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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 5
Glorious Cure of the Gadarene Demoniac (@Mr
5:1-20).
1. And they came over unto the other side of the sea,
into the country of the Gadarenes.
2. And when he was come out of the ship, immediately--(see
@Mr
5:6).
there met him a man with
an unclean spirit--"which had devils [demons]
long time" (@Lu
8:27). In Matthew (@Mt
8:28), "there met him two men possessed with
devils." Though there be no discrepancy between these
two statements--more than between two witnesses, one of
whom testifies to something done by one person, while the
other affirms that there were two--it is difficult to see
how the principal details here given could apply to more
than one case.
3. Who had his dwelling among the tombs--Luke (@Lu
8:27) says, "He ware no clothes, neither abode in
any house." These tombs were hewn out of the rocky
caves of the locality, and served for shelters and lurking
places (@Lu
8:26).
4. Because that he had been often bound with fetters
and chains, &c.--Luke says (@Lu
8:29) that "oftentimes it [the unclean spirit]
had caught him"; and after mentioning how they had
vainly tried to bind him with chains and fetters, because,
"he brake the bands," he adds, "and was
driven of the devil [demon] into the wilderness." The
dark tyrant--power by which he was held clothed him with
superhuman strength and made him scorn restraint. Matthew
(@Mt
8:28) says he was "exceeding fierce, so that no
man might pass by that way." He was the terror of the
whole locality.
5. And always, night and day, he was in the mountains,
and in the tombs, crying, and cutting himself with stones--Terrible
as he was to others, he himself endured untold misery,
which sought relief in tears and self-inflicted torture.
6. But when he saw Jesus afar off, he ran and
worshipped him--not with the spontaneous alacrity
which says to Jesus, "Draw me, we will run
after thee," but inwardly compelled, with terrific
rapidity, before the Judge, to receive sentence of
expulsion.
7. What have I to do with thee, Jesus, Son of the most
high God? I adjure thee by God, that thou torment me not--or,
as in @Mt
8:29, "Art Thou come to torment us before the
time?" (See on Mr 1:24). Behold the tormentor
anticipating, dreading, and entreating exemption from torment!
In Christ they discern their destined Tormentor; the time,
they know, is fixed, and they feel as if it were come
already! (@Jas
2:19).
8. For he said unto him--that is, before the
unclean spirit cried out.
Come out of the man,
unclean spirit!--Ordinarily, obedience to a command of
this nature was immediate. But here, a certain delay is
permitted, the more signally to manifest the power of
Christ and accomplish His purposes.
9. And he asked him, What is thy name?--The object
of this question was to extort an acknowledgment of the
virulence of demoniacal power by which this victim was
enthralled.
And he answered, saying,
My name is Legion: for we are many--or, as in Luke (@Lu
8:30) "because many devils [demons] were entered
into him." A legion, in the Roman army, amounted, at
its full complement, to six thousand; but here the word is
used, as such words with us, and even this one, for an
indefinitely large number--large enough however to rush,
as soon as permission was given, into two thousand swine
and destroy them.
10. And he besought him much that he would not send
them away out of the country--The entreaty, it will be
observed, was made by one spirit, but in behalf of many--"he
besought Him not to send them, &c."--just
as in @Mr
5:9, "he answered we are
many." But what do they mean by entreating so
earnestly not to be ordered out of the country? Their next
petition (@Mr
5:12) will make that clear enough.
11. Now there was there, nigh unto the mountains--rather,
"to the mountain," according to what is clearly
the true reading. In @Mt
8:30, they are said to have been "a good way
off." But these expressions, far from being
inconsistent, only confirm, by their precision, the minute
accuracy of the narrative.
a great herd of swine
feeding--There can hardly be any doubt that the owners
of these were Jews, since to them our Lord had now come to
proffer His services. This will explain what follows.
12. And all the devils besought him, saying--"if
thou cast us out" (@Mt
8:31).
Send us into the swine,
that we may enter into them--Had they spoken out all
their mind, perhaps this would have been it: "If we
must quit our hold of this man, suffer us to continue our
work of mischief in another form, that by entering these
swine, and thus destroying the people's property, we may
steel their hearts against Thee!"
13. And forthwith Jesus gave them leave--In Matthew
(@Mt
8:32) this is given with majestic
brevity--"Go!" The owners, if Jews, drove an
illegal trade; if heathens, they insulted the national
religion: in either case the permission was just.
And the unclean spirits
went out--of the man.
and entered into the
swine: and the herd ran violently--rushed.
down a steep place--down
the hanging cliff.
into the sea (they were
about two thousand)--The number of them is given by
this graphic Evangelist alone. and were choked in the
sea--"perished in the waters" (@Mt
8:32).
14. And they that fed the swine fled, and told it--"told
everything, and what was befallen to the possessed of the
devils" (@Mt
8:33).
in the city, and in the
country. And they went out to see what it was that was
done--Thus had they the evidence, both of the herdsmen
and of their own senses, to the reality of both miracles.
15. And they come to Jesus--Matthew (@Mt
8:34) says, "Behold, the whole city came out to
meet Jesus."
and see him that was
possessed with the devil--the demonized person.
and had the legion,
sitting--"at the feet of Jesus," adds Luke
(@Lu
8:35); in contrast with his former wild and wandering
habits.
and clothed--As our
Evangelist had not told us that he "ware no
clothes," the meaning of this statement could only
have been conjectured but for "the beloved
physician" (@Lu
8:27), who supplies the missing piece of information
here. This is a striking case of what are called Undesigned
Coincidences amongst the different Evangelists; one of
them taking a thing for granted, as familiarly known at
the time, but which we should never have known but for one
or more of the others, and without the knowledge of which
some of their statements would be unintelligible. The
clothing which the poor man would feel the want of the
moment his consciousness returned to him, was doubtless
supplied to him by some of the Twelve.
and in his right mind--but
now, oh, in what a lofty sense! (Compare an analogous,
though a different kind of case, @Da
4:34-37).
and they were afraid--Had
this been awe only, it had been natural enough; but other
feelings, alas! of a darker kind, soon showed themselves.
16. And they that saw it told them how it befell to him
that was possessed with the devil--("the
demonized person").
and also concerning the
swine--Thus had they the double testimony of the
herdsmen and their own senses.
17. And they began to pray him to depart out of their
coasts--Was it the owners only of the valuable
property now lost to them that did this? Alas, no! For
Luke (@Lu
8:37) says, "Then the whole multitude of the
country of the Gadarenes round about besought Him to
depart from them; for they were taken with great
fear." The evil spirits had thus, alas! their object.
Irritated, the people could not suffer His presence; yet
awe-struck, they dared not order Him off: so they entreat
Him to withdraw, and--He takes them at their word.
18. he that had been possessed with the devil prayed
him that he might be with him--the grateful heart,
fresh from the hand of demons, clinging to its wondrous
Benefactor. How exquisitely natural!
19. Howbeit, Jesus suffered him not, &c.--To be
a missionary for Christ, in the region where he was so
well known and so long dreaded, was a far nobler calling
than to follow Him where nobody had ever heard of him, and
where other trophies not less illustrious could be raised
by the same power and grace.
20. And he departed, and began to publish--not only
among his friends, to whom Jesus immediately sent him, but
in Decapolis--so
called, as being a region of ten cities. (See on Mt 4:25).
how great things Jesus
had done for him: and all men did marvel--Throughout
that considerable region did this monument of mercy
proclaim his new-found Lord; and some, it is to be hoped,
did more than "marvel."
@Mr
5:21-43. THE DAUGHTER OF JAIRUS RAISED TO LIFE--THE
WOMAN WITH AN ISSUE OF BLOOD HEALED. ( = @Mt
9:18-26 Lu 8:41-56).
The occasion of this scene will appear presently.
Jairus' Daughter (@Mr
5:21-24).
21. And when Jesus was passed over again by ship unto
the other side--from the Gadarene side of the lake,
where He had parted with the healed demoniac, to the west
side, at Capernaum.
much people gathered
unto him--who "gladly received Him; for they were
all waiting for Him" (@Lu
8:40). The abundant teaching earlier that day (@Mr
4:1, &c., and @Mt
13:1-58) had only whetted the people's appetite: and
disappointed, as would seem, that He had left them in the
evening to cross the lake, they remain hanging about the
beach, having got a hint, probably through some of His
disciples, that He would be back the same evening. Perhaps
they witnessed at a distance the sudden calming of the
tempest. The tide of our Lord's popularity was now fast
rising.
and he was nigh unto the
sea.
22. And, behold, there cometh one of the rulers of the
synagogue--of which class there were but few who
believed in Jesus (@Joh
7:48). One would suppose from this that the ruler had
been with the multitude on the shore, anxiously awaiting
the return of Jesus, and immediately on His arrival had
accosted Him as here related. But Matthew (@Mt
9:18) tells us that the ruler came to Him while He was
in the act of speaking at His own table on the subject of
fasting; and as we must suppose that this converted
publican ought to know what took place on that memorable
occasion when he made a feast to his Lord, we conclude
that here the right order is indicated by the First
Evangelist alone.
Jairus by name--or
"Jaeirus." It is the same name as Jair,
in the Old Testament (@Nu
32:41 Jud 10:3 Es 2:5).
and when he saw him, he
fell at his feet--in Matthew (@Mt
9:18), "worshipped Him." The meaning is the
same in both.
23. And besought him greatly, saying, My little
daughter--Luke (@Lu
8:42) says, "He had one only daughter, about
twelve years of age." According to a well-known
rabbin, quoted by LIGHTFOOT, a daughter. till she had
completed her twelfth year, was called "little,"
or "a little maid"; after that, "a young
woman."
lieth at the point of
death--Matthew (@Mt
9:18) gives it thus: "My daughter is even now
dead"--"has just expired." The news of her
death reached the father after the cure of the woman with
the issue of blood: but Matthew's brief account gives only
the result, as in the case of the centurion's
servant (@Mt
8:5, &c.).
come and lay thy hands
on her, that she may be healed; and she shall live--or,
"that she may be healed and live," according to
a fully preferable reading. In one of the class to which
this man belonged, so steeped in prejudice, such faith
would imply more than in others.
The Woman with an Issue of Blood Healed (@Mr
5:24-34).
24. And Jesus went with him; and much people followed
him, and thronged him--The word in Luke (@Lu
8:42) is stronger--"choked," "stifled
Him."
26. And had suffered many things of many physicians--The
expression perhaps does not necessarily refer to the
suffering she endured under medical treatment, but to the
much varied treatment which she underwent.
and had spent all that
she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse--pitiable
case, and affectingly aggravated; emblem of our natural
state as fallen creatures (@Eze
16:5,6), and illustrating the worse than vanity of all
human remedies for spiritual maladies (@Ho
5:13). The higher design of all our Lord's miracles of
healing irresistibly suggests this way of viewing the
present case, the propriety of which will still more
appear as we proceed.
27. When she had heard of Jesus, came--This was the
right experiment at last. What had she "heard of
Jesus?" No doubt it was His marvellous cures she had
heard of; and the hearing of these, in connection with her
bitter experience of the vanity of applying to any other,
had been blessed to the kindling in her soul of a firm
confidence that He who had so willingly wrought such cures
on others was able and would not refuse to heal her also.
in the press behind--shrinking,
yet seeking.
touched his garment--According
to the ceremonial law, the touch of anyone having the
disease which this woman had would have defiled the person
touched. Some think that the recollection of this may
account for her stealthily approaching Him in the crowd
behind, and touching but the hem of His garment. But there
was an instinct in the faith which brought her to Jesus,
which taught her, that if that touch could set her free
from the defiling disease itself, it was impossible to
communicate defilement to Him, and that this wondrous
Healer must be above such laws.
28. For she said--"within herself" (@Mt
9:21).
If I may touch but his
clothes, I shall be whole--that is, if I may but come
in contact with this glorious Healer at all.
Remarkable faith this!
29. And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried
up--Not only was her issue of blood stanched (@Lu
8:44), but the cause of it was thoroughly removed,
insomuch that by her bodily sensations she immediately
knew herself perfectly cured.
30. And Jesus immediately knowing in himself that
virtue--or "efficacy."
had gone out of him--He
was conscious of the forthgoing of His healing power,
which was not--as in prophets and apostles--something foreign
to Himself and imparted merely, but what He had dwelling
within Him as "His own fulness."
turned him about in the
press--crowd.
and said, Who touched my
clothes?
31. And his disciples said unto him--Luke says (@Lu
8:45), "When all denied, Peter and they that were
with Him said, Master."
Thou seest the multitude
thronging thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me?--"Askest
thou, Lord, who touched Thee? Rather ask who touched Thee
not in such a throng." "And Jesus said, Somebody
hath touched Me"--"a certain person has touched
Me"--"for I perceive that virtue is gone out of
Me" (@Lu
8:46). Yes, the multitude "thronged and pressed
Him"--they jostled against Him, but all involuntarily;
they were merely carried along; but one, one
only--"a certain person--TOUCHED HIM," with the
conscious, voluntary, dependent touch of faith, reaching
forth its hand expressly to have contact with Him. This
and this only Jesus acknowledges and seeks out. Even so,
as AUGUSTINE long ago said, multitudes still come
similarly close to Christ in the means of grace, but all
to no purpose, being only sucked into the crowd. The
voluntary, living contact of faith is that electric
conductor which alone draws virtue out of Him.
32. And he looked round about to see her that had done
this thing--not for the purpose of summoning forth a
culprit, but, as we shall presently see, to obtain from
the healed one a testimony to what He had done for her.
33. But the woman, fearing and trembling, knowing what
was done in her--alarmed, as a humble, shrinking
female would naturally be, at the necessity of so public
an exposure of herself, yet conscious that she had a tale
to tell which would speak for her.
came and fell down
before him, and told him all the truth--In Luke (@Lu
8:47) it is, "When the woman saw that she was not
hid, she came trembling, and falling down before Him, she
declared unto Him before all the people for what cause she
had touched Him, and how she was healed immediately."
This, though it tried the modesty of the believing woman,
was just what Christ wanted in dragging her forth, her
public testimony to the facts of her case--the disease,
with her abortive efforts at a cure, and the instantaneous
and perfect relief which her touching the Great Healer had
brought her.
34. And he said unto her, Daughter--"be of
good comfort" (@Lu
8:48).
thy faith hath made thee
whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy plague--Though
healed as soon as she believed, it seemed to her a stolen
cure--she feared to acknowledge it. Jesus therefore sets
His royal seal upon it. But what a glorious dismissal from
the lips of Him who is "our Peace" is that,
"Go in peace!"
Jairus' Daughter Raised to Life (@Mr
5:35-43).
35. Thy daughter is dead; why troublest thou the Master
any further?--the Teacher.
36. he saith unto the ruler of the synagogue, Be not
afraid, only believe--Jesus, knowing how the heart of
the agonized father would sink at the tidings, and the
reflections at the delay which would be apt to rise
in his mind, hastens to reassure him, and in His
accustomed style: "Be not afraid, only
believe"--words of unchanging preciousness and power!
How vividly do such incidents bring out Christ's knowledge
of the human heart and tender sympathy! (@Heb
4:15).
37. And he suffered no man to follow him, save Peter,
and James, and John the brother of James--(See on Mr
1:29).
38. And he cometh--rather, "they come."
to the house of the
ruler of the synagogue, and seeth the tumult, and them
that wept and wailed greatly--"the minstrels and
the people making a noise" (@Mt
9:23)--lamenting for the dead. (See @2Ch
35:25 Jer 9:20 Am 5:16).
39. And when he was come in, he saith unto them, Why
make ye this ado, and weep? the damsel is not dead, but
sleepeth--so brief her state of death as to be more
like a short sleep.
40. And they laughed him to scorn--rather, simply,
"laughed at Him"--"knowing that she was
dead" (@Lu
8:53); an important testimony this to the reality of
her death.
But when he had put them
all out--The word is strong--"turned them all
out"; meaning all those who were making this noise,
and any others that may have been there from sympathy,
that only those might be present who were most nearly
concerned, and those whom He had Himself brought as
witnesses of the great act about to be done.
he taketh the father and
the mother of the damsel, and them that were with him--Peter,
and James, and John.
and entereth in where
the damsel was lying.
41. And he took the damsel by the hand--as He did
Peter's mother-in-law (@Mr
1:31).
and said unto her,
Talitha cumi--The words are Aramaic, or Syro-Chaldaic,
the then language of Palestine. Mark loves to give such
wonderful words just as they were spoken. See @Mr
7:34 14:36.
42. And straightway the damsel--The word here is
different from that in @Mr
5:39-41, and signifies "young maiden," or
"little girl."
arose, and walked--a
vivid touch evidently from an eye-witness.
And they were astonished
with a great astonishment--The language here is the
strongest.
43. And he charged them straitly--strictly.
that no man should know
it--The only reason we can assign for this is His
desire not to let the public feeling regarding Him come
too precipitately to a crisis.
and commanded that
something should be given her to eat--in token of
perfect restoration.
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