9: The Gentile and the Demons
Notes
Transcript
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
OUTLINE:
1. INTRODUCTION
a. To the other side of the lake
b. Jesus is God
c. Jesus is a friend of sinners
2. CONCLUSION
-------------------------------------------------------------1. INTRODUCTION:
a. To the other side of the lake:
They came to the other side of the sea, to the country of the
Gerasenes (Mk 5:1).
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Jesus arrives in Gentile country, on the other side of the lake
o This area hadn’t been under permanent or settled Israelite control for
centuries, like the area on the western side of the lake
o Joshua conquered most of it initially
o It hung on through David and Solomon’s reign
o It hung when it became a part of the breakaway Northern Kingdom
o It was swallowed up by the Assyrians in 722 BC
o It wasn’t under any kind of Israeli control until the late 1st century BC,
under the Maccabees, but the Romans quickly conquered the entire
region after siding with one Maccabean faction during a civil war
among the Jews
This entire region had been predominately Gentile for over 700 years
o This wasn’t a place the average Jewish rabbi in this time would ever
want to go
o The people there were ceremonially unclean pagans, and the very air
they breathe could contaminate you and make you unworthy to stand
before God (this was how the thought went)
Yet, Jesus decides to go here – why?
o Mark’s a guy who appreciates irony
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
o He likes to highlight when something happens that’s the opposite of
what you’d expect
▪ (1) Jesus came to His own people, preaching their own
Scriptures, saying He was the Messiah they’d been waiting for
… and they rejected Him
• But, the demons always give Him glory and honor!
• His own family thinks He’s insane
• A group of Pharisees from Jerusalem accused Him of
being demon-possessed!
• That’s not the way you’d think it would go!
▪ (2) So, Jesus adopts a teaching style (parables) for His own
people that’s designed to filter and screen out folks who are
following Him for the wrong reason, and preaches that most
people will reject the Gospel (parable of the sower)
• But, the demons always acknowledge who He is!
• That’s also not the way you’d think it would go!
▪ (3) Then, despite all the things they’ve seen and heard that
ought to teach them otherwise, the disciples still have to be
babied along so they’ll understand who He actually is … He is
the Messiah, but He’s more than just a man!
• But, again, the demons always confess who He is!
o Now, when Jesus heads to a completely Gentile area:
▪ (1) He confronts a demon who understands exactly who Jesus
is, while His own apostles are still confused and afraid
▪ (2) He makes His first Gentile convert, who also understands
exactly who He is (more so than the apostles), and Jesus
commissions Him as a missionary to the Gentiles; the people
most Jewish teachers in this day had taught Jews to despise!
And when Jesus had stepped out of the boat, immediately there
met him out of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit. He lived
among the tombs. And no one could bind him anymore, not even
with a chain, for he had often been bound with shackles and
chains, but he wrenched the chains apart, and he broke the
shackles in pieces. No one had the strength to subdue him. Night
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
and day among the tombs and on the mountains he was always
crying out and cutting himself with stone (Mk 5:2-5)
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What’s going on with the man Jesus meets?
o Well, clearly, this guy has problems!
▪ The man confronts Jesus immediately
▪ He lives among the tombs along the shore, which makes the
man ceremonially “unclean” under the OT law (for real, this isn’t
tradition!), which means Jesus is being very odd for going there!
▪ He’s clearly insane and has superhuman strength; he can even
rip shackles and chains apart; this isn’t surprising = he’s
inhabited by up to 2000 demons!
▪ No man is strong enough to hold him, and they seem to leave
him alone to haunt the hillside and the tombs (which sounds like
a good idea!)
▪ He lives in the hills overlooking the Sea of Galilee, screaming
and mutilating himself with stones day and night
o All told, this is clearly not somebody you want to meet in the early
morning hours, when you roll into an unfamiliar neighborhood
b. Jesus is God:
And when he saw Jesus from afar, he ran and fell down before
him (Mk 5:6).
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This is probably the most dramatic encounter anyone has with Jesus in the
entire Gospel of Mark, and you should pay attention to what it means!
What does this guy do?
o He sees Jesus from afar; that is, from the tombs on the hillside
o He’s probably been watching this single, solitary boat creep towards
the shore for a while
o As the boat docks, He runs down to confront Jesus
Why is the man running at Jesus?
o Is he excited and anxious to greet Him with a Starbucks gift card or a
loaf of freshly baked banana bread to welcome Him to the
neighborhood?
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
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o No; the man is probably heading to attack the occupants of the boat
What does He do when He gets to Jesus?
o It depends on what your translation says; he either “fell down/bowed
down” or he “worshipped”
o The context (see following) says the demon-possessed man
worshipped Jesus
o The man isn’t in control of himself; he’s being controlled by the fallen
angel who’s inhabiting his body
o This means the demon is worshipping Jesus
o He runs at the boat like a madman, ready to attack the occupants, but
when he gets within range of Jesus (who’s by now stepped out onto
the shore), he falls down in worship once he realizes who Jesus is!
Why on earth would a demon worship Jesus?
o When you worship someone (or something ☹), you’re
acknowledging the object of your worship is better than you, above
you, superior to you, of a higher status than you
o Who’s higher than the angels!?
▪ God is higher than the angels!
▪ The demons are worshipping Jesus as God, because they
recognize their own Creator
o But, didn’t God create everything!?
▪ Genesis says He did, but the NT says Jesus did it:
• “He was in the beginning with God. All things were
made through him, and without him was not any
thing made that was made,” (Jn 1:2-3)
o Son the agent in creation
o Distinction between God and Son
o Jesus is eternal
• “The true light, which gives light to everyone, was
coming into the world. He was in the world, and the
world was made through him, yet the world did not
know him,” (Jn 1:9-10)
o Son the agent in creation
o Jesus is prior to creation because He made it =
eternal
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
• “He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of
all creation. For by him all things were created, in
heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether
thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all
things were created through him and for him. And he
is before all things, and in him all things hold
together,” (Col 1:15-17)
o Distinction between God and Son
o Son the agent in creation = eternal
• “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God
spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last
days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he
appointed the heir of all things, through whom also
he created the world,” (Heb 1:1-2)
o Son the agent in creation = eternal
o Distinct from God
▪ Jesus created the stars, the sun, the moon, the planets, the
galaxies, the solar system … and the demon who’s bowing
before Him and worshipping Him
• But, the NT also never conflates Father and Son as if they
were identical – there’s always a distinction between
Father, Son and Spirit
o Who is Jesus, then?
▪ (a) He’s more than the sweet, gentle, meek and mild guy in a
robe and sandals we imagine in too many of our stereotypes
▪ (b) He’s also not the white guy with the piercing blue eyes you
see in those bad FaceBook posts
▪ (c) He’s the One through whom the Father created creation
itself,
▪ (d) Demons bow before Him in worship!
▪ (e) The Apostle John presents Jesus as the Righteous
Avenger; the One who’ll kill and trample unbelievers at the end
of the Tribulation period like grapes in a winepress, and their
blood will flow like a river that’s jumped it’s banks for tens of
miles around, in a flood several feet high (see Rev 14:14-20; cf.
Rev 19:11-16)
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
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▪ (f) An angel will summon all the birds of the air to gorge
themselves on the dead bodies of those who oppose God (Rev
19:17-21)
Let’s see what else this demon has to say:
And crying out with a loud voice, he said, “What have you to do
with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I adjure you by God,
do not torment me,” (Mk 5:7).
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What’s happening here?
o The demon begins begging and screaming
o Idiom = “What do you want with me!?”
What does the demon say to Jesus?
o (1) He recognizes Him
▪ Jesus didn’t have a nametag on, but the demon recognizes His
creator anyway
o (2) He calls Jesus “Son of the Most High God”
▪ This is Gentile language for the highest of the gods; the
penultimate God
▪ Balaam (Num 24:16), the King of Babylon (Isa 14:14) and
Nebuchadnezzar (Dan 3:26, 42) each used the term to refer to
Yahweh
▪ Like a parasite, the demon uses the vocabulary of the Gentile
man he’s inhabiting to confess that Jesus is the Son of God
What does the next part mean? What does it mean to “adjure” or “implore”
somebody?
o This is where a translation doesn’t get you anywhere by being literal!
o It means to command someone to do something, but the demon
clearly isn’t in a position to demand anything from Jesus; he’s on his
knees worshipping Him!
o So, it’s a command that’s cried out in a submissive way; he’s begging
Jesus
o The demon is basically saying something like:
▪ “For God’s sake, don’t torment me!”
▪ “Swear to God that you won’t torture me!”
What does it say about Jesus that a demon:
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
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o Fell down and worshipped Him
o Confessed that He was the Son of the Most High God
o Begged Jesus, in a pitiful, crying and submissive way to not torment
Him?
Why does the demon beg Jesus to not torment him? When does Jesus ever
torment any demon?
o The only time in Scripture a fallen angel is tormented is in the last
days, when they’re condemned to eternal, conscious torment in hell,
along with Satan, the Antichrist and the False Prophet
▪ Jesus in the last days = “Then he will say to those on his left,
‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared
for the devil and his angels,” (Mt 25:41)
o Luke and Matthew make it clear the demons beg Jesus not to send
them to hell:
▪ “And they begged him not to command them to depart into
the abyss,” (Lk 8:31)
▪ “And behold, they cried out, ‘What have you to do with us,
O Son of God? Have you come here to torment us before
the time?’” (Mt 8:29)
The demons don’t just:
o (a) Recognize Jesus
o (b) Worship Jesus
o (c) Call Jesus by the title of “Son of God,” or
o (d) Beg him
They beg him to not send them to hell to be tormented before the appointed
time, at the end of days
o They’re like ants standing in the path of a steam-roller, and they know
it
Why are the demons begging Jesus, and carrying on like this?
For he was saying to him, “Come out of the man, you unclean
spirit!” (Mk 5:8).
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Because Jesus had issued them a command, and they were terrified!
And, as they throw themselves at His feet, cry out and beg for mercy, Jesus
engages them in conversation:
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
And Jesus asked him, “What is your name?” He replied, “My
name is Legion, for we are many,” (Mk 5:9).
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A “legion” was a unit of about 5000 – 6000 troops
o This doesn’t mean there were exactly 6000 demons inhabiting this
man
o It just means there were a lot!
And he begged him earnestly not to send them out of the
country. Now a great herd of pigs was feeding there on the
hillside, and they begged him, saying, “Send us to the pigs; let
us enter them,” (Mk 5:10-12).
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The demons keep begging Jesus over and over for mercy; they’d rather
inhabit the pigs then be sent out of the region, to hell itself
o The demons are nothing but a bunch of blubbering fools now, on their
knees crying and begging for mercy from their Creator
So he gave them permission. And the unclean spirits came out
and entered the pigs; and the herd, numbering about two
thousand, rushed down the steep bank into the sea and drowned
in the sea (Mk 5:13).
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The demons only go into the pigs because Jesus gave them permission
There are evidently about 2000 demons, which indicates (again) how
powerful Jesus is in comparison to these fallen angels = deity
c. Jesus is a friend of sinners:
The herdsmen fled and told it in the city and in the country. And
people came to see what it was that had happened. And they
came to Jesus and saw the demon-possessed man, the one who
had had the legion, sitting there, clothed and in his right mind,
and they were afraid (Mk 5:14-15)
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
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The herdsmen ran away, and I can understand why!
o (a) They’d probably been watching the encounter
o (b) They saw the demon possessed man begging for mercy; they
were probably too far away to hear, but they could put the pieces
together from what they saw
o (c) They probably saw the man gesture to their flocks of pigs on the
hillside (“what’s going on here, I wonder …?”)
o (d) They saw Jesus give some sort of permission to the man
o (e) Immediately, all their flocks of pigs went insane and committed
mass suicide by rushing down into the Sea of Galilee and drowning
themselves
▪ I’d be a bit scared, too!
What’s the guy who used to be demon-possessed doing?
o He’s sitting with Jesus; and it’s probably not the awkward kind of
silence you get in a crowded elevator, where everyone tries to ignore
everyone else and you can’t wait to escape!
▪ They’re probably chatting about the Gospel, about how He’s the
Messiah, about the story of reality (creation, fall, redemption,
reconciliation) from the OT; about the Good News of the
Kingdom of God
o He has clothes, probably from the disciples
▪ I doubt he got them from Kohls
And those who had seen it described to them what had happened
to the demon-possessed man and to the pigs. And they began to
beg Jesus to depart from their region (Mk 5:16-17).
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The townspeople find them there after the herdsmen tell everyone what
happened
They come, and see this man who basically had no name, who’d only been
known by the title “demon-possessed guy,” and he’s sitting calmly, clothed,
and in his right mind
o This is such a dramatic reversal
o This is Jesus’ parable of Satan and the strong man come to life
Frightened out of their minds, they beg Jesus to leave
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
As he was getting into the boat, the man who had been
possessed with demons begged him that he might be with him
(Mk 5:18).
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The demons beg Jesus for mercy and ask Him to postpone their
eternal torment in hell
The Gentile townspeople beg Jesus to leave
The man who used to be demon-possessed begs to be with Jesus!
And he did not permit him but said to him, “Go home to your
friends and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and
how he has had mercy on you.” And he went away and began to
proclaim in the Decapolis how much Jesus had done for him, and
everyone marveled (Mk 5:19-20).
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Jesus commissions this man, His first Gentile convert, to stay in the region
and tell everyone about what He’s done for him, and about His mercy:
o Satan’s power over the man has been broken
o This is what the prophets said the Messiah would do (cf. Isa 35:5-10)
o If Jesus has the power to bind Satan and plunder his goods, what
does this say about Him?
This is the message Jesus sent this man to bring to his community, and what
a testimony he has to give!
o His own healing would be proof enough, but several eyewitnesses
saw the herd of pigs commit mass suicide as the demons drove them
into the sea!
o There’s proof positive that this man, Jesus, is exactly who He said He
was!
Did you notice that Jesus refers to Himself as Lord?
o There’s only one “Lord,” and that’s Yahweh
o Yet, Jesus calls Himself “Lord,” and the man understands Jesus is
referring to Himself because he went around telling everybody about
… Jesus!
2. CONCLUSION:
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
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I want you to leave here this morning knowing two things:
o (1) The incident with the demon = Jesus is God
▪ Jesus incarnation and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost (and beyond) reveal that our one God isn’t unitary or
biunal; He’s triune
▪ In this passage:
• (a) The demons worship Jesus
• (b) Jesus commands them to leave the poor man, and
they scream in terror and start begging Him for mercy
• (c) The demons call Jesus the “Son of the Most High
God!”
• (d) The demons beg and plead with Jesus to not cast
them into hell, which only Yahweh can do!
• (e) There are at least 2000 demons inside this man, and
they’re all worshipping, begging and pleading with Jesus
and acknowledging His identity as their Creator
• (f) They beg Him to let them enter the pigs, rather than
be cast into hell
• (g) They only go once He gives them permission!
o (2) The mission to this Gentile = Jesus is a friend of sinners:
▪ This man is just as much in the grip of Satan as you are today,
if you haven’t repented of your sins and believed in Jesus
• You may not be living in caves, cutting yourself with
stones, and screaming at odd hours of the night in terror
• But, your heart, soul and mind belong to Satan unless
and until you:
o (a) Confess your sinfulness, your wickedness, your
rebellion against God
o (b) Forsake self-rule in favor of God’s rule over
your heart, soul, mind and life, with Jesus as your
king
o (c) and believe that Jesus was perfect for you, died
for you, and defeated Satan for you by rising from
the dead
o (d) and, if you do that, Jesus will be a perfect and
all-sufficient Savior
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Pastor Tyler Robbins
The Gentile and the Demons (Mk 5:1-20)
Sunday Morning – August 19, 2018
Sleater Kinney Road Baptist Church, Olympia, WA
▪ Jesus could have stayed in Israelite territory, but He came
there to save this man from Satan
▪ He could have taken the man with him and returned to Israel,
but He left him there to spread the Gospel … even though
they’d just begged Him to leave = God has people He intends
to save everywhere = great encouragement
▪ Jesus is God, and He will be your judge, but for now He’s able
to be your Savior, too
• His yoke is easy, and His burden is light, and He’ll accept
you if you come to Him in repentance and faith
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Pastor Tyler Robbins