“Maybe Jesus Was Suicidal Too”: A United Church of Christ Pastor Reflects on His Suicide Attempt
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The studies have typically been restricted to the analysis of the relationship between religiosity (often operationalized as church affiliation or attendance) and suicidal ideation/attitude or suicide mortality statistics. Very rarely have researchers addressed non-religious form[s] of spirituality or used a qualitative methodology. The picture … becomes even more disappointing when we note that the findings about the influence of religion on suicide are inconsistent and ambiguous.
All major world religions forbid suicide that is carried out for personal reasons, although they vary in the intensity and circumstances for that condemnation. In addition, religion often surrounds the person with a supportive community, enables him or her to cope better with stress, and often protects against depression, substance abuse, and social isolation, major risk factors for suicide.
- A failed, nonexistent, or antagonistic relationship with a religious community (Colucci and Martin 2008; Lawrence et al. 2016; Nelson et al. 2012; Park and Slattery 2013);
- A religious tradition that is judgmental, moralistic, or ostracizing (Bryan et al. 2015; Gibbs and Goldbach 2015; Lytle et al. 2018);
- A belief that one is being punished, oppressed, betrayed, or deserted by God (Bryan et al. 2015; Colucci 2008; Jongkind et al. 2019; Lawrence et al. 2016; Smigelsky et al. 2020; Swinton 2001);
- Irreconcilable anger toward God or questioning of God (Baetz and Bowen 2011);
- A discrepancy between one’s beliefs and the teachings of one’s religious tradition or the sense that one is failing to live up to the tradition’s standards (Rickgarn 1990);
- Other religious/spiritual struggles as defined by the Religious and Spiritual Struggles Scale (Currier et al. 2018; Exline et al. 2014; McGraw 2020; Raines et al. 2020);
- Negative religious/spiritual coping (Currier et al. 2017; Dua et al. 2021; Goodwin 2013; Prempeh 2013; Rosmarin et al. 2013; Shannonhouse et al. 2020);
- A lack of meaning or purpose, when characterized as a spiritual problem (Colucci 2008; Knizek et al. 2021; Smigelsky et al. 2020);
- A belief in metempsychosis (reincarnation) or an afterlife that is preferable to the current life3 (Zhang and Xu 2007).
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Rationale for a Qualitative Approach
2.2. Sampling, Recruitment, and Data Collection
- You wrote on the questionnaire that as you were growing up, your family was affiliated with the _____ tradition. Tell me more about your involvement with that tradition. If no tradition: What exposure to religion or spirituality did you have?
- What did “God” mean to you when you were growing up? How have your beliefs about God/_____ (use participant’s preferred term) or your relationship with God/_____ changed over time?
- Would you say you have experienced religious or spiritual struggles? Please describe them and how they have affected your life.
- You wrote that you were _____ years old when you (first) attempted suicide. What role, if any, did your religious/spiritual beliefs or practices play in your life at that time or in your intention to end your life?
- Tell me about religion/spirituality in your life today.
2.3. Data Synthesis and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Religion and Spirituality before the Suicide Attempt
What it did was it amplified all these liberal theological ideas in me, because I was like, “No, that’s not who God is!” I would go to these clergy meetings with evangelical and other Protestant ministers who would talk about crazy theological crap (laughs). I’d be screaming in my head, “Aaaaah! What am I doing here? This is not the Church; this is not what I believe Jesus—God—is about.” So, it really made me stand up and take some more vocal action about social justice.
3.2. Factors Contributing to the Suicide Attempt
3.2.1. Feeling Trivialized
3.2.2. Intergenerational Depression and Suicidality
the church took a huge step back from my dad … I witnessed church members taking sides and being really supportive of my mom, which they should’ve, but my dad was kind of left out there high and dry. Over the course of a couple months, it was like my dad lost all his friends at the church … He stopped coming to worship. He was never invited to the men’s fellowship groups or anything like that. At the point at which my mom and dad divorced, my freshman year of high school, my dad couldn’t walk into the church. He was not greeted by people, or if he was, it was a very awkward exchange.
3.2.3. Despair and Cognitive Distortion
Being “a minister who was charged with saving people from suffering” was becoming an unbearable responsibility; after all, Jeremy could not even save himself from suffering.I spent a couple weeks just eating with a bunch of homeless people and being like, “What is going on in my life where I can’t afford to do this [pastoral] work?” and … “I’m not good enough to go to seminary, but if I go to seminary I can be better at what I do”—just this internal wrestling … I blamed God; like, “If God is good, and Jesus is good, then why do we live in a world that just hates so much? Why do I work in a church where no one respects me or appreciates me or validates me?”
Further pursuing this line of thinking, Jeremy was reminded of Jesus Christ, the central figure of his religion, and the circumstances surrounding Christ’s death.“I’m taking myself out of your life so you don’t have to worry and care for me. It’s one less thing that is dragging you down, and now you can go live your life and be happy without me moping around and being sad”—which, in the middle of you being very sad, makes complete sense. I remember writing a journal entry about how I felt like I just wanted to die, and the image of me being this ship—a sailing ship in the ocean: I would die, and the ship would sink into the ocean, and, resting on the bottom of the ocean, the ship was dead, but it brought forth more life. So, coral and fish began to live in the carcass of the ship at the bottom of the sea, and I was trying to describe how that was a very beautiful thing. Very poetic to me. Like, “If I killed myself, think of all the life that could emerge from that, all the opportunities for other people … Maybe I can teach these people something through this death.”
3.2.4. The Stigma of Suicide
Consequently, he didn’t talk about it, which, presumably, only worsened his alienation, despair, and the other factors fueling his urge to kill himself.My perspective as a teenager was if you are depressed, or if you attempt suicide, the church will forget you … And now here I am at 27, 10 years later, and I’m feeling sad and depressed and suicidal, and if I share that with the church, which is my safe place and my place of healing, it would ruin me! I would no longer have a safe place; I would no longer have a community that would care about me. They would all gasp and take a big step back. So that was the stigma that I felt working before [my] suicide attempt; it was “I don’t know how to talk about this in my church. I can’t talk about it.”
Distrust, then, like silence, ostracism, and shaming, can perpetuate the stigma of suicide and, by extension, suicide itself.Fear still exists in me that I’m gonna tell this story and say something very personal about myself, and I don’t know if that other person is going to want to trust me anymore. That means that [those of us who have been suicidal] don’t want to share these experiences! We don’t want to talk about suicide, we don’t want to talk about depression. And I think that’s why there’s a lot of clergy who don’t want to share the truth of their depression and suicidal idealization; it’s because they will never be trusted again in the church.
3.3. Why He Survived
3.4. Religion and Spirituality Since the Suicide Attempt
I was like, “There is no God. There is nothing. There is no meaning or reason, and if I die it’s just a body in the ground. And I don’t have a soul or anything like that, because it doesn’t mean anything! We’re not even making sense when we talk about spirituality. There’s no love and there’s no real community that can support me.” I was so, just, done. With the church, with God. I felt alone and abandoned. The meaning of life had been completely lost for me, and I was really struggling with that!
is that for years I was ashamed of my depression and my suicide attempt. It was something I could not talk about … I felt liberated after reading Out of the Depths; I realized that I didn’t have to be ashamed … and I could do the work of evaluating how my own faith life contributed to my experience of depression and suicide attempts. I think for a while I was really trying to compartmentalize both of those experiences, like my faith didn’t have anything to do with suicide … [Boisen] found affirmation from friends and family and colleagues that encouraged him to not hide that stuff but to share it in restorative ways.
I thought suicide was going to prevent me from being ordained, but it’s actually one of the most important reasons for why the ecclesiastical body said yes—not that they’re putting a toxic minister into ministry but that they’re putting in a minister who understands brokenness and has done the hard work of healing. I had gone on that journey and wanted to minister to others in the way that I understood my own healing ministry.
3.5. Summary of the Results
- Religion and its attendant creeds and observances, including regular attendance at worship services, featured large in the childhood and adolescence of seven out of eight of the participants.
- All participants have religiosity or spirituality of various ilks and intensities in their lives today.
- Participants’ current relationships with God range from detachment to intimacy.
- Every person has experienced religious/spiritual struggles.
- While despair was present in all participants prior to their suicide attempts, other psychoemotional and spiritual states were also operative: being “done” (five participants), perceived failure or inadequacy (five participants), and cognitive distortion (all eight).
- All attribute surviving their suicide attempts to one or more causes, from the mundane/practical to the supernatural/divine, and most recognize a grander purpose for their existence.
- Healthy coping methods and spiritual factors keep each of them from acting on continuing suicidal ideation.
- All currently engage in advocacy, helping, caregiving, or ministry in a professional or volunteer capacity.
- All have confronted their personal history of suicide attempts and pondered the changes in their relationships with life and death since surviving the attempts. Several speak and write publicly about their experiences with suicide. All harbor compassion for people who experience suicidality.
- Every person’s story includes turning points, some with patently spiritual elements, that have resulted in a desire to live.
4. Discussion
4.1. Whalley’s Model
- The source of the notion that suicide is an option. This is the case, Whalley explains, when religion promotes suicide or renders it attractive, such as by promising reunion with loved ones in an afterlife or the opportunity to “merge into the universe” (Whalley 1964, p. 105) after death. It is also at play when one believes one is being commanded by religion to take one’s life or when one “identif[ies] with Christ and must therefore kill [one]self” (Whalley 1964, p. 105).
- Suicido-genic6. Religion may “nourish a suicidal idea” that originated elsewhere: hearing an account of someone’s suicide and finding oneself to be like-minded, for instance, or “studying the works of Nietzsche” (Whalley 1964, p. 105). In addition,if a person has been socialized in a religion that stressed Man’s worthlessness and sinfulness and portrayed human beings more as worms than angels, in a time of crisis or depression the individual may feel complete despair. The suicidal hypothesis may then take root or may come to consciousness if it has been dormant. If his religion has made shame, guilt, fear, and punishment more vivid and real to him than love, hope, joy, and forgiveness, religious counselors will find it difficult to convince him of the reality of the hopeful side of his religion—even if he wants to believe.Whalley points out that Judeo-Christian faiths teach contradictory beliefs simultaneously, such as depicting God as both loving and chastising, and some religions advance decidedly negative views of human nature and conduct. This championing of unsympathetic doctrines runs the risk of inducing “guilt and self-hatred” in their affiliates, which “often make an excellent subsoil in which suicidal impulses may flower and bear fruit” (Whalley 1964, p. 105).
- Suicido-static. By contrast, religion can inhibit the maturation of suicidality, such as when religious conversion or deepened religious conviction mitigates depression or guilt by providing hope or forgiveness, or when one joins a supportive religious community that channels one’s suicidality into more constructive thoughts and actions.
- Suicido-cidal. Religion can extinguish suicidal urges altogether, suddenly or gradually. Whalley describes three cases from her clinical practice in which this “killing off” of suicidality occurred abruptly after the individuals’ suicide attempts. Surviving the attempt functioned as an epiphany for each of them; all three confidently attributed their survival to direct intervention by God and responded by significantly altering their conduct, worldview, and values. Besides losing their suicidal inclinations, they became “more interested in religion” (Whalley 1964, p. 106).
- Immunizing. “By providing a specific set of counter-beliefs supported by a social situation and rituals” (Whalley 1964, p. 106), religion can create conditions hostile to either the germination or the acting-upon of suicidal thoughts. In such cases, says Whalley, suicide “becomes literally unthinkable” or at least not “within the realm of [one’s] own action-possibilities” (Whalley 1964, p. 106). As examples she discusses the life-oriented philosophies of Judaism and Catholicism and the latter’s characterization of suicide as “one of the few sins for which there is no escape from eternal punishment” (Whalley 1964, p. 106).
4.2. Results Set within Whalley’s Model and Related to the Literature
4.2.1. Religion/Spirituality as Suicidogenic
4.2.2. Religion/Spirituality as Suicido-Static
4.2.3. Religion/Spirituality as Suicido-Cidal
4.2.4. Religion/Spirituality as Immunizing
4.2.5. Religion/Spirituality as Inconsequential
4.2.6. Summary of Results Set within Whalley’s Model
5. Limitations
6. Future Directions
6.1. Recommendations for Researchers
- Is religion/spirituality ever accessed after individuals have made up their mind to end their life, their cognition is constricted, and a suicide attempt is imminent? If so, what forms does it take? Does a certain type of religion/spirituality or religious/spiritual practice have the most potential to decrease suicidality at that time?
- At what point does beneficial religion/spirituality stop working (become inconsequential) prior to an attempt?
- How can religion/spirituality’s “life-giving” effects be strengthened during a suicidal crisis?
- What is the typical relationship between atheism and suicide, and what factors are most operative within this relationship?
- What types of religion-based suicide stigma are most harmful to people with suicidal ideation?
- Which religious/spiritual struggles correlate most strongly with suicidality?
- Which forms of religious/spiritual coping work best for people with suicidal ideation and its accompanying cognitive and affective states (hopelessness, despair, burdensomeness, alienation, etc.) or for those healing from the trauma of a suicide attempt?
6.2. Recommendations for Clinicians and Other Caregivers
- If you are affiliated with a faith tradition, how close a connection do you feel to it and to the other people affiliated with it?
- If you do not feel close to or supported by the other people in that tradition and you would like to be, how could you improve that relationship?
- How would you change your faith tradition (the worship services, the teachings, the rituals, etc.) so that it is more welcoming and fulfilling for you?
- Which of your beliefs and values match your faith tradition’s? Which do not?
- What other faith traditions or spiritualities appeal to you? What about them do you find compelling?
- What do you believe happens to people when they die? What if they had killed themselves?
- What is your family’s attitude toward suicide? Friends’? Community’s? Religious tradition’s? How have these attitudes affected your own?
- What religious/spiritual struggles have you experienced?
- Do you believe people are inherently good? Do you feel you are?
- When you feel most down, what role does religion/spirituality play for you?
- How might religion or spirituality help if suicidal thoughts began to dominate your daily life?
- How does the way you view or relate to God change when you are despondent?
- If you are thinking about suicide, what are your reasons for dying? What are your reasons for living? What do you think your death would accomplish? What harm might it do? (See Freedenthal 2013 for guidance on these questions.)
- What do you think is your purpose on earth?
- How do you explain your surviving your suicide attempt(s)? To what, if anything, do you attribute your survival?
- What do you think is your purpose for surviving?
- What aspects of your religion/spirituality were not working for you before the attempt(s)?
- How might religion or spirituality have helped when you became preoccupied with thoughts of ending your life?
- How have you changed your religion or spirituality since the attempt(s) so that there is a better fit?
- What is your view of God? How helpful is that view for you? If you would like to have a more collaborative relationship with God, how could you move toward that?
- How have your ideas about God changed since your suicide attempt(s)? About death? About life?
- What practices do you have that give you a sense of goodness, vitality, or serenity? What practices could you add? What practices do not enhance your well-being?
- If you still think about suicide, what are your reasons for dying? For living?
- Have you experienced any spiritual awakenings or turning points in your life story? If you could write your own turning point, what would it be?
7. Closing Thoughts
Oh God, you see us. You see me, and you see Ryan. I offer you thanksgiving for the journey that each of us has taken, for this opportunity to have our journeys collide here in this triangle[-shaped] room, with light that is shining on some darkness. In the depths of that darkness there has been healing. Certainly in my life there is still healing to be had, and in Ryan’s life there is still healing to be had, and in this world there is still darkness that needs more light. May you bless this work that we have committed to here; may it bless the lives of the people that it touches. May Ryan’s work here be prophetic. Inscribe in the hearts of the people that she presents it to a sense of story, and belonging, and of being heard. This I pray, to you, a still-speaking God, a still-listening God, a God who says yes despite all of it. Amen.
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | “Suicidality” is the instance of being suicidal; that is, inhabiting a state that can be located on the “suicide continuum,” the range of increasingly lethal “ideation” (thoughts, plans, or preoccupation) or behaviors involving intentionally ending one’s life (Colucci and Martin 2008; Firestone and Seiden 1990; Sveticic and De Leo 2012). |
2 | In this article, “spirituality” will refer to “the actualization of the basic human capacity for transcendence” (Schneiders 2011, p. 16), or, as psychologist Kenneth Pargament famously defines it, a “search for the sacred” (Pargament 2007, p. 53). It is the subjective way a person experiences the numinous (Piedmont et al. 2020). “Religion,” meanwhile, is an organized system of beliefs, practices, rituals, ceremonies, symbols, values, and sacred texts (Pargament et al. 2013a). “Religiosity,” sometimes called “religiousness,” is the extent to which a person participates in religion internally, such as by belief, or externally, such as by action. |
3 | Suicides carried out for this reason, similar to those motivated by the belief that one will be sainted or rewarded after death for killing oneself, might not involve psychache. In such cases, they would be different from the type of suicide that is the focus of this article, suicide that stems from emotional agony. |
4 | The use of first person is a convention in qualitative research, the mode of this project. Consistent with the postmodern spirit of the paradigm, researchers’ use of “I” emphasizes their inescapable subjectivity; encourages accountability, reflexivity, and transparency; and implies the social and person-based nature of the research encounter (C. Webb 1992). |
5 | Whalley’s name is erroneously listed as “Whalen” in the article. |
6 | I find Whalley’s use of this term confusing. Since a genesis is an origin, “suicido-genic” more aptly describes the source of suicidality rather than something that augments or aggravates it, which is how she uses it. Perhaps a more suitable medical term for her intended meaning would be “suicido-trophic” (suicidality-nourishing) or “suiciditic” (suicidality-inflaming). Nevertheless, I will observe “suicido-genic” as she defines it, but I will conflate it with the religion-as-source concept. In other words, “suicido-genic” as I use it will describe something that acts as either the germ or the provocateur of suicidal ideation or behavior. This is consistent with other scholars’ use of it (e.g., Eskin et al. 2020). I will also drop the hyphen in accordance with the modern convention. |
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Pseudonym | Gender | Age | Race | Education | Occupation | Marital Status | Religious Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abby | F | 45 | W | Master’s | Epidemiologist | Married | “Catholic (lapsed)” |
Deacon | M | 39 | W | Some college | Emergency medical technician and critical care technician | Married | “None” |
Elizabeth | F | 58 | W | Master’s | Educator/advocate/ consultant | Widowed | “Culturally Christian/ Ideologically Buddhist” |
Gabriela | F | 40 | W | Master’s | Advocate/writer | Divorced | Buddhist |
Harrison | M | 48 | W | Master’s | Social worker | Married | “Roman Catholic” |
Jeremy | M | 33 | W | Master’s | Hospital chaplain | Married | “United Church of Christ (Christian/ Protestant/liberal)” |
Phil | M | 51 | W | Master’s plus PsyS | School psychologist and adjunct professor of psychology | Married | “Christian (non-denominational)” |
Stern | M | 29 | W | Some college | Volunteer at mental health nonprofit | Single | “Universalist” |
Role of Religion/ Suicide (RS) | Definition | Evidence for It in This Study and # of Participants Who Experienced It |
---|---|---|
Suicidogenic | Exacerbating suicidality | Prior to the suicide attempts, RS failed to stymie suicidality (8 participants) and actively contributed to suicidality (6) |
Suicido-static | Attenuating suicidality | Since the suicide attempts, RS has been informing coping and reasons for living (8) |
Suicido-cidal | Exterminating suicide or suicidality | RS possibly aided in the elimination of suicidality (1) and helped to thwart death (5) |
Immunizing | Rendering suicide undoable | Not applicable |
Inconsequential/ no role | Having no effect on suicidality | Prior to the suicide attempts, RS was absent or too weak (2); during the attempts, the protective effects of RS disappeared (6) |
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Hall, E.R. “Maybe Jesus Was Suicidal Too”: A United Church of Christ Pastor Reflects on His Suicide Attempt. Religions 2021, 12, 930. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110930
Hall ER. “Maybe Jesus Was Suicidal Too”: A United Church of Christ Pastor Reflects on His Suicide Attempt. Religions. 2021; 12(11):930. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110930
Chicago/Turabian StyleHall, Elizabeth Ryan. 2021. "“Maybe Jesus Was Suicidal Too”: A United Church of Christ Pastor Reflects on His Suicide Attempt" Religions 12, no. 11: 930. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110930
APA StyleHall, E. R. (2021). “Maybe Jesus Was Suicidal Too”: A United Church of Christ Pastor Reflects on His Suicide Attempt. Religions, 12(11), 930. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110930