anxiety and stress and worry

There are couple issues that I have with this paragraph. The first issue I have is that he pretends that stress management is not sufficient and that all we need to do is "trust Jesus more". He is basically insinuating that if we cannot stop being filled with anxiety, then we are not trusting Christ enough. While I do agree that if we did fully trust Christ, then we would not worry so much, but the truth is none of us trust Christ to that degree. Mr. MacArthur is acting as if he always trusts Christ and therefore he never worries. He insinuates that if we just trusted Christ like he does, then we won't worry anymore. This is a horrible thing to say to someone who is dealing with PTSD, OCD, or General Anxiety Disorder. What he is implying here is that any Christians who deal with an anxiety disorder are second-class citizens in the Kingdom of God. This paragraph demonstrates once more that Mr. MacArthur does not understand just how serious anxiety disorders really are. If he did, then he'd understand that mere platitudes such as "Stop worrying" or "Stop being afraid" are actually quite offensive and not helpful to people who suffer with anxiety disorders on a daily basis. His rhetoric is basically implying that there is something wrong in the Christian who suffers with an anxiety disorder. 

The next thing that I'd like to address comes from paragraph six of his sermon. It says the following, 

Now there are only two realms in which you can worry.  You can worry about the physical world or you can worry about the spiritual world.  You can worry about what is immaterial, or what is material.  You can worry about what is earthly and what is heavenly.  And so that is precisely what Jesus says you don't need to worry about.  In verse 22 He says, "Don't be anxious for your life," and by that He means what you eat, and your body, what you wear.  Stop worrying about that, the basics of life.  And then down in verse 32, "Don't be afraid on the spiritual level for your Father has chosen gladly to give you the kingdom."  You're left with nothing to worry about, nothing to be anxious about, nothing to be stressed about, nothing to panic over.  So we conclude that if you do worry as a Christian, worry is a sin.  But it's a sin that rises from a failure to understand God, a failure to understand His sovereign love, a failure to understand His sovereign care, a failure to understand His sovereign resources.  So that's what Jesus unfolds here.  Jesus does offer anxiety-free living.  When you come into His kingdom, God takes care of you and your worries really are ended so that what defined your life, worrying about everything, is eliminated.


First off, I like the point where he says that there are only two realms in which we worry: the physical and the spiritual. I can definitely agree with that. However, he again makes the same mistake that he has been making for this entire sermon. He assumes that for someone struggling with an anxiety disorder, all he needs to do is "Stop worrying and trust Jesus". This may be true. All one does need to do is stop worrying and trust Jesus. However, for someone dealing with an anxiety disorder, this is much easier said than done. Mr. MacArthur is implying that this should come easy for a Christian. Then, he decides to condemn any Christian who seems to not be able to get a grasp on this by saying they are sinning. He further says that when these Christians worry, they are "failing to understand God, a failure to understand His sovereign love, a failure to understand His sovereign care, a failure to understand His sovereign resources". This blatant condemnation by Mr. MacArthur is extremely heinous because it tells any Christian who suffers from an anxiety disorder that they are not believing rightly concerning the Lord. He is telling these brothers and sisters in Christ that their anxiety disorders is their own fault. Worrying is not always a sin, especially when the person cannot control their anxiety. Mr. MacArthur is plainly denying that some people cannot control their anxieties. He is assuming that all anxieties are controllable and if someone cannot do it, then it is their fault. 

I will end this blog on this note. Please stay tuned for Part 3 of this series. I hope that this blog series blesses and edifies you as it helps you to better understand anxiety disorders and mental illness as a whole. Thank you very much for reading this blog and may the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all!

-David Lee Chu Sarchet
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry website








Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Why John MacArthur Is Wrong About Mental Illness (Part 1)

 



Recently, John MacArthur, pastor of Grace Community Church in California, preached two sermons on Mental Illness. His main focus was on Anxiety disorder, but his sermon could apply to any mental illness. I have some severe issues with what he had to say in these two sermons and so I decided that I need to write a blog series concerning them. As someone who struggles with Schizoaffective Disorder Bipolar Type and Separation Anxiety Disorder,  I feel like I need to address what Mr. MacArthur is saying because he has such a huge influence on many people worldwide. However, I'd like to say that although I do not pay much attention to him anymore, I do have the utmost respect for the man. I respect how he takes a bold stance against the culture, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. So, this is not an attack on Mr. MacArthur as a person. I am merely criticizing some points he has made in these two sermons. So, please do not think that I am just a "MacArthur-hater". I sincerely love him as a brother in Christ and I cannot wait to meet him in Heaven one day if I do not get the chance to meet him in this lifetime. 

The passage that Mr. MacArthur preaches comes from Luke 12:22-34. It would be best if I posted that whole passage here to see what it says in its entirety. The passage he preaches comes directly from our Lord's mouth. Jesus says, 

"...Therefore, I tell you do not be anxious about your life, what you will wear, nor about your body, what you will put on. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing. Consider the ravens: they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than birds! And which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life? If you are not able to do a small thing as that, why are you anxious about the rest? Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. But, if God so clothes the grass, which is alive in the field today, and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will he clothe you, O you of little faith! And do not seek what you are to eat and what you are to drink, nor be worried. For all the nations of the world seek after these things, and your Father knows that you need them. Instead, seek his kingdom and these things will be added unto you. 
Fear not, little flock,  for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions, and give to the needy. Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a treasure in Heaven that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth destroys, For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" 

As you can see from this passage, Our Lord is commanding us not to worry about our lives because God is sovereign and He cares to provide for us. I do admit that trusting in His sovereignty has been one of the most comforting realities that I have come to realize. It is true that because God is sovereign, and He cares for us, we should not worry or fear anything in this life. Mr. MacArthur is absolutely right about that. My contention with him is about his gross oversimplification of what having an Anxiety disorder is. As I have said earlier, one of the disorders I deal with daily is Separation Anxiety Disorder. This disorder causes me to be fearful about significant others abandoning me. How this disorder manifests itself by causing me to become clingy and constantly panic whenever I am not around my significant other. I also tend to have vivid nightmares about significant others either leaving me or betraying me too. My Separation Anxiety Disorder has caused me to lose jobs and to skip classes when I was in college, which inevitably led to me failing courses. I say all of this to demonstrate how crippling having an anxiety disorder can really be. Mr. MacArthur oversimplifies the experience of what millions of people go through daily in these two blogs. I will demonstrate this in this series. 

Mr. MacArthur titles these sermons "Anxiety-Free Living" or "Stress-Free Living", but what he says later will inevitably lead people with anxiety disorders to have more anxiety. I say this because when someone oversimplifies one's real struggle with an anxiety disorder, the person who deals with the disorder will then think that there must be something wrong with them or that they aren't a very good Christian. This will inevitably make the person much more anxious. The first part of this sermon comes from the third paragraph. John MacArthur says the following, 

I understand while the...why the world is stressed out.  I understand why people are anxious.  I understand why they worry.  I understand why they have panic attacks.  It's frightening to be dangling in this inexplicable universe and feeling all alone and not being able to figure out why you're even here and where you're going.  I understand there's a certain cosmic fear.  I understand why people take drugs and drink and go on eating binges and shopping binges and wild adventures and all kinds of things to fill their minds with other thoughts.  We are living in an anxiety-ridden culture.  And the amazing thing about it is this is the most indulged, the most lavish society ever, this is the most comfortable society ever, this is the society that has the most but it seems to be the most angst-ridden, anxious, stressed out, panicked culture ever.  We have a massive medical world that exists to do nothing but help people with stress.  No worry goes unnamed.  No worry goes undefined.  No worry goes uncataloged.  No worry goes undiagnosed.  And no worry goes unmedicated.  They just go unrelieved.  People live with anxiety.  They live with worry.  They live with stress.  But it's so common that we don't even talk about eliminating it.  The term is "to manage it."  You take a course, go to a seminar, listen to a lecture, buy a tape on stress management like it was a baseball team, needed a manager, or a production line.  Then Jesus comes along and says, "I'm not going to teach you how to manage your stress, I'll eliminate it."


Mr. MacArthur says he understands why people are anxious and he does make a good point. According to the secular world, we are on a small ball that is orbiting the sun and nothing is controlling it that can stop it from colliding with the sun. According to the secular world,  we are here because of a cosmic accident and there is no rhyme or reason for our existence. This belief indeed is enough to cause us intense anxiety. However, what he is saying only applies to secular people. I agree with him that secular people have a lot to be anxious about. However, millions of people trust in the sovereignty of the Almighty God who still deal with a lot of anxiety and need medication to help them cope. What Mr. MacArthur is essentially saying here is that these Christians are behaving just like secular people who have no trust in God. This is a horrible thing to say because what it does is alienate true Bible-believing Christians who deal with anxiety disorders from the rest of the flock. His statement causes us to feel like second-class citizens in the Christian community. Furthermore, in his last statement where he says that the best the secular world has to offer us is a way to manage our symptoms, but Jesus says He came to "eliminate them" which is very damaging to Christians who struggle with real anxiety disorders. The reason why I say this is because it sets these Christians up for a false hope. Mr. MacArthur tells these Christians that if they only come to Christ, then all of their anxiety will disappear, and they will be able to toss their medications away. However, the Christian faith is not a medical treatment and when these Christians realize that they are still dealing with their anxiety disorders, they will become disillusioned with the faith or think that there must be something wrong with them personally. I agree that the best the secular world has to offer is anxiety management and that without Christ the secular world's methods are useless. However, this does not mean if someone comes to Jesus then their issues will automatically disappear. It is true that if someone comes to Jesus, then the Holy Spirit will comfort them in their struggle with anxiety disorders, but this does not mean that their anxiety will just disappear. No, the person will deal with their anxiety disorder, or any mental illness, for the rest of their lives. But, with medication and therapy, along with the help of the Holy Spirit, the person will cope with their symptoms a lot better, and they will have hope in this life and the next life too. 

I would like to address his points in paragraph four. In that paragraph, Mr. MacArthur says the following, 

The goal in the society we live in is managed anxiety, how to somehow get rid of the panic, the stress, the anxiousness that you feel because you are dangling in the midst of a cosmic universe that's inexplicable to you and there are inordinate and underlying subliminal fears and anxieties that rise to the surface very often.  And it gets to be pretty serious with many people. About twenty million in America, twenty million adults are annual subjects of the mental illness world, about forty-two billion dollars a year in government costs.  They come with anxiety disorders that are given names, even though they are often engaged in what's called co-morbidity which means they overlap and intermingle.  It's not as if you just have sort of one area of anxiety. There are several categories.  There's what's called General AD, which is General Anxiety Disorder, and I suppose you could throw almost everything in there.  And then there's Obsessive Compulsive Anxiety Disorder which means you do really weird things like wash your hands 100 times a day, or pull your hair out, or rub your nose away, or some other inexplicable compulsive kind of behavior.  And then there is Panic Disorder in which you go into a high level of panic, rapid-heart palpitation, extreme fear, and there's no real circumstantial reason for it.  There is post-traumatic stress AD which is some level of panic which you feel after something that you just went through.  There is what's called Social Anxiety Disorder which I guess means you wouldn't have it if you didn't hang around people.  And then there is Specific AD, specific phobias about...some people are...go into anxiety if they see a rat or some with a snake or some have anxiety over a storm, some people literally have a phobia with closets, agoraphobia, claustrophobia, acrophobia, heights, etc., etc.  And about 50 percent of the United States population experiences some kind of psychiatric anxiety disorder, about half the people in America in their life.  A hundred million are estimated worldwide to have panic attacks, just out of nowhere to feel a terrible, terrifying panic.  This is huge.  And, of course, the medical business is huge to deal with it or to attempt to manage it, and the drug companies, of course, are the main player in how that is managed

Again, I do agree with him when he says that the secular world has a lot to be stressed about. I would even agree with him that Christians have a lot to be at peace about. However, I do not like how he overly simplifies how serious anxiety disorders are. For example, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder is much more than something that causes you to do "really weird things like wash your hands 100 times a day, or pull your hair out, or rub your nose away, or some other inexplicable compulsive disorder". Since Mr. MacArthur seems to trivialize this disorder so much, it causes me to wonder if he ever knew anyone who struggled with OCD. I have known many people personally who dealt with this disorder. For example, when I was a teenager, I knew another teen who felt that he had to count all his steps whenever he walked anywhere. If he messed up or miscounted a step, he would have to walk all the way back to where he started and start completely over. I knew another teen back in the day who had to count all of his socks a million times before he went to bed. These two teens literally felt like they had to do certain things and if they failed to do them, then they would suffer such an extreme form of anxiety that would literally cripple them from doing anything else. Also, they believed that if they failed to perform these rituals something horrible will happen either to them or someone they cared about.  The only thing that helped these two teens manage their symptoms was medication and therapy. Mr. MacArthur further demonstrates that he does not fully understand Panic disorder. He says that it is when "you go into a high level of panic, rapid heart palpitation, extreme fear, and there is no inexplicable reason for it". He is somewhat correct in this description, but there is much more to Panic disorder than he is describing. I know of a few people in my life who deal with Panic disorder. When I ask them what having a panic attack feels like, they tell me that it literally feels like they cannot breathe and that they are dying. This is a lot more serious than what Mr. MacArthur is describing. He also describes PTSD as just "some level of panic which you feel after something you went through". This statement is very much an oversimplification of PTSD and I cannot understand why anyone would take this seriously. People who deal with PTSD literally feel like they are experiencing their traumatic event all over again when they are triggered. For example, when a woman is raped, she could literally go into a comatose state of mind years later when something happens that reminds her of the rape. Also, when a soldier comes back home from war, he may become extremely violent toward his family whenever he is reminded of something that happened while he was at war. Basically, PTSD is much more serious than what Mr. MacArthur is describing it as. I think the saddest description Mr. MacArthur gives is when he describes Social Anxiety Disorder. He says that these people "wouldn't have it if they did not hang around people", but he completely misses the point of Social Anxiety Disorder. People with this disorder tend to remain stuck in their homes because the very thought of being out in public frightens them so much that they feel like they are safer when they do not go anywhere. The people who suffer from this disorder tend to lose jobs, tend to isolate from friends and family, and tend to become very severely depressed and suicidal. 

He then concludes this section by blasting the pharmaceutical companies for making a "big profit" by prescribing those of us with anxiety disorders medication that helps us cope. I do admit that Big Pharma does make a lot of money when psychiatrists prescribe us medication. However, I honestly do not see this as a big deal. I find it quite odd when detractors of the mental health field use this argument as a way to make Big Pharma look bad. The reason I find this odd is that they do not use this same line of reasoning for any other field such as dentistry or cardiology. Those two fields make just as much money, if not more than anyone in the mental health field does. Yet, no one criticizes these two fields as being corrupt. Personally, I believe that any field that is providing a good service that helps people live better, more efficient, lives should be paid handsomely for their hard work. I do not see it as a conflict of interest when Big Pharma makes a ton of money when psychiatrists prescribe medication for their patients any more than it can be a conflict of interest when a dentist prescribes a patient with dentures. 

I will stop this blog here so that you can think about what I said and I will continue critiquing Mr. MacArthur's sermon in Part 2 of this series. 

I hope that this blog helps you better understand what it is like for people who suffer from anxiety disorders to truly go through. It is disheartening to see a man with as much influence as Mr. MacArthur trivialize the experiences of literally millions of Christians worldwide. Please feel free to leave a comment about what you think below and I thank you for taking the time to read this blog series. May the grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ richly bless you all!

-David Lee Chu Sarchet
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry Website






Monday, May 13, 2024

Simply Eric: Forming My First Doubts About The Bible (Part 10)

    ***The following is a fictional account of a teenager who has Bipolar Disorder and Conduct Disorder. Some content may be triggering. Reader discretion advised***




It is finally Friday and today is off to a wonderful start. This morning, I was determined to beat the night shift staff member at his own game. That means I was planning on cleaning the bathroom so well that he would have to give positive points. I literally looked for every spot he could have marked off and scrubbed and scrubbed until everything was spotless. I have never cleaned a bathroom so well in my entire life. As it turns out, when I finally went to get him to check my chore, he even agreed that it met his standards. Instead of taking away points, he gave me a plus 250 points! Pretty much that means my day is complete. I couldn't possibly earn any more points for the rest of the day. I can basically rest easy and not worry about impressing these staff members. It also means that I am well on my way to achieving Level 2. They will decide that by next week's meeting on Wednesday. For now, I am just going to enjoy my victory. 

After chore time, we all line up in front of the door, count off our numbers and line expectations, and then head outside to go to the cafeteria for Breakfast. My mood is in such high spirits that absolutely nothing can bring me down. Once we are at the cafeteria, we get in line to get our food. For breakfast today we are having the same instant scrambled eggs, hard bacon, instant oatmeal, and an apple. I am beginning to think the cooks here do not know how to cook anything else. I secretly hand the girl who is helping them my letter and then go and sit down at a table. Travis decided to join me. I really wish this loser would leave me alone, but I am much too polite to say anything. I do not want to hurt the poor guy's feelings. He obviously thinks I am his only friend in this place and who doesn't need friends when they are in a place like this? He probably thinks I will protect him from his bullies, but he is in for a rude awakening because I am not planning on getting into any more fights from here on out. I do not want to do anything to jeopardize my discharge from this place. 

"So, what do you like to do for fun besides sports?" Travis asks me and immediately I want to tell him that I enjoy beating up twerps like him. I just would like to scare him away from me, but I decided not to say that. 

"Um," I say in between bites of my scrambled eggs "I like listening to music--" 

"What kind of music do you enjoy?" He cuts me off right away and this does annoy me quite a bit. How is he going to ask me something and then cut me off midsentence? Obviously, he is not home-trained. I decided to just let it go, however, and I told him I mainly listen to rap and hip hop. He seems to get excited by this because he tells me that he is into rap and hip hop too. I highly doubt it. He is just trying to relate to me. 

"Have you ever heard of Christian rap?" He asks me and tell him I have not. To be honest, the whole idea of "Christian rap" seems rather corny to me. Why is it that Christians are always trying to make their own versions of something that is already a thing? He goes to tell me about some guy named Shai Linne, but I couldn't care less about this topic. After I finish eating, I stand up to go put my tray away. Then, we all get in line, count off our numbers and expectations, and then we transition to the Medical building. Once we are in there, Travis continues talking to me about Shai Linne and this song of his called "Lyrical Theology". I tell him honestly that I am not interested and he seems hurt by this. I do not really care, however. He needs to go bother someone else about his "Christian Rap". After the kids take their medication, we all line up and count off our numbers and expectations, and then we head to the School building. 

The first class we went to was Mrs. White's English class and as always I thoroughly enjoyed her class. Even if I already knew everything she was teaching, it still was a joy listening to her. I think she enjoys having me as a student because she always appoints me to help the other students who are struggling. The next class is Social Studies with Mr. Jesse, and as always he is an a-hole. Today, he decided to make me look stupid by asking me a question concerning the Civil Rights movement that he knew I did not know nor even cared to know. He is lucky we are not on the outs because I would have seriously humiliated him. The next class is Science with Mr. Green, and as always he shares with us an episode of MythBusters. This episode is actually quite interesting to me because it is about Noah's Ark from the Bible. It piques my interest because of my latest interest in even reading the Bible. However, this episode is very troubling. They are talking about how rain can't fall for 40 days and 40 nights and flood the entire world. They talk about how even if it were true, there is no possible way that some ignorant goatherders would be able to put together a solid wooden boat of the size that the Bible says it is. Furthermore, they say a boat that size that is made of solid wood would collapse in a great worldwide flood. I must admit that all this seems pretty damning evidence against the Bible. I never considered the fact that the Bible is so unscientific, but then again, what should I expect from ignorant goatherders? This new revelation bothers me because if I cannot trust the Bible on something so crucial, then how could I trust the Bible at all? After that class, we go to Mrs. Thompson's Math class, but I cannot pay any attention to what she is saying because I just keep on thinking of what we learned from MythBusters in Science class. After that class is over, we all line up, count off our numbers and expectations, and begin transitioning back to the unit. 

Once we are in the unit, I immediately go to my room to grab my Bible. I do not want to sit in the therapy group because I need to do something more important. Mr. Tony comes to my room and asks me if I care to join the group and I curse him out and tell him to leave me alone. He does as I tell him and I search frantically for the chapter on Noah's ark. I find it in the book of Genesis and it literally says that Noah and his sons built a large wooden boat to save themselves from a worldwide flood! I am blown away by this to be honest because this pretty much blows the credibility of the Bible to smithereens. How could some ancient goatherders possibly know how to build a boat that size for all the animals in the world? Furthermore, how could they possibly make the boat sturdy enough to not break when the world is supposedly flooded? Also, where is the evidence of this so-called flood? I have a million questions like these running through my mind right now. I decided that I would ask Mr. Skyler at next Wednesday's Bible Study because he seems pretty knowledgeable and trustworthy. However, for now, I will just drop the issue. 

I walk out of my room and I see Enrique' bullying Travis for his snack. I almost think to myself that I should let it go because Travis needs to learn to stand up for himself. But, something in me tells me that what Enrique is doing is not right and that I should stand up to him on Travis' behalf. After all, Travis has been nothing but nice to me. I decided to confront Enrique' against my better judgment. 

"Yo, why don't you pick on me like that, chump?" I yell at Enrique' and he looks at me with an angry stare. I walk up to him before he can say anything and I punch him directly in his fat mouth. He tries to push me away, but then I punch him in his gut and he falls to the ground by my feet. Mr. Andy comes out and grabs me from behind and slams me to the ground and holds me in place until I am calm enough to be let up. Enrique' walks away with a busted lip and Mr. Andy takes off negative 250 points from my record. I guess my day has officially been ruined all because I decided to play Superman. I will never make that mistake again. Travis is on his own from now on. He comes up to me to say thank you, but I tell him to get away from me before I beat him up. I see the fear in his eyes and I just walk away and go to my room. I do not want to deal with anyone for the rest of the night. 

***To Find Out The Rest Of Eric's Story, Purchase The Book Here Simply Eric: Life of A Teenage Boy With Bipolar and Conduct Disorders

-David Lee Chu Sarchet?
Christian Mental Health Advocate 

Check out the Christ-Centered Mental Health Ministry website