Verses 1-17
Mark 5:1-17. They came into the
country of the Gadarenes —
Called Gergesenes, Matthew 8:28.
Gadara and Gergasa being towns
near each other, and their
inhabitants, and those of the
country adjacent, taking their
name indifferently from either.
There met him a man with an
unclean spirit — Matthew
mentions two. Probably this, so
particularly spoken of here, was
the most remarkably fierce and
ungovernable. This whole story
is explained at large, Matthew
8:28-34. My name is Legion, for
we are many — But all these seem
to have been under one
commander, who accordingly
speaks, all along, both for them
and for himself. They that fed
the swine fled, and told it in
the city — The miracle, issuing
in the destruction of the swine,
was immediately reported in the
town and country by the
affrighted keepers, who as they
fled had fallen in, it seems,
with Jesus and his company, and
learned from them the cause of
what had happened. And they went
out to see what was done — Thus
the whole people had ocular
demonstration of the power of
Jesus, and were rendered
inexcusable in not believing on
him; and they see him that was
possessed of the devil sitting —
At the feet of Jesus, to receive
his instructions; and clothed —
With the raiment that had been
given him; and in his right mind
— Perfectly composed and
restored to the use of his
reason; and they were afraid —
Instead of rejoicing that a
human being was delivered from
so great an evil as had long
afflicted him, they were thrown
into the utmost consternation,
and, being conscious of their
wickedness, dreaded the further
effects of Christ’s power,
which, probably, if they had not
done, they would have offered
some rudeness, if not violence,
to him.
Verses 18-20
Mark 5:18-20. He that had been
possessed, prayed that he might
be with him — To enjoy the
further benefit of his
instructions. Perhaps he feared
lest, if Jesus left him, he
should relapse into his former
condition, the terrors of which
he dreaded. Howbeit, Jesus
suffered him not — Judging it
proper to leave him in that
country as a witness of the
power and goodness of his
deliverer, and of the folly and
wickedness of these Gadarenes,
who rejected such a Saviour. Go
home to thy friends — To thy
relations and neighbours; and
tell them how great things the
Lord hath done for thee — This
was peculiarly needful there,
where Christ did not go in
person. He began to publish in
Decapolis, &c. — Not only at
home, but in all that country
where Jesus himself did not
come.
Verses 22-28
Mark 5:22-28. There cometh one
of the rulers of the synagogue —
Probably that at Capernaum. The
rulers of the synagogue were
three persons chosen out of ten,
who were obliged constantly to
attend the public worship over
which they presided, and
determined such disputes as
happened in the synagogue. For
an explanation of this whole
paragraph, see notes on Matthew
9:18-26.
Verse 29-30
Mark 5:29-30. She felt in her
body that she was healed of that
plague — Or distemper, with
which she had been chastised;
for this is the plain meaning of
the word μαστιγος here used,
which properly means a stroke,
scourge, or correction. And
Jesus turned about in the press,
and said, Who touched, &c. — The
woman, having obtained her wish,
would have retired unobserved:
but Jesus, who had secretly
performed the cure, by the
concurring efficacy of his will,
which sent forth the healing
virtue, thought fit, on this
occasion, to show that it had
not escaped his notice, and to
take the opportunity of
illustrating and commending the
faith of the woman for the
encouragement of others to
confide in his power and love.
Verse 37
Mark 5:37. John, the brother of
James — John is thus described
here, because, when Mark wrote
his gospel, not long after our
Lord’s ascension, the memory of
James, lately beheaded, was so
fresh, that his name was more
known than that of John himself.
Verses 38-42
Mark 5:38-42. He seeth the
tumult — The crowd of people
that wept and wailed greatly —
Greek αλαλαζοντας πολλα, howling
much, as some render the word.
“From several passages of
Scripture, (see Jeremiah 9:17;
Jeremiah 16:6-7; Ezekiel 24:17,)
it appears that the people of
the East used to bewail the dead
by tearing their hair, and
cutting their flesh, and crying
most bitterly. Nor did the
relations of the deceased
content themselves with these
expressions of violent grief.
They hired persons of both
sexes, whose employment it was
to mourn over the dead in the
like frantic manner, and who
besides sung doleful ditties, in
which honourable mention was
made of the age, the beauty, the
strength, the courage, the
virtues, and the actions of the
deceased, with an intention to
increase the sorrow of the
afflicted relations. In process
of time they accompanied these
lamentations with music,
particularly of flutes,
(Josephus, Bell., Mark 3:8,) a
custom which prevailed likewise
in the West. Ovid, Fast., lib.
6, Cantabant męstis tibia
funeribus. But the Jews were
forbidden to tear their hair and
cut their flesh in mourning for
the dead, (Leviticus 19:28;
Deuteronomy 14:1,) because such
expressions of grief were
inconsistent with resignation to
the divine will, and looked as
if they had no hope of their
friends’ resurrection. Hence the
apostle’s precept, 1
Thessalonians 4:13, Sorrow not
as others which have no hope.
Besides, these rites were
practised by the heathen, as a
kind of sacrifices to the manes
of the dead.” — Macknight.
Verse 43
Mark 5:43. He charged them that
no man should know it — That he
might avoid every appearance of
vain-glory, might prevent too
great a concourse of people, and
might not further enrage the
scribes and Pharisees against
him; the time for his death, and
for the full manifestation of
his glory, not being yet come.
He commanded that something
should be given her to eat — So
that when either natural or
spiritual life is restored, even
by immediate miracle, all proper
means are to be used in order to
preserve it. |