The Bible Book

(Chris Devlin) #1
225
See also: The Raising of Lazarus 226–27 ■ Feeding the 5,000 228–31 ■ Healing of the Beggar 284–87 ■
The Final Judgment 316–21

THE GOSPELS


Jesus approaches the man and
calls for the demon to come out of
Him. The demon replies: “What do
you want with me, Jesus, Son of
the Most High God? In God’s name,
don’t torture me!” (Mark 5:7) Jesus
asks for the name of the demon,
who tells Him it is “Legion, for
we are many.”

Unclean and unwanted
The demons plead with Jesus not
to send them away, but rather to
send them into the bodies of a large
herd of pigs grazing nearby. When
Jesus grants the demons their
wish, the pigs hurtle down the
steep hillside into the lake and are
drowned, demonstrating Jesus’s
dominion over spiritual creatures.
The pig-keepers are angry at the
loss of their property and when the
local people hear about the carnage,
they remonstrate with Jesus and
ask Him to leave. As He climbs
back into His boat, however, Jesus
is hailed by the cured demoniac.
The man begs Jesus to let him
travel with Him, but Jesus refuses,
telling the man to go home to his
own people and tell them how
much the Lord has done for him.

The traditional interpretation of
this story is that, in casting out the
demons and condemning the pigs,
Jesus prioritized the soul of the
man. Medieval scholar St. Thomas
Aquinas argued that Jesus acted
to save the demoniac’s soul rather
than his body or the property of the

pig-keepers. Thus, the miracle is
a judgment on the townsmen’s
concern for their pigs over the
possessed man. The tale may
also have symbolic meaning.
Judaism regards pigs as unclean,
and therefore the herd might be a
good place to bury impure spirits. ■

Demonic Possession


According to French Benedictine
monk Antoine Augustin Calmet,
writing in the 18th century, in
the Bible there are two forms of
demonic attack—“possession”
and “obsession.” The former
usually involves the internal
“ownership” of the individual
by an evil spirit. This manifests
in the form of physical agitation,
a furious temper, speaking in
tongues, and uttering blasphemy.
“Obsession” occurs when the

demon acts externally against
its victim. This can involve
unexplained lesions, epileptic
seizures, and facial deformation.
In the Old Testament, evil
spirits are mentioned in 1
Samuel, 1 Kings, and Job. There
is a greater number of demonic
attacks in the New Testament.
However, Calmet notes that
what seemed to be demons may
have often represented little
more than simple maladies
that could not be explained
by contemporary physicians.

A boy.
Mark 9:17–29

A Canaanite
woman’s daughter.
Matthew 15:21–28

A blind and mute man.
Matthew 12:22–32

A man in the synagogue
at Capernaum.
Luke 4:35

A mute man.
Matthew 9:32–34

Subjects of
exorcism

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