To Know Jesus and Make Him Known

Naked and Very Scary – Luke 8:26-39

This guy was terrifying. He ran around with no clothes on. He was clearly wild and out of his mind. And there was so much supernaturally force upon him that when they tried to chain him up and put a guard around him, the man was able to break the chains multiple times.

Then it was the crying and the cutting. The man cried out constantly. And he used stones to cut himself. He had cuts all over his body.

He was an embarrassment to the town. And he was a terror to them. The only grace was that he lived up in the tombs. The tombs! It wasn’t exactly an ideal place when one wanted to bury someone, or go be near their deceased relative. It brought grief upon grief.

When Jesus arrived, he was met by this man. I’m sure people told him to avoid this area. It would be “wisdom.”

But Jesus does not run. Instead he confronts evil.

It’s always interesting that the men with 1000 Scriptures could not recognize Jesus, but the demons knew who he was and were very afraid. They stated clearly that this was Jesus, Son of the Most High God.

The demons begged Jesus not to send them to the Abyss. That’s scary. The abyss is real.

In a strange way Jesus had mercy on them and instead sent them into the pigs. The demons came out of the man, went into the pigs, and the pigs who were now out of their mind jumped off the cliff. It had to have been a confusing, terrifying scene.

Naturally the townspeople asked Jesus to leave. The large herd of pigs represented great wealth that was now gone. Mark says it was 2000 pigs which was huge. And they couldn’t exactly stand up to Jesus because clearly a huge miracle had just been performed.

And it’s true. The value of the man was far greater than the pigs.

But nor was it Jesus who sent the pigs to their death. It was the demons.

The whole town was terrified of this powerful prophet or man or whoever he was. They just wanted him out. So he left. The newly delivered man wanted to go with him, but Jesus said no.

I can imagine the formerly demon-possessed man wanting to leave. It was terribly embarrassing. He had run around naked for years and lived in tombs of the dead. He was a mockery of the town for sure. But more importantly, a man typically does not open himself up to that much demonic activity unless he was deeply hurt and likely couldn’t forgive. Unlike bitterneess and unforgiveness could have opened up a door that wide.

But Jesus told him to go back. To face his town, his former friends and his family. And he was to tell them how much Jesus had done for him.

So the man did.

He humbled himself, faced his embarrassment, faced the hurt, and told people of the miraculous work of Jesus. Jesus was more important to him than his pride. He was a changed man.

This event has so much to it.

1) Jesus was mightier than thousands of demons, and he commands them.

The question has always been, “who is Jesus?” The demons answer that. He is the Son of the Most High God. But also Jesus demonstrated it. At his word 2,000 demons (or more) left the man and went into pigs. Jesus was no joke. He had power over the darkness.

2) The power of God is one that does not bow to fear when the need to show compassion is present.

Certainly people tried to warn Jesus to not go where he went. But Jesus went. Not to show his power alone but to show his compassion.

At times Jesus moved away from dangerous situations. It wasn’t his time. He would walk through crowds or leave places where he was not wanted.

But in this moment, it was about compasson. And love triumphs over fear.

3) We are compelled to tell people how much Jesus has done for us

This is the gospel. Telling others who he is and what he has done. First and foremost that he died for our sins so that we might live with him.

And also telling what he has done for us personally.

Oftentimes that means humbling ourselves. Forgiving others. And just simply putting Jesus above ourselves.

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