Tuesday, 24 June 2025

Luke 8:26-39 The Gerasene Demoniac

 This is a strange story to modern ears. Although, there are universal insights within the passage that transcend time.

Three parts of the narrative worth noting.

 

1. The name of the demon is ‘Legion’. Luke tells us that the man is possessed by many demons. But ‘Legion’ also referred to a unit of soldiers in the Roman army, the army that occupied the country. It is difficult not to see a connection. The social situation of the man – under Roman occupation – lives in him.

 

2. The story is a reverse scapegoating story. In a paradigmatic scapegoating story, the crowd throw the (alleged) demon-possessed person over the cliff to exorcise the evil from their midst. (It never works.) In such a case, imagine the crowd looking over the cliff at the dead body of the dead scapegoat far below. But in this story the order is reversed. The formerly-possessed man, now in his right mind, looks on as the demons (in the unclean pigs) rush to their deaths. Those who formerly lived in him have been ejected, and he is free.

 

3. The people of the town beg Jesus to leave them. Strange that they don’t ask Jesus to stay and heal others. It is as though Jesus has disrupted their lives by setting free this man.

 

So, what has been disrupted? Perhaps it is the distorted social relationships that live in the man. We are told in the narrative of the attempts by the people of the town to help the possessed man. At first glance we think it is too bad the man couldn’t be helped. He escapes their attempts to bind him. But what if he is escaping those whose distorted social relationships live in him? The people need someone to ‘help’, but not for his benefit, but for their own benefit. He breaks their bonds and escapes, but only temporarily; it is Jesus who will truly heal the man.

And notice also that the Jesus does not give the man permission to leave the place where he was (formerly) bound. Instead, Jesus sends him back into the jigsaw of social distortion as a missionary of the peace and freedom that Jesus can give. He is a living missionary of the good news. As a disciple of Jesus the formerly possessed man will now be the one who disrupts the social relations of the town. This is integral to being a disciple. To be a living presence of the peace and healing of Christ in a world in need of that peace and healing. The greater the healing, the greater the freedom of Christ, the less we will fit the jigsaw. That is, won’t fit the jigsaw (of distortion) anymore, at least as we might have formerly. But that is why our discipleship as missionaries of this peace can be so powerful, and in ways not easily seen at times.

We live in an age of blaming others. When we neglect our inner healing and look only to heal other people or societal structures, we are on the path to scapegoating.  The surest way to prevent scapegoating is to remember Jesus (who died a scapegoat) and take into the world his healing that lives in us.

Saturday, 7 June 2025

Notes on the Readings for Pentecost Year C

 A. The Tower of Babel (Genesis 11)

1. Gen 1-12 include universal stories: we read them and see something of ourselves and the universal human predicament in these stories  (For example: Creation and Fall through resentment leading to  human violence and arrogance, revenge and murder.)

 

2. Notice that, despite the best efforts of humankind to “make a name for ourselves,” God still has to “come down” to see the great tower built into the heavens. The arrogance of humankind is on display, shown in a competition with God.

 

3. God confuses and scatters humankind to break up our attempt to be great and all-powerful. The greatness humankind aspires to without due reference to God leads to a uniformity we can recognise in the great mass movements of the twentieth century. In confusing our language (different languages) we are scattered to await the true unity that God will build within us. That is, in confusing and scattering us, God is saving us from ourselves.

 

B. The Holy Spirit Descends (Acts 2)

1. Jews from all over the region (speaking different languages) have come to Jerusalem to celebrate the great Festival of Pentecost. They are a microcosm of the great variety of humankind. Even their unity as the Chosen People/the People of God must wait for its final form in the preaching of the good news by the disciples of Jesus.

 

2. Notice that it is not the listeners who are enabled by the Spirit to understand the dialect of the disciples. The Spirit enables the disciples to speak the good news of what God has done in Christ into the variety of peoples and languages of the world, and in this variety bring a new, unforeseen unity. The unity is not to be found in a uniformity, but in the new humanity won for us in the death and resurrection of Jesus.

 

C. Love and Unity of the Father and Son in Us (John 14)

1. We have heard how the universal disunity of humankind (symbolically displayed in our differing languages) is brought into a surprising unity through the folly of the cross and resurrection of Jesus and the giving of the Spirit.

 

2. It is worth comparing the apparent foolishness of God’s wisdom displayed in the cross of Jesus with the ‘wisdom’ and arrogance of human attempts to bring unity.

 

3. Jesus and the Father are one.  The unity we enjoy and must nurture comes to us through union with Jesus, and through him, union with the Father. That is, he and his Father make their home in us. This is the “much fruit” that comes from the seed that falls to the earth and dies. We are one because of Christ’s death.

 

4. Therefore, we must always remember that our unity is not made by our own effort, but is a gift of God, won for us at great cost. However, the unity we enjoy can be easily undermined by our own effort.

 

5. The Advocate/Spirit abides in us and teaches us from within. And what are we taught? The Advocate/Spirit will teach us how to love Jesus by obeying his great commandment: to love one another as he has loved us.