Gospel of Matthew linked to bizarre trail of 
self-mutilations

June 13, 2012, Special to World Science  

It happens only sporadically -- a bit more than every three 
years on average, judging by published medical re­ports -- 
but that makes it no less disturbing each time for hospital 
staff faced with the situation.

"It" may be de­scribed by citing the most recent ex­am­ple, 
re­ported in a medical journal last month: that of a 
62-year-old man whom physicians dubbed Mr. P to protect his 
privacy. Mr. P showed up at the emer­gen­cy room of St. 
Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoe­nix, Ariz., 
complaining of a case of "Mat­thew 19:12." Asked to clarify, 
he just kept repeating the same thing: Mat­thew 19:12.

The nurse on du­ty searched the Internet for Matthew 19:12. 
The result was, to put it mildly, wo­risome. The Biblical 
verse, as she learned, reads as follows. 

For there are some eunuchs, which were so born from their 
mother's womb; and there are some eunuchs, which were made 
eunuchs of men; and there be eunuchs, which have made 
them­selves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake. He 
that is able to receive it, let him receive it.

As it quickly be­came clear, Mr. P had made this hospital 
visit un­accompanied by his penis. That, he explained, he 
had flushed down the toilet three days ago after severing it 
with a pocket knife. His testicles were al­so absen­t -- 
re­moved four years earlier at Mr. P's re­quest by a doctor 
in Mexico. 

Matthew 19:12

"For there are some eunuchs, which were so born from their 
mother's womb; and there are some eunuchs, which were made 
eunuchs of men; and there be eunuchs, which have made 
them­selves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake. He 
that is able to re­ceive it, let him re­ceive it."

Mat­thew 18:8

"Where­fore if thy hand or thy foot of­fend thee, cut them 
off, and cast them from thee: it is better for thee to enter 
in­to life halt or maimed, rather than having two hands or 
two feet to be cast in­to ever­lasting fire."
 
Mat­thew 5:30

"And if thy right hand of­fend thee, cut it off and cast it 
from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy 
members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be 
cast in­to hell."

Matthew 5:29

"But if thy right eye of-fend thee, pluck it out and cast it 
from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy 
members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be 
cast in­to hell."
 
 
Al­though his speech and thoughts appeared muddled, Mr. P 
did state that he had "done this be­cause his penis had 
caused him to sin and as an eunuch he could be closer to God 
as de­scribed in Mat­thew 19:12," three re­searchers 
affiliated with St. Joseph's wrote in a re­port de­scribing 
the incident. Mr. P al­so claimed to have pondered the 
decision for months be­fore acting.

Mr. P received u­gent treatment at St. Joseph's, including a 
skin graft on­to the stump. He was then confined to a local 
psychiatric hospital by court order, leaving little but 
questions be­hind.

The three investigators pro­ceeded to search an on­line 
medical literature database, PubMed, for other cases of this 
nature. They discovered that the Bi­ble -- in­deed, the 
Gospel of Matthew specifically -- has left a trail of 
self-mutilations inspired largely by four of its verses. 

The bloody toll listed in case re­ports dating back to 1967 
-- PubMed doesn't go back much further -- in­cluded three 
partially or fully amputated penises; four pairs of 
castrated testicles; three amputated hands and 11 severely 
damaged eye­balls. Saws, circular saws, screw­drivers and 
pencils were among the tools used for the horrifying 
procedures, al­though several patients put out their eyes 
with their fingers alone.

"Our literature re­view re­vealed 16 patients in addition to 
[Mr. P] who had injured them­selves in connection with 
specific religious text," the re­searchers wrote. Their 
re­view of the cases is published in the May 29 on­line 
issue of the re­search journal Psychosomatics.

All but one of the patients were diagnosed with psychiatric 
dis-orders or psychotic dis-orders or had substance abuse 
issues, they wrote; Mr. P., for example, "had a long history 
of severe bi­polar illness marked by hyper-religious 
delusions."

And every case was connected with at least one of four 
verses in Mat­thew’s Gospel: 19:12, 18:8, 5:29 and 5:30. The 
three latter verses are more cryptic than the first, 
referenced by Mr. P. What they have in common is that they 
appear to suggest that if a hand, foot or right eye are 
some­how offensive, cutting them off is the way to go, 
be­cause at least, that much less of the body will end up in 
Hell.

"Several biblical verses reference self-mutilation as 
metaphoric acts of sacrifice or contrition," wrote the 
re­searchers, who included psychiatrist Jason P. Caplan of 
St. Josep's and the Creighton University School of Medicine 
in Omaha, Neb. "Some in-dividuals may interpret these 
passages literally and act on them, causing significant 
injury and even in­advertent death."

"Psychiatrists should be aware of the content of these four 
verses to aid in timely di­agnosis and intervention if they 
were to arise in discussion with a patient," they added. "It 
is interesting to note that no cases cite the Gospel of Mark 
de­spite very similar content (i.e., Mark 9:43, which reads 
'And if thy hand of-fend thee, cut it off: it is better for 
thee to enter in­to life maimed, than having two hands to go 
in­to hell, in­to the fire that never shall be quenched')."

"In­dividuals who rationalize their actions through biblical 
passages appear to have a series of features that make them 
a unique cohort with specific challenges regarding prognosis 
and treatment," Caplan and col­leagues wrote. Many of them 
have no regrets about their actions; de­liberately destroy 
the body part to prevent its re­attachment; re­sist efforts 
to successfully re­attach it when that is possible; and are 
un­co­operative with other aspects of treatment, they added. 

A 37-year old man was quoted in the 1967 re­port saying: 
"Even if I do get certified [insane] and in the eyes of the 
world I am mad it is far better for me to have cleansed 
my­self."

"Ideas of reference (specifically, that the Bible directly 
refers to them) is a re­peated theme in this group, 
under­scoring a common thread of psychotic disor­ders," 
Caplan and col­leagues wrote. "Guilt over sexual acts or 
de­sires is another re­current theme… Recent homo-sexual 
experiences occurred in three of the cases of genital 
self-mutilation." Four of the 17 self-mutilators were 
females; they had poked out their eyes or, in one case, 
amputated a hand.

Many patients had self-amputated after failed at­tempts to 
persuade doctors to do the deed, the re­searchers wrote, 
indicating a need for doctors presented with such re­quests 
to refer cases to a psychiatrist immediately.

Caplan dis­closed in the paper that he is affiliated with 
Aliso Viejo, Calif.-based Avanir Pharmaceuticals. The 
re­port did not re-commend any specific drug treatments, 
how-ever. As for how Mr. P is doing currently, Caplan said 
he doesn't know. "Once they leave the acute care hospital, 
we get no further up-date," he wrote in an e­mail.

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