Luke 8:26-39 From the beginning of Genesis where
we see Satan working for mankind’s destruction-- to the last chapters of
Revelation where we see the final destruction of Satan and the evil angels--
the Bible teaches that there are evil, spiritual beings in the world who are
opposed to God and work for our spiritual destruction.
The Good News for
us today is that as many and as powerful as these evil beings are—they are
simply no match for Jesus. The Bible
says that Jesus and the disciples:
…sailed to the
country of the Gerasenes, which is opposite Galilee. When Jesus had stepped out on land, there met
him a man from the city who had demons. For a long time he had worn no clothes,
One
of the consequences of Adam and Eve’s fall into sin through Satan’s deception was
that they saw that they were naked and hid from God. Where before they had lived in perfect
innocence with one another and in perfect fellowship with God—Satan destroyed both
of those relationships—and they were ashamed.
The man in our Gospel
lesson—completely under Satan’s power-- had lost that sense of shame-- but his
nakedness was not a return to innocence and fellowship. Instead, it indicated a total loss of any spiritual sense that something was wrong with him--
so deeply was he held in Satan’s bondage.
We live in a
culture that has lost its sense of shame—not because of mankind’s return to the
innocence of Eden --but because mankind is has lost the sense that something is
wrong in their relationship with God and with one another. In our world:
All manner of
sexual perversion is called normal. Our
neighbors incur debts that they have no intention of paying off. Politicians look us dead in the eye and say
one thing knowing all the time that another is true. People dress immodestly even for church. And those who do these things are shocked--
that we’re shocked.
This “complete and
utter” lack of shame is not a sign that we are throwing off the fetters of a
puritanical morality--but a revelation that so many in our world (under the
influence of Satan) have lost any sense of shame. This is not progress—it is death. The bible says that the demon-possessed man had not lived in a house but among the
tombs--a more vivid picture of our world is hard to imagine. The Bible says that:
When he saw Jesus, he
cried out and fell down before him and said with a loud voice, "What have
you to do with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I beg you, do not torment
me." For Jesus had commanded the
unclean spirit to come out of the man. (For many a time it had seized him. He
was kept under guard and bound with chains and shackles, but he would break the
bonds and be driven by the demon into the desert.)
For the man that
day there was no earthly power strong enough to restrain him physically—but neither was there any
earthly power strong enough to set him free spiritually. In fact, he didn’t even want to be set
free—he didn’t even know what freedom was anymore, so deeply was he held
captive under Satan’s dominion.
But Jesus loved
him too much to let him go on living like that forever. So is his love for us. He is not content to let us live under
Satan’s dominion but has come to set free from Satan’s power—a deliverance and
redemption that only he can accomplish.
As great and as
powerful as were the demons who held that poor man captive—they were simply no
match for Jesus—they had to bow at his feet in submission for they knew exactly
who he was and what he had come to do.
God promised this
day would come—that he would send a Savior—one born of a woman who would
destroy Satan and restore everything that he had destroyed—one who would set us
free from slavery to sin and death. What
was about to happen for that man was sign of what Jesus would do for all
people—rescuing us from the hell that we deserve on account of our sins. The Bible says that:
Jesus then asked him,
"What is your name?" And he said, "Legion," for many demons
had entered him.
In
Jesus’ day, a legion was a group of Roman soldiers—6,000 of them—that is how
may demons had taken possession of this poor man—but they were still no match
for the One who was sent to destroy them.
That is important
for us to remember. Two different human attitudes
please Satan when it comes to our understanding of who he is. The first is when people deny his existence
and give him a free reign to go about his destructive ways (and we see plenty
of that in our culture today). The
second is when people overestimate his power and fear him (and there’s plenty
of that kind of superstition in the church today). Satan is real. Satan is powerful—but he is no match for Jesus. The Bible says that they begged him not to command them to depart into the abyss.
6,000 demons bowed
at Jesus’ feet that day and begged him not to send them back to hell which is
another biblical teaching denied by many modern people. Hell is a place of eternal torment and
suffering made for the devil and his angels.
Despite modern denials that hell is simply an ancient fable designed to
scare people into behaving themselves: hell
is real—and it’s torments are terrible—the sufferings, eternal.
The great tragedy of
hell is that there are also human beings
there when it doesn’t have to be that way.
Jesus Christ has fully atoned for all our sins on the cross. There he suffered the pains of hell in our
place and rose up victorious on the third day showing Satan a defeated
enemy. The way of salvation is open to
all people through faith in Jesus Christ and hell need not gain one more person
for its eternal torments. For the demons
that day, anything was preferable to
being sent back to hell. The Bible says
that:
A large herd of pigs
was feeding there on the hillside, and they begged Jesus to let them enter
these. So he gave them permission. Then
the demons came out of the man and entered the pigs, and the herd rushed down
the steep bank into the lake and were drowned.
Bible
scholars don’t fully understand why Jesus allowed the demons to enter into the
pigs. Wouldn’t it have been better if the
demons were destroyed by Jesus? But the
final destruction of evil takes place on the Last Day when Satan and his angels
are cast by Jesus into the lake of fire for eternal torment. Perhaps the drowning of the pigs is a picture
of what is to come for them on that day.
Didn’t the demons
know what would happen once they entered into the pigs—bringing about their own
destruction? Not necessarily. Satan and his angels do not know all things
like God does and here we see another example of their blind, self-defeating
hatred.
Was it right and
just of Jesus to let these demons destroy the livelihood of those who kept the
pigs? But what are pigs compared to even
one human soul? What the drowning of the
pigs did show in a dramatic, undeniable way was the destructive nature of
Satan—that he is a destroyer of all creation.
At the very least, the death of thousands of pigs showed in an
undeniable way that something dramatic and life-changing had just taken place
in that community. The Bible says that:
When the herdsmen saw
what had happened, they fled and told it in the city and in the country. Then people went out to see what had
happened, and they came to Jesus and found the man from whom the demons had
gone, sitting at the feet of Jesus, clothed and in his right mind, and they
were afraid. And those who had seen it
told them how the demon-possessed man had been healed.
For
the man that day, his life had been changed forever by Jesus’ healing. His mind was whole and his relationship with
God was restored. Clothed, in his right
mind, and sitting at the feet of Jesus—a complete change from where he was
before. Because Jesus was his Savior, Satan
was no longer his master.
That is a picture
of every person who has been healed by the mercy of Jesus Christ. Jesus has defeated Satan and as we come to
faith in Christ the reign of Satan over our lives comes to an end.
No longer are we
burdened by the shame of the past because it has been washed away by Jesus’
blood. No longer are our minds at
warfare with God because now we have the mind of Christ which is strengthened
daily in us through word and sacrament. No
longer is Satan our master, for Jesus is our Lord to whom we give our willing
obedience and our loving service—bearing witness to what he has done for
us—just like the man that day. The Bible says that:
All the people of the
surrounding country of the Gerasenes asked Jesus to depart from them, for they
were seized with great fear. So he got into the boat and returned. The man from whom the demons had gone begged
that he might be with him, but Jesus sent him away, saying, "Return to
your home, and declare how much God has done for you." And he went away,
proclaiming throughout the whole city how much Jesus had done for him.
The
man who was set free from Satan returned to return to his home town and told what
Jesus had done for him. Jesus asks the
same of us. Jesus has work for us to do in
his mission to bring healing and wholeness to the world.
People around us may
deny evil and deny Satan and deny hell—but their denials don’t ring true. Just like us, they live in a world that is
broken by evil. They experience
temptations and suffering. They are
afraid of what will happen to them when they die.
We have the
solution to their fears and that is the Good News of Jesus Christ--that he has
delivered us from evil in the most wonderful, loving way—by shedding his life’s
blood upon the cross to set us free from Satan’s rule over our lives and rising
up from the dead to guarantee us an eternal life with God. Jesus says to us today what he said that
day: Return to your home and declare how much God has done for you. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment