Commentary
After the violence at Nazareth, Jesus arrives in Capernaum and immediately displays the authority of his word. In the synagogue he teaches with force, silences an unclean demon that names him, and drives it out without struggle. In Simon's house he rebukes a fever; at sunset he heals the sick one by one and again forbids demonic speech. When the crowds try to keep him there, Jesus states the controlling point of the episode: he was sent to proclaim the kingdom of God in other towns as well.
Luke 4:31-44 presents Jesus as the Holy One whose spoken authority subdues demons, removes sickness, and keeps his ministry ordered toward the wider proclamation of the kingdom rather than toward local acclaim.
4:31 So he went down to Capernaum, a town in Galilee, and on the Sabbath he began to teach the people. 4:32 They were amazed at his teaching, because he spoke with authority. 4:33 Now in the synagogue there was a man who had the spirit of an unclean demon, and he cried out with a loud voice, 4:34 "Ha! Leave us alone, Jesus the Nazarene! Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are - the Holy One of God." 4:35 But Jesus rebuked him: "Silence! Come out of him!" Then, after the demon threw the man down in their midst, he came out of him without hurting him. 4:36 They were all amazed and began to say to one another, "What's happening here? For with authority and power he commands the unclean spirits, and they come out!" 4:37 So the news about him spread into all areas of the region. 4:38 After Jesus left the synagogue, he entered Simon's house. Now Simon's mother-in-law was suffering from a high fever, and they asked Jesus to help her. 4:39 So he stood over her, commanded the fever, and it left her. Immediately she got up and began to serve them. 4:40 As the sun was setting, all those who had any relatives sick with various diseases brought them to Jesus. He placed his hands on every one of them and healed them. 4:41 Demons also came out of many, crying out, "You are the Son of God!" But he rebuked them, and would not allow them to speak, because they knew that he was the Christ. 4:42 The next morning Jesus departed and went to a deserted place. Yet the crowds were seeking him, and they came to him and tried to keep him from leaving them. 4:43 But Jesus said to them, "I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns too, for that is what I was sent to do." 4:44 So he continued to preach in the synagogues of Judea.
Observation notes
- The unit repeatedly centers on Jesus' speech: he teaches, rebukes, commands, forbids speech, and declares his mission.
- Authority forms the main thread: the people first note it in teaching (v.32), then in command over unclean spirits (v.36), and the narrative demonstrates it over both personal and cosmic disorder.
- The demon identifies Jesus before the crowd does, calling him 'the Holy One of God'; later demons call him 'the Son of God,' but Jesus refuses demonic disclosure.
- The wording moves from synagogue to house to citywide gathering, widening the scope of Jesus' impact in Capernaum.
- Luke notes that the demon came out 'without hurting him,' underscoring Jesus' complete control over destructive spiritual power.
- Simon's mother-in-law rises 'immediately' and serves, marking the cure as total rather than partial.
- At sunset the Sabbath restriction on travel and burden-bearing likely gives way, explaining the influx of the sick from the town.
- Jesus lays hands on 'every one of them,' showing personal, not merely mass, healing activity within a summary scene of many miracles.
- The crowd's desire to keep Jesus local is countered by his 'I must' statement, which interprets the miracles in light of mission rather than popularity.
- Verse 43 links Jesus' activity explicitly to being sent and to the kingdom of God, tying this narrative to the Nazareth program of Spirit-anointed proclamation.
Structure
- 4:31-32: Jesus enters Capernaum and teaches in the synagogue; the crowd reacts to the authority of his word.
- 4:33-37: A demonized man interrupts; Jesus rebukes the demon, expels it, and the crowd links the exorcism to his authority and power.
- 4:38-39: In Simon's house Jesus rebukes a high fever; immediate recovery leads to service.
- 4:40-41: At sunset many sick and demonized people are brought; Jesus heals individually and silences demonic testimony.
- 4:42-44: Though crowds try to detain him, Jesus states the necessity of preaching the kingdom in other towns and continues synagogue ministry.
Key terms
exousia
Strong's: G1849
Gloss: authority, right to command
This term binds teaching and exorcism together: Jesus does not merely explain truth but speaks with sovereign efficacy.
dynamis
Strong's: G1411
Gloss: power, might, effective force
Luke portrays Jesus' word as not only rightful but effective; what he commands actually happens.
epitimao
Strong's: G2008
Gloss: rebuke, censure, command sharply
Using the same verb for personal evil and bodily illness presents both as subject to Jesus' commanding word.
daimonion akatharton
Strong's: G1140
Gloss: unclean demon
The term frames the encounter not as mere illness but as hostile spiritual impurity confronted by Jesus' holiness.
ho hagios tou theou
Strong's: G3588, G40, G5120
Gloss: the Holy One belonging to God
The confession is accurate in content yet rejected in mode; Jesus will not let demonic voices define his identity.
huios tou theou
Strong's: G5207, G2316
Gloss: Son of God
Luke lets readers hear a high christological claim early, but Jesus restrains disclosure because his identity must be understood on his terms and in his mission.
Syntactical features
Causal clause explaining amazement
Textual signal: "they were amazed at his teaching, because he spoke with authority"
Interpretive effect: The crowd's reaction is grounded specifically in the manner of Jesus' speech, not merely the novelty of content.
Imperatival sequence in exorcism
Textual signal: "Silence! Come out of him!"
Interpretive effect: The clipped commands portray immediate dominance; no ritual, invocation, or struggle is needed.
Result clause of complete healing
Textual signal: "Immediately she got up and began to serve them"
Interpretive effect: The response demonstrates that the fever's removal was decisive and observable.
Necessity statement
Textual signal: "I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns too"
Interpretive effect: The verb of necessity frames Jesus' itinerary as governed by divine mission rather than by crowd demand.
Purpose clause of sending
Textual signal: "for that is what I was sent to do"
Interpretive effect: Jesus interprets his works through a commission from the Father; proclamation is not secondary to healing but mission-defining.
Textual critical issues
Luke 4:44 destination of preaching
Variants: Some witnesses read that Jesus was preaching in the synagogues of 'Galilee'; others read 'Judea.'
Preferred reading: Judea
Interpretive effect: The reading may sound geographically surprising after a Galilean context, but it can function as a broader regional designation in Luke or as a textual preservation of the harder reading; it does not alter the unit's main point that Jesus continues an itinerant preaching ministry.
Rationale: The harder reading 'Judea' is well attested and likely gave rise to harmonizing alteration toward 'Galilee'.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 61:1-2
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The Nazareth program just announced in Luke 4:18-19 stands behind this unit: proclamation, liberation, and restoration are now enacted in Capernaum.
Psalm 106:10 / Isaiah 49:24-25
Connection type: pattern
Note: Jesus' release of those under oppressive powers fits Old Testament patterns of the Lord rescuing captives from stronger enemies.
Malachi 1:6 and royal-son motifs
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The title 'Son of God' is not quoted from a single text here, but it resonates with Old Testament categories of royal and uniquely commissioned sonship fulfilled in Jesus.
Interpretive options
Why does Jesus silence demons who speak truth about him?
- He rejects demonic testimony because true revelation about his identity must come through his own ministry and God's timing, not through unclean spirits.
- He mainly seeks to avoid premature messianic excitement that misunderstands his mission.
- He silences them simply because public exorcism custom required dominance over spirits, with no larger christological purpose.
Preferred option: He rejects demonic testimony because true revelation about his identity must come through his own ministry and God's timing, not through unclean spirits.
Rationale: The text explicitly notes that the demons knew who he was, yet Jesus forbids them to speak. In Luke, accurate words can still be an improper vehicle of revelation; the restraint also coheres with avoiding premature and distorted messianic acclaim.
What does Jesus prioritize in this unit: healing or preaching?
- Healing is the primary mission, and preaching accompanies it.
- Preaching the kingdom is primary, while healings and exorcisms authenticate and embody that message.
- Luke presents both as equal and unrelated facets of ministry without assigning priority.
Preferred option: Preaching the kingdom is primary, while healings and exorcisms authenticate and embody that message.
Rationale: Jesus' own explanation in vv.42-44 interprets the miracles by reference to his being sent to proclaim the kingdom in other towns.
How should 'Judea' in v.44 be understood?
- A broader designation for the Jewish land or people rather than strict southern Judea.
- A scribal mistake for 'Galilee.'
- A deliberate indication that Jesus had already expanded beyond Galilee at this point.
Preferred option: A broader designation for the Jewish land or people rather than strict southern Judea.
Rationale: This reading preserves the stronger textual evidence without forcing a geographical contradiction into the immediate context.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The Nazareth scene sets the programmatic backdrop: the works in Capernaum must be read as enactments of the Isaiah mission and as a contrast to hometown rejection.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: The repeated mention of authority, teaching, rebuking, demons, and proclamation controls the unit; interpretation should follow these recurring textual signals rather than abstract miracle themes.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Titles such as 'Holy One of God' and 'Son of God' must be interpreted through Jesus' own actions and mission statement, not through demonic speech alone.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: Simon's mother-in-law serving after healing should not be allegorized, but it does show an appropriate human response to restoration.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: low
Note: The events are presented as real acts of teaching, exorcism, and healing; symbolic readings must not displace the historical narrative level.
Theological significance
- Jesus' authority is not confined to instruction; the same word that astonishes the synagogue also silences demons and removes fever.
- The kingdom arrives here in announced and enacted form: Jesus preaches it, and his healings and exorcisms make its liberating force visible.
- Jesus does not permit unclean spirits to publicize his identity, even when their words are accurate; his identity is disclosed under his own authority.
- The crowds' desire to keep Jesus in Capernaum is overruled by the purpose for which he was sent, showing that divine mission governs his movements.
- Luke presents healing as a real expression of the kingdom's arrival, yet not as the whole of Jesus' task; proclamation remains mission-defining.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Luke binds the scenes together through verbs of speaking and commanding. Jesus teaches, rebukes, forbids, and declares why he was sent. The repeated stress falls not on technique but on a word that takes effect.
Biblical theological: What was announced from Isaiah in Nazareth now appears in public action. The release and restoration associated with God's favor are no longer only read from the scroll; they are embodied in the synagogue, the household, and the gathered town.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes a world in which unclean spirits, bodily illness, and ordinary communal life all stand open before Jesus' authority. Evil is neither imaginary nor sovereign. It is exposed, limited, and overruled by a higher holiness.
Psychological Spiritual: The crowds rightly want relief and presence, but Jesus will not let need, success, or admiration set his agenda. The demons also show that recognition is not obedience: they know who he is and still belong to the realm he rebukes.
Divine Perspective: Jesus interprets the scene through sending: he was sent to proclaim the kingdom in other towns. The miracles therefore reveal not random power but the directed mercy of God moving outward according to divine purpose.
Category: character
Note: God's holiness is revealed in Jesus' confrontation with what is unclean and destructive.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God's reign is displayed in effective deliverance from demons and disease.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus' identity is shown through his authoritative works and words rather than entrusted to demonic announcement.
Category: personhood
Note: Jesus acts with deliberate purpose, resisting crowd control because he knows why he was sent.
- Jesus gives himself to sufferers in front of him, yet refuses to remain where he is most wanted.
- The demons speak truly about Jesus, yet their witness is silenced rather than welcomed.
- The scene is full of healing, but Jesus himself places kingdom proclamation at the center of his mission.
Enrichment summary
Luke shapes the Capernaum scenes with holiness language and Sabbath timing. The synagogue exorcism pits an 'unclean' spirit against God's 'Holy One,' and the flood of people at sunset reflects the close of the Sabbath. Yet the narrative does not let the miracles define Jesus' work by themselves. His own 'I must' in verse 43 interprets the healings and exorcisms as signs within a larger sent mission to proclaim the kingdom from town to town.
Traditions of men check
Reducing Jesus' ministry to social relief or therapeutic care alone
Why it conflicts: The unit includes extensive healing, but Jesus himself states that his sent mission is to proclaim the good news of the kingdom to other towns.
Textual pressure point: Verses 42-44 reinterpret the miracles through the 'I must' of kingdom proclamation.
Caution: This should not be used to minimize mercy ministry; the text joins proclamation and compassionate action rather than opposing them.
Treating spectacular spiritual manifestations as self-authenticating revelation
Why it conflicts: Even truthful supernatural speech from demons is silenced by Jesus.
Textual pressure point: Verses 34-35 and 41 show Jesus rejecting demonic testimony despite its factual accuracy.
Caution: The point is not to deny all spiritual gifts or testimonies, but to insist that source and submission to Christ matter.
Measuring ministry faithfulness mainly by crowd retention and local demand
Why it conflicts: The crowds try to keep Jesus from leaving, but he departs because mission is determined by divine sending, not by immediate popularity.
Textual pressure point: Verse 43 grounds movement in being sent, not in the desires of the crowd.
Caution: This does not make stability or long-term ministry wrong; it corrects the reflex that visible demand alone defines calling.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: The clash between the 'unclean' demon and the 'Holy One of God' belongs to Israel's holiness grammar. The issue is not merely danger versus power, but defilement meeting one who belongs wholly to God.
Western Misread: Reading the scene either as a case study in pathology or as spectacle detached from holiness categories.
Interpretive Difference: The exorcism becomes a manifestation of holy authority that drives out what is incompatible with God's presence.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The movement from synagogue to household to the evening influx follows the rhythms of Jewish communal life. 'As the sun was setting' is a social and religious marker, not just scene-setting detail.
Western Misread: Treating the crowd at sunset as a generic report of popularity.
Interpretive Difference: The timing shows Jesus' authority entering ordinary Israelite patterns of Sabbath observance and public life.
Idioms and figures
Expression: "the spirit of an unclean demon" / "the Holy One of God"
Category: other
Explanation: These paired descriptions create a deliberate holiness contrast. 'Unclean' is not a casual insult; it marks a defiling power. 'Holy One of God' marks Jesus as uniquely consecrated and belonging to God.
Interpretive effect: The encounter is framed as an incompatibility between impurity and holiness, which explains the demon's alarm and Jesus' decisive dominance.
Expression: "Silence! Come out of him!"
Category: other
Explanation: The sharp, minimal commands are rhetorically forceful. Jesus uses no ritual technique, invocation, or struggle formula.
Interpretive effect: The brevity magnifies his intrinsic authority: he does not negotiate with evil powers but overrules them.
Expression: "as the sun was setting"
Category: other
Explanation: In context this functions as more than atmospheric detail. It signals the close of the Sabbath and explains why many now bring the sick to Jesus.
Interpretive effect: The timing ties the healing summary to Jewish social practice and prevents the verse from being read as incidental narrative filler.
Expression: "she got up and began to serve them"
Category: other
Explanation: Her service is best read as evidence of full restoration within a household setting, not as a hidden allegory.
Interpretive effect: The cure is shown to be immediate and complete, and restored health returns a person to normal relational participation.
Application implications
- Ministry should not split proclamation from mercy; in this scene Jesus announces the kingdom and relieves suffering under the same authority.
- Dramatic spiritual speech should not be treated as trustworthy simply because it contains something true; this passage makes source and submission to Christ matter.
- Periods of usefulness and public demand can become a temptation if they begin to dictate calling; Jesus refuses to let crowd desire replace divine sending.
- Simon's mother-in-law shows that restoration is not an end in itself; recovered strength returns a person to active service.
- The passage encourages confidence in Jesus' authority over both demonic oppression and bodily illness while stopping short of promising the same immediate outcome in every case.
Enrichment applications
- Test spiritual phenomena by their source and by their submission to Jesus, not by intensity or by isolated true statements.
- Let calling be shaped by divine purpose rather than by the pressure to stay where response is strongest.
- Pray for the sick and oppressed with confidence in Jesus' authority while refusing simplistic claims about the cause of every affliction or the timing of every healing.
Warnings
- Do not treat every illness in the unit as demonization; Luke distinguishes the fever and various diseases from demon possession.
- Do not flatten the passage into a generic miracle story; the repeated focus on authority and the explicit mission statement govern the meaning.
- Do not build a full doctrine of messianic secrecy from this passage alone; here the concern is specifically demonic testimony and mission timing.
- Do not overread 'Judea' in v.44 as requiring a major geographical shift if the term is functioning broadly.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not build a full doctrine of 'messianic secrecy' from this passage alone; the local emphasis is the rejection of demonic witness and the control of revelation by Jesus himself.
- Do not overpress the textual variant in v.44; whether 'Judea' is taken broadly or 'Galilee' is preferred, the main point remains Jesus' ongoing itinerant synagogue proclamation.
- Do not import later continuationist or cessationist systems as though Luke 4:31-44 were written to resolve them directly.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Assuming that because the demons speak truth, their witness is therefore valid or exemplary.
Why It Happens: Readers may equate factual accuracy with spiritual reliability, especially when the statement about Jesus is christologically correct.
Correction: Jesus silences them. In this passage, true words from an unclean source are still not an acceptable vehicle of revelation.
Misreading: Letting the dramatic healings and exorcisms eclipse Jesus' own statement of purpose.
Why It Happens: The narrative gives extended attention to visible acts of power and to the crowd's amazement.
Correction: Verses 42-44 interpret the whole episode: Jesus was sent to proclaim the kingdom in other towns, and the miracles serve that mission.
Misreading: Treating fever, disease, and demonization as interchangeable conditions.
Why It Happens: The scenes are narrated in close succession, and the same commanding Jesus addresses all of them.
Correction: Luke distinguishes an unclean demon, a high fever, and various diseases. Jesus rules over all of them, but the text does not collapse them into one category.
Misreading: Using the passage as if it directly settled later debates about whether Jesus' exact ministry pattern must be reproduced in every age.
Why It Happens: Readers often move too quickly from narrative description to universal program, while others react by denying any continuing relevance.
Correction: The first aim of the passage is to reveal Jesus' messianic authority and mission. It supports a close relation between proclamation and mercy, but it does not by itself resolve later disputes about normativity.