The Demon Jesus Didn't Cast Out. 01/21/2024
Preached at Chapel by the Sea in Clearwater Beach, FL
January 21, 2024
[Summarize or read Where the Wild Things Are]
Max, the king of all wild things, was lonely and wanted to be where
someone loved him best of all.
Will you pray with me: Lord may the words of my mouth and the
meditations of all our hearts be pleasing to you, through Jesus Christ, who
is our strength and our redeemer. Amen.
Once upon a time, a man had lived within the village of Gerasene,
surrounded by family and friends, people he loved, and who loved and
cared for him. He had grown up there, running through the streets and
alleys, chasing balls and cracking jokes. He had learned a trade and
established a thriving business. He relished in the beauty of the created
world, a beauty that was inescapable in that village by the seashore.
But all that was before he met Legion. Or more accurately, before Legion
invaded his body. In the blink of an eye, the life he knew disappeared.
The demons often seized him, throwing him to the ground or driving him
into the wilderness. He found shelter in a graveyard and lived there among
the tombs, lonely and disconnected from any meaningful relationship.
Threatened by his strange and unexplainable behavior, the fearful
townspeople hired guards to make sure that he was restrained at all times,
bound by chains.
And that’s how he lived, if you could call it living. He lived among the dead;
he was dead to his townspeople, his family and friends; and he may well
have wished he were in fact dead. At least all the other bodies in this
graveyard were resting in peace.
Meanwhile, Jesus' climbs into a boat and sets sail headed, as Luke points
out, to “the opposite side of the sea.” His boat makes landfall at that very
cemetery. And as Jesus steps off of the boat, he comes face to face with
the Gerasene man. Jesus came all the way to where the man stood,
shackled and trembling, among the tombs.
Immediately, the demons recognizes Jesus, and resumes their torture of
the man. Jesus asks the demons for their name, and after they beg not to
be cast into the abyss, Jesus sends Legion out of the man and into a herd
of pigs.
The man who had been thrown to the ground at Jesus' feet now sits at his
feet like a disciple. The man's mind, once scrambled, is restored. The
man's body, once plagued by seizures, is healthy again. Once naked, the
man is now clothed. Once isolated from his community, now the man
returns to his hometown to tell the good news.
When Jesus shows up, this place of loneliness, captivity, and death is
suddenly transformed into the place where the Gerasene man discovers
the Someone who loves him best of all. And it’s clear that his life will never
be the same.
Interestingly, Jesus doesn’t cast the demons into the abyss. He doesn’t
send them off to some far-away place where they no longer haunt our
world. The demons are still with us; they just have different names. And
even though we don’t often talk about it in these terms, we all battle our
own demons. The Wild Things within and around us are alive and well.
They still “roar their terrible roars and gnash their terrible teeth and roll their
terrible eyes and show their terrible claws.”
The demons of our world are all those things that drive us away from
relationship, away from community, and toward destructive behavior. We
face demons of addiction and isolation. We face demons of prejudice and
discrimination. We face demons of hatred and distrust, physical and
emotional abuse, hypocrisy, division, and deeply ingrained social and
economic systems that privilege some while enslaving others.
These demons, and others, threaten to steal our life away. These Wild
Things drive us into the wilderness and dash us against the rocks. They
bind us in chains, steal our joy, and destroy our relationships. The demons
are still with us, they just have different names.
And we need someone to sail through night and day and in and out of
weeks and almost over a year to where our wild things are. We need
someone to stand face-to-face with us as we roar our terrible roars and
gnash our terrible teeth and roll our terrible eyes, and show our terrible
claws. We need someone to stare into yellow eyes of our demons, without
blinking once, and to say, “BE STILL!”
And then, from the other side of the sea, comes Jesus. And he makes
landfall, right here – right where we stand, shackled and trembling. And he
calls us by name and casts out these demons that haunt our lives. When
Jesus is present, all our places of loneliness and death can be transformed
into places where we discover that Someone loves us best of all – places
of hope and of new life, places where we are restored to a right relationship
with God and with each other.
It seems like Luke is heading for a happily-ever-after ending. But there’s
another demon in the story. A demon Jesus didn’t cast out.
We read elsewhere in Luke’s gospel of demons that are difficult to cast out.
In one instance, Jesus calls together the twelve disciples and gives them
authority over all demons and disease. He sends them out, full of energy
and passion, to proclaim the reign of God and to heal the sick. A few weeks
later, while Jesus is teaching a large crowd, a man from the back shouts
out: "Teacher, please look at my son. He is possessed by a demon that
torments him, repeatedly dashing him against rocks...I begged your
disciples to cast it out, but they could not."
Why couldn’t they cast it out? What happened to the power Jesus had
given them? What can be done with these difficult demons?
Maybe we can find an answer back in the story of the Gerasene man. The
townspeople saw how the demon-possessed man had been made whole
again. Jesus had cast out the demon that constantly seized him. But the
crowd immediately asked Jesus to leave them. [Look again at verse 35]
Luke says, quite literally, that they were seized with a great fear. They were
possessed by the demon of fear. Their fear seized them, in exactly the
same way that the demon had once seized the Gerasene man.
The fear of the townspeople was the demon Jesus didn't cast out.
And the demon of fear still threatens to seize us and our world.
Our world is a world of change and vulnerability. And we often push back in
fear. We fear that our world is heading toward chaos. We fear that there will
not be a place for us. We fear those who are different from us. We fear that
we will hear a bad report from the doctor, that our retirement account will
not hold up, that our children will struggle. We fear that the churches we
have known and loved will not survive the rapid cultural change all around
us. We fear that everything we have filled our lives with will not have lasting
meaning. We fear that asking questions about our faith and our world might
lead us away from God rather than closer.
So we buckle down. We resist change. We convince ourselves that there
are many things we can control. We insulate ourselves against threatening
situations, people and ideas. We avoid relationships that would stretch our
thinking or our worldview. We don’t ask the questions. We double down on
the ways we have always done things.
The demon of fear is alive and well in our world.
But the demon that seized the hearts of those townspeople in the
Gerasene countryside, that demon of fear was more than simply a fear of
the demonic or the chaotic. More than a fear of change or of the unknown.
If we read carefully, the fear that seized the people was actually a fear of
the divine. A fear of God's disruptive and transformative work in our lives.
It may seem strange to talk about a fear of the divine, of God's work in our
lives and in our world. But the fear seizes the townspeople in those
moments after they see that Jesus cast out the demons and healed the
man. Jesus disturbed their status quo, the rules of their world, which up to
this point seems so set, so certain. God's movement through Jesus to
transform the world was threatening to them and can be threatening to us. I
don't know your fears, but I do know mine. And sometimes my fears fall
squarely in this category: fear of encountering the divine, fear of the radical
transformation that Jesus calls us to, fear of where God might lead me if I
allowed the Spirit to take control.
In scripture, when God is about to show up and do something amazing or
powerful in the lives of God’s people, often an angelic messenger will come
before, saying: “Do not fear. Do not be afraid.” We find the words often on
the lips of Jesus himself, as he invites his followers to the challenges of
discipleship. Some version of “do not fear” occurs as many as 365 times
throughout the Bible.
Whether it's fear of the demons in our lives, fear of the chaos in our world,
or fear of God’s presence and power in the midst of it all. Fear exists. And
fear can seize us, just as it did those first-century townspeople.
So why didn't Jesus just finish the job and cast out the demon of fear? The
answer lies in the conclusion of Luke’s account.
As Jesus prepares to sail back across the sea, the Gerasene man stands
with one foot in the boat and one foot on the dry ground, and begs to go
with Jesus. But Jesus sends him back into the town, to the same people
who had disowned him, who had sent him into exile, who had bound him
with chains to ensure their own safety. Why on earth would Jesus do this?
I believe Jesus realized the power of the Gerasene's testimony. I believe
Jesus knew that only the healed Gerasene man, a man who had lived in
fear and incited fear in others, could cast out the demon of fear that had
seized his community.
Healed from our demons, we want to remain in that that place where we
can revel in knowing that the most important Someone loves us best of all.
We want to rest at Jesus’ feet, to climb in the boat and sail back over a year
and in and out of weeks and through a day and into the night of our very
own rooms where we find supper waiting.
But maybe that’s just the storybook ending, and not the scriptural ending.
Maybe we, like the Gerasene man, once possessed but now healed, once
seized by our demons but now of a sound mind, have been given the
power to overcome fear and bring transformation and reconciliation to our
community. Maybe we are sent by Jesus into our communities to be agents
of love and grace and transformation.
Maybe Jesus is inviting us to stand face-to-face with the demons of fear
that divide and tear down and hold back. And to stare into all their yellow
eyes without blinking once, and to say “Be Still!” To rid our churches and
our communities and our world from the demon of fear – the demon that
Jesus didn't cast out.
So, may we all go boldly from this place, and in the power of God’s love,
finish the job.