Monday 25th April 2011
Derren Brown is a TV hypnotist. He makes entertainment out of manipulating people's emotions and perceptions: but he is essentially open about this.
The premiss of this documentary is two-fold: firstly, that faith healers (every faith healer? Brown thinks so) are simply manipulative showmen who are out to make money; secondly, that Brown can train anyone to be a faith healer. He's quite exercised about this - and particularly concerned about those who suffer depression when their healing does not appear (or doesn't last), or throw away medication and become ill.
So he recruits a scuba-diving instructor, trains him over a few months, then takes him to Texas. There they see some faith healers at work, and learn a few tricks along the way - the best being the old favourite of leg-lengthening. He practices preaching, teams up with a worship group, does a bit of on-street 'healing', and then runs a public event and does the whole thing for real. At the end, he does a 'reveal' in front of the whole audience - telling people that faith isn't about handing over money to rich evangelists.
Throughout, he's eager to underline that he has no quarrel here with genuine faith, and doesn't wish to undermine it. He wants only to expose charlatans. He and his scuba-diving protégé are also very exercised about doing right by those they work with - to the extent of cutting ties with a Christian PR company which might have got them a much bigger audience, for fear that said company would crash when the truth was revealed. They suffer angst from the deceit they engage in, but remind themselves "we must be hypocrites for a while so that the reality may be shown".
All in all, the presentation struck me as thoroughly responsible and worthy. There are many "faith healers" who are plainly manipulative fraudsters, and the more they are exposed, the better.
But it's rather close to home, too. I've certainly encountered many within my branch of faith who will talk eagerly and in a convinced way about miraculous healing. Long ago, I even encountered people who'd experienced the leg-lengthening thing, though I haven't heard of that stuff for quite a while. But miraculous healing almost never seems to stand up to scrutiny. You'd expect the medical profession to be sceptical, of course, but given how many people believe in healing, you'd have thought that there would be at least a few well-attested, incontrovertible cases. But there aren't. As far as I know, the medical literature has none whatsoever. None at all. Even though there are plenty of Christian doctors - even plenty of Evangelical and Charismatic ones. None at all. None whatsoever. Isn't that odd?
Christian GP Peter May evidently set out some time ago some characteristics of biblical healing miracles, arguing that these form something of a "gold standard" for evaluating whether a miracle has happened.
- The conditions were obvious examples of gross physical disease
- They were at that time incurable and most remain so today
- Jesus almost never used physical means
- The cures were immediate
- Restoration was complete and therefore obvious
- There were no recorded relapses
- Miracles regularly elicited faith
Miracles today? They remain widely discussed in Christian circles. Should we move on?