Today's gospel (Mark 5: 1-20) is one of the most touching and bewildering in all of St Mark’s life of our Lord. It is most touching, on the one hand, because Jesus delivers a man who is in utter torment from a large number of demons. It is most bewildering because it is not really clear why Jesus should send these demons into a local herd of pigs who then destroy themselves by running off a cliff.
Our hearts must go out to the man possessed in this incident.
He is tortured by the demons who have possessed him. Demonic
possession is a real, not a symbolic, spiritual event, and it requires a real
ministry of exorcists to manage it even today. But this man’s misery is not only spiritual
or psychological. In addition to his internal torment, he lives in a cemetery, howls
his pain day and night to whoever will hear him, and even gashes himself with
stones. This last action may in fact be an attempt at self-therapy, but self-therapy
of this kind is itself a torture and cruel burden. If we read these events at a
spiritual level, however, this possessed man could stand for any soul who becomes
seduced by passions or appetites within, only to find that such passions and
appetites themselves become torturers who exact full payment. Perhaps these
appetites are for bodily or sensuous pleasures or, for the more pious, perhaps these appetites are
for spiritual satisfactions: certainties, signs of approval from God, self-validation
and things of this sort. These too can torture no less than sensuous passions
to which one has become enslaved. Religious idealism is not a sign of integrity
but a dangerous disguise of inner disorder. Who can free us from the body of
this death? We know the answer And it is not ourselves.
What is more bewildering in this gospel is the fact that
Jesus drove out the demons from this man's soul and allowed them to enter the
herd of swine which then plunged themselves over the edge of a cliff. The
effect of this event was so great that the people of the town begged Jesus to
leave the area. Indeed, the gospel tells us that the people of the town were
afraid at what had happened. The Fathers of the Church commenting on this scene
offer various interpretations of its meaning. Perhaps the most persuasive,
however, is the Jesus is showing the townspeople, and by extension anyone who
hears about this event, about the terrible, destructive power that demons can
wield. The only “solace” the townspeople had offered to the man possessed was
to attempt to put him in chains which he broke in his fury. But this will not
do. We cannot protect ourselves from evil by pretending it does not exist or by building imaginary safe spaces for our modern souls. We
cannot guard against the gates of hell by minimising the risks.
Especially in our own day, the ambient culture is so enamoured
of individual choice that we do not like to think upon the consequences of
those who give themselves to evil actions. The story of the men set free of the
legion of demons should be a lesson for us that ignorance is no protection, and
that we are called to conversion because our souls are a battleground of the
Kingdom of God.