Faustino Castaño

Apart from the original meaning that the term "syndrome" has in the field of medicine, it is also often used to refer to phenomena that characterize a certain situation. For example, the expression "Stockholm Syndrome" was coined to refer to a psychological reaction in which the victim of a kidnapping against her will develops a complicit relationship and a strong emotional bond with her kidnapper. It is in this sense that we use the expression "Nicodemus Syndrome" to explain the psychological tendency to assume, unconsciously and uncritically, cultural values in general and religious values in particular of the environment in which one lives and is educated.

The Gospel, (John, 3:1-12), narrates the encounter with Jesus of a pious Pharisee who found it difficult to overcome the mental schemes of the cultural and religious environment in which had been formed. Surely it was not the only case of this type that Jesus encountered in spreading his message, and the evangelist wanted to summarize and symbolize in it all similar cases. The conclusion Jesus reached, in the “Nicodemus case”, is that it was necessary to be “born again”, that is, that in order to assume the liberating message that Jesus brought it was necessary to overcome the mental schemes that They are the result of the training process.

Consider, for example, the natural way in which we learn the native language, the language spoken in the environment in which we were raised, and how difficult it is to learn a second language. Well, the same thing happens with all the rest of the cultural legacy of the social environment in which we are formed: values or principles, economic system, ways of life, rules of conduct, moral criteria, social customs, religious beliefs and practices...

The case of the Nicodemus of the Gospel was that of the average type of the Jews of the time. He had been educated in a social, political and religious environment based on the Law of Moses. Jesus assumed that religious framework but wanted to free it from the Talmudist casuistry, what he called "the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees." A saying of his that expresses the spirit of the teaching he wanted to convey was that " the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath ". In reality, it is a revolutionary message; it turns the entire organized social system upside down. He comes to say that religion, laws, political authority... make sense only if they serve the good of people.

The way society is organized, and not only that of the time of Jesus, all this cultural legacy (values, moral criteria, religious system, etc.) is organized according to the interests of the dominant powers in society, that is, , people are educated, already from their tender age, so that they assume that cultural framework and consider it as the most natural thing in the world. If the system is threatened by revolutionary ideas that seek to change the world from the bottom up, the dominant powers resort to domesticated personnel in favor of their interests. The crowd that cried out to Pilate for the release of Barabbas and the condemnation of Jesus of Nazareth was made up, in large part, of unhappy people like Nicodemus who were sincerely convinced that he could can't be right against the Sanhedrin and the priesthood of the Temple of Jerusalem a simple layman like that Jesus who came from an insignificant village like Nazareth, from which it was said then that nothing good could come from there, see John, 1:45-50

Religion, which in principle responds to a human need to relate to the transcendent, to what we call God, is used by all the dominators of all times to mentalize, in favor of their own interests, those subjected and expropriated. The same happens with political systems that, in principle, have the necessary and dignified function of organizing the coexistence of human groups. Hence, any system of domination strives to control both political leaders and religious priesthoods. Those who offer themselves to serve as lackeys to the holders of economic power, the true owners of society, are unworthy political and religious leaders.

Those political and religious leaderships, what Jesus called “the kingdoms of this world”, fell into Satan's temptation of power and dominion that Jesus rejected. Jesus urges us to be “born again”, free ourselves from the leaven of the “doctors” who work for the system of domination, the ideological apparatus of the system that mentalizes us to accept it as it is. The Nicodemus syndrome, the tendency not to question what has been imbued in our minds, makes us incapable of undertaking the task that Jesus assigns to his followers, the construction of the Kingdom of God and his justice.

This occurred from the time of Jesus until now. It is assumed that the people who felt challenged by the call of Jesus and assumed the mission of following and imitating him would be devoted to his liberating project, the construction of that Kingdom different from those of this world. So we have to ask ourselves what resulted, after two millennia, from that transforming vocation. The history of those 20 centuries shows us that the Christian churches were abandoning the liberating program of the Messiah Jesus to gradually fall into a religiosity centered on worship, prayer...

Of the early Christian community in Jerusalem, the book of the Acts of the Apostles tells us that: …all those who believed came together and had all things in common. They sold their possessions and goods, and distributed them to everyone, to each one according to his need... …The multitude of those who had believed was of one heart and one soul. None of them claimed to be their own anything that he possessed, but that all things were common to them. With great power the apostles bore witness to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and abundant grace was upon all of them. There was, then, no needy among them, because all those who owned land or houses sold them, brought the price of what was sold and put it at the feet of the apostles. And it was distributed to each one as he had need.

Even in the fourth century, a bishop like Ambrose of Milan wrote:

Because nature generously offers everything for everyone in common. God ordained that everything be produced to provide food for all in common; his plan was for the land to be, as it were, the common possession of all of us. Nature produced common rights, so it is usurping greed that has established private rights.

But in the Christian religious sphere, it gradually but incessantly accepted and defended systems of domination based on the market and private property with all the abuse and inequality that they generate. Our Church dedicated itself to persecuting and condemning all internal and external movements that claim to recover the spirit of the evangelical message. She is fully dedicated to making nicodemos; the teaching he imparts seems to be aimed at spreading the idea that Jesus came into the world so that we would pray a lot. Jesus valued what prayer means in man's relationship with the Father, but the only prayer he taught his disciples was the "Our Father", and he did so only when they asked him: "teach us to pray" (Luke 11:1-4), and it is also a community prayer: “Our Father”, very far from the individualistic spirit that encourages “intimate and individual” prayer advocated by many current preachers. Jesus taught that the relationship that God wants with humans passes through the brotherly relationship of humans among themselves: loving everyone, friends and enemies, as brothers, forgiving offenses, renouncing violence, blessing those who curse us, praying for those who persecute us, share what we are and have with those who need us... In short, his mission was not primarily to promote prayers and devotions but love and service to others. He conceived his mission as the fulfillment of the prophecies that announced a liberating Messiah for the oppressed poor.

This is forgotten and they want to make us forget the promoters of prayer cults like the inquisitor Domingo de Guzmán, initiator of the devotion of the "Holy Rosary", or Ignacio Larrañaga, promoter of "prayer workshops", or the organizers of nocturnal adorations or perpetual It is time that someone in the Church dares to say that these people are simple nicodemuses who lead other nicodemuses or, as Jesus said: “blind men who lead other blind men”. Jesus does not feel loneliness in any tabernacle hoping that they will accompany him there with prayers. Where he wants to be accompanied and receive solidarity is in the oppressed and needy people, for example in Cañada Real, where to the hardships and deprivations they suffered there was added, two years ago, the cut off of the electricity supply by people who They seem to pray a lot.

These abandoned personnel, and other similar ones in other parts of the country, and many millions of people in wide areas of the planet are the robbed and wounded man who presents the parable of the Good Samaritan. Jesus valued the solidarity of the Samaritan more than the devotion of the priest and the Levite who came to pray in the Temple and passed by, leaving the needy aside. If we focus on devotions and cults abandoning the victims of the system and do nothing to change this system, it means that we have not learned anything from the Gospel and that we continue, like Nicodemus, trapped in the distorted religious tradition of our unjust society. If we want to be true followers of Jesus of Nazareth, we must strive to overcome the mental schemes that force us to respect what is socially established, overcome the Nicodemus syndrome, what Jesus called "being born again".