Mark 5 contains therefore a very surprising account of Jesus’
encounter with a demonized man. In fact, the naked, bleeding, howling man is
possessed by a legion of demons. The demons immediately recognise who Jesus is
and beg Jesus not to send them to hell (the place of ‘torment”, v7). Jesus instead
sends the demons into a herd of two thousand pigs, which then immediately run
off a cliff and drown. Animal activists
might be upset at this point.
Human beings more
important than animals
Why did Jesus do this?
Did Jesus dislike pork? Firstly, I think it must be said that we must acknowledge that
according to the Bible human beings are more important that animals. Humans are made in the image of God, not
animals (Genesis 1). Rather than getting
worked up over two thousand dead pigs, we should thank God for the saving of
one precious life created in his image.
One person is worth more than two thousand penguins or two thousand
dolphins. Perhaps we need to
re-prioritise our thinking at this point.
Operation destroy
Secondly, I think that the reason Jesus diverted the demons
into the herd was to visibly show his disciples and us what Satan’s intention
was with that man – and every human.
Satan’s aim is to kill and destroy you and your children (John 10:10). That’s why the man was cutting himself with
sharp stones. Satan may use direct possession,
or he may use lust, drugs, jealousy, divorce, money or something else – but the
overall goal remains the same.
Yet, after the man’s encounter with Jesus he is totally
transformed. He is sitting down, dressed and in his right mind (v15). He is forgiven and freed.
You may not be demon possessed, but without Jesus you are
also in a desperate situation. Satan is
seeking to destroy you. Jesus is the one
who has conquered Satan through his death for sin and his resurrection to new
life. Like that man, you need to have an
encounter with the stronger man who binds
up Satan (Mark 3:27).