Commentary
On the far side of the lake, Jesus is met by a man living among the tombs, beyond restraint, and dominated by an unclean spirit. The spirits identify themselves as 'Legion,' beg Jesus for terms, and can act only by his permission. When they enter the pigs and drive the herd into the lake, the man is left seated, clothed, and in his right mind. The townspeople respond with fear and ask Jesus to leave, but the restored man is sent instead to his own people to report what the Lord has done for him and the mercy he has received.
Mark portrays Jesus’ authority reaching from the storm-tossed sea into a region marked by tombs, uncleanness, and demonic domination. A man no one could bind is restored by Jesus’ command, and that restoration ends not in private relief but in commissioned witness in the Decapolis.
5:1 So they came to the other side of the lake, to the region of the Gerasenes. 5:2 Just as Jesus was getting out of the boat, a man with an unclean spirit came from the tombs and met him. 5:3 He lived among the tombs, and no one could bind him anymore, not even with a chain. 5:4 For his hands and feet had often been bound with chains and shackles, but he had torn the chains apart and broken the shackles in pieces. No one was strong enough to subdue him. 5:5 Each night and every day among the tombs and in the mountains, he would cry out and cut himself with stones. 5:6 When he saw Jesus from a distance, he ran and bowed down before him. 5:7 Then he cried out with a loud voice, "Leave me alone, Jesus, Son of the Most High God! I implore you by God - do not torment me!" 5:8 (For Jesus had said to him, "Come out of that man, you unclean spirit!") 5:9 Jesus asked him, "What is your name?" And he said, "My name is Legion, for we are many." 5:10 He begged Jesus repeatedly not to send them out of the region. 5:11 There on the hillside, a great herd of pigs was feeding. 5:12 And the demonic spirits begged him, "Send us into the pigs. Let us enter them." 5:13 Jesus gave them permission. So the unclean spirits came out and went into the pigs. Then the herd rushed down the steep slope into the lake, and about two thousand were drowned in the lake. 5:14 Now the herdsmen ran off and spread the news in the town and countryside, and the people went out to see what had happened. 5:15 They came to Jesus and saw the demon-possessed man sitting there, clothed and in his right mind - the one who had the "Legion" - and they were afraid. 5:16 Those who had seen what had happened to the demon-possessed man reported it, and they also told about the pigs. 5:17 Then they asked Jesus to leave their region. 5:18 As he was getting into the boat the man who had been demon-possessed asked if he could go with him. 5:19 But Jesus did not permit him to do so. Instead, he said to him, "Go to your home and to your people and tell them what the Lord has done for you, that he had mercy on you." 5:20 So he went away and began to proclaim in the Decapolis what Jesus had done for him, and all were amazed.
Observation notes
- The setting is explicitly 'the other side of the lake,' linking this episode to the previous sea-crossing and extending the question of Jesus’ authority from nature to the demonic realm.
- The repeated references to tombs, uncleanness, and pigs create a dense cluster of impurity markers, underscoring the extremity of the situation.
- The man is described first through failed human attempts to bind and subdue him, which prepares for the contrast with Jesus’ effortless command.
- The demonized man both runs to Jesus and falls before him; the narrative then clarifies that the speaking voice is that of the unclean spirits, not a simple act of discipleship.
- The title 'Son of the Most High God' comes from the demonic realm, showing supernatural recognition of Jesus before the local human population responds properly.
- Legion' is followed by 'for we are many,' so the name functions rhetorically to convey multiplicity and oppressive force rather than merely a personal identifier.
- The demons beg repeatedly; Jesus does not negotiate as an equal but grants permission, which places them under his authority.
- The destruction of the pigs visibly externalizes the destructive intent of the unclean spirits and confirms that the departure from the man is real, not symbolic only.
Structure
- Jesus lands in the region of the Gerasenes and is immediately confronted by a man dominated by an unclean spirit from among the tombs (5:1-2).
- Mark elaborates the man’s hopeless condition: isolation, superhuman violence, self-destruction, and society’s inability to restrain him (5:3-5).
- The demonized man runs to Jesus; the spirits recognize Jesus’ identity and plead concerning judgment (5:6-10).
- At the demons’ request, Jesus permits them to enter the pigs; the herd rushes to destruction in the lake (5:11-13).
- Witnesses report the event; the crowd sees the restored man and responds with fear rather than welcome (5:14-17).
- The healed man requests to accompany Jesus, but Jesus sends him home as a herald of divine mercy in the Decapolis (5:18-20).
Key terms
pneuma akatharton
Strong's: G4151, G169
Gloss: impure spirit
It ties the episode to impurity and demonic opposition, making the restoration more than psychological stabilization.
hypsistos
Strong's: G5310
Gloss: Most High
The title acknowledges Jesus’ superior status in a way fitting a Gentile setting and heightens the irony that demons perceive what humans often miss.
legeon
Strong's: G3003
Gloss: legion, large military unit
It conveys organized, overwhelming occupation and sharpens the scale of Jesus’ victory.
parekalei
Strong's: G3870
Gloss: implored, entreated
The repeated pleading forms a contrast: demons beg under compulsion, the restored man begs from devotion, and Jesus decides both outcomes.
epetrepsen
Strong's: G2010
Gloss: allowed, permitted
The wording preserves Jesus’ sovereignty; the demons act only within what he permits.
sophronounta
Strong's: G4993
Gloss: sound-minded, sane
This concise description marks a total reversal of the earlier portrait and displays the restorative effect of Jesus’ deliverance.
Syntactical features
Explanatory parenthesis
Textual signal: '(For Jesus had said to him, "Come out of that man, you unclean spirit!")' in 5:8
Interpretive effect: This aside explains why the spirits protest and shows that their plea is reactive; Jesus initiated the confrontation.
Name-question followed by plural explanation
Textual signal: 'My name is Legion, for we are many' in 5:9
Interpretive effect: The singular 'name' followed by plural explanation presents the man as occupied by a plurality, reinforcing the scale of bondage.
Repetition of entreaty language
Textual signal: The spirits 'begged' Jesus repeatedly in 5:10 and 5:12; the man 'asked' in 5:18
Interpretive effect: This repeated pattern highlights Jesus as the decisive authority over demons, crowds, and disciple-like aspirations.
Triple restoration markers
Textual signal: 'sitting there, clothed and in his right mind' in 5:15
Interpretive effect: The sequence gives visible, social, and mental signs of complete restoration, not merely invisible spiritual change.
Commission framed by two parallel reports
Textual signal: Jesus says, 'tell them what the Lord has done for you... he had mercy on you' in 5:19; the man proclaims 'what Jesus had done for him' in 5:20
Interpretive effect: The parallel places Jesus’ act within the work of the Lord, contributing to Mark’s high Christology without flattening the distinction in wording.
Textual critical issues
Place-name of the region
Variants: Manuscripts read Gerasenes, Gadarenes, or Gergesenes at points in the tradition.
Preferred reading: Gerasenes
Interpretive effect: The exact toponym affects geographical precision but not the substance of the episode: Jesus is in predominantly Gentile territory east of the lake.
Rationale: The best-attested Markan reading is Gerasenes, while alternate readings likely reflect scribal attempts to harmonize the geography.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 65:4
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The association with tombs resonates with uncleanness and alienation from holy order, though Mark does not quote the text directly.
Psalm 107:23-30
Connection type: pattern
Note: After the sea is subdued in the preceding scene, the transition to another form of chaos fits the broader biblical pattern of the Lord mastering forces humans cannot control.
1 Samuel 16:14-23
Connection type: pattern
Note: The narrative belongs to the biblical pattern in which oppressive spiritual affliction is real and divine intervention alone brings relief, though here Jesus’ authority is direct and superior.
Interpretive options
What does 'Legion' chiefly communicate?
- A literal indication of a very large number of demons inhabiting the man.
- A rhetorical name meant mainly to convey overwhelming, organized oppression without fixing an exact count.
- A coded anti-Roman symbol in which the demons primarily represent imperial occupation.
Preferred option: A rhetorical name meant mainly to convey overwhelming, organized oppression without fixing an exact count.
Rationale: The text itself explains the term with 'for we are many,' focusing on multiplicity and power. Roman resonance may be heard by some readers, but the narrative interest is the scale of demonic domination and Jesus’ superiority.
Why does Jesus permit the demons to enter the pigs?
- To provide visible proof that the spirits truly left the man and that their nature is destructive.
- To enact judgment on an unlawful herd and thereby explain the pigs’ destruction mainly in moral terms.
- To show that demons need a host and Jesus grants a temporary relocation without deeper narrative purpose.
Preferred option: To provide visible proof that the spirits truly left the man and that their nature is destructive.
Rationale: The narrative centers on the man’s deliverance and the public verification of what occurred. The herd’s destruction dramatizes what the demons were doing to the man and would continue to do if unchecked.
Why does Jesus refuse the healed man’s request to accompany him?
- Because discipleship is denied to him in this case.
- Because Jesus appoints him to a different form of discipleship: witness among his own people in Gentile territory.
- Because ritual or ethnic barriers still limit his nearness to Jesus.
Preferred option: Because Jesus appoints him to a different form of discipleship: witness among his own people in Gentile territory.
Rationale: Jesus explicitly redirects him to mission, not exclusion. The command to proclaim mercy shows purposeful commissioning rather than rejection.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The preceding storm-calming scene sets up this episode as another answer to the question, 'Who then is this?' The unit must be read as a continuation of Jesus’ authority over uncontrollable realms.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Not every feature is symbolic. Tombs, chains, pigs, and the lake are concrete narrative details first; theological meaning should arise from their actual narrative function.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The demons’ recognition, their pleading, and Jesus’ permission all require a reading centered on Jesus’ superior authority rather than on curiosity about demonology.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The man’s self-harm and isolation are consequences of bondage, not grounds for blaming him. The moral force of the passage falls on Jesus’ mercy and the crowd’s fearful rejection, not on stigmatizing the afflicted.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: Some symbolic overtones may be present, but the event is narrated as a real exorcism and restoration. Typological or political readings must not replace the historical deliverance account.
Theological significance
- Jesus enters a setting marked by death, impurity, and Gentile otherness without being overcome by any of it; the demonic powers must plead and await permission.
- The contrast between the man among the tombs and the man seated, clothed, and sound-minded shows that Jesus’ deliverance is not only expulsive but restorative, returning a person to recognizable human wholeness.
- The scene exposes a sharp irony: the spirits know who Jesus is, the healed man obeys him, and the wider population responds by asking him to leave.
- Jesus’ charge to tell what 'the Lord' has done, followed by the man’s report of what Jesus has done, contributes to Mark’s high Christology while staying with the narrative’s own wording.
- Mercy interprets the miracle. The point is not a display of raw force alone, but compassionate authority exercised for the good of a ruined man.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The account is built on stark reversals: tombs give way to home, violent exposure to clothing, frenzy to soundness, exclusion to public testimony. The repeated begging—first by the spirits, then by the healed man—keeps Jesus’ decision at the center of every movement in the scene.
Biblical theological: Following the stilling of the sea, this episode shows that Jesus rules not only impersonal chaos but personal evil. The commission in the Decapolis also widens the horizon of witness beyond Jewish space.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes a world in which personal evil is real and destructive, yet not ultimate. The demons are active, but derivative; they cannot secure their own future and cannot resist Jesus’ word.
Psychological Spiritual: The man’s bondage appears in self-harm, isolation, and loss of self-command. His restoration appears in calm, dignity, and reintegration. The townspeople’s fear suggests that people may find holy order more threatening than familiar disorder when it unsettles their interests.
Divine Perspective: Jesus treats the man not as a spectacle or a public problem to be managed, but as one to be restored and returned to his people. He himself frames the event in terms of mercy.
Category: attributes
Note: Jesus’ supremacy appears in the fact that the spirits must ask and can proceed only under his permission.
Category: character
Note: The restoration is interpreted through mercy, showing that holy power is exercised compassionately.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The destruction of the herd makes the exorcism publicly unmistakable and turns the man into a witness across the region.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus’ identity is disclosed through what hostile powers confess and through the authority he exercises over them.
- Hostile spirits recognize Jesus’ status while the surrounding humans respond with fear.
- The man’s request for physical nearness is denied, yet he is entrusted with witness.
- The region prefers Jesus’ departure to life reordered by the mercy he brings.
Enrichment summary
Mark stacks the scene with impurity markers—Gentile territory, tombs, an unclean spirit, pigs—to show how far Jesus’ authority reaches. Yet the narrative does not linger on defilement for its own sake. Its focal point is the man’s reversal from violent ruin to visible wholeness. The crowd’s fear is equally revealing: mercy can be unwelcome when it disrupts accepted arrangements. The closing commission turns the restored man into a herald among his own people, so the miracle ends in testimony rather than spectacle.
Traditions of men check
Reducing demonic language to a pre-scientific way of describing mental illness only.
Why it conflicts: The text distinguishes between the man’s observable condition and the speaking, pleading, and transferring unclean spirits as personal agents.
Textual pressure point: The spirits identify themselves, negotiate, beg not to be sent away, and enter the pigs with visible consequences.
Caution: The passage should not be used to deny that some severe distress has non-demonic dimensions; the point is that this text presents genuine demonic oppression.
Assuming successful ministry is measured mainly by public acceptance and retention of a crowd.
Why it conflicts: Here a dramatic deliverance leads not to regional celebration but to a request that Jesus leave.
Textual pressure point: After seeing the restored man and hearing the report, the people ask Jesus to depart their region.
Caution: This should not become a blanket suspicion of all visible fruit; it simply warns that divine power does not guarantee social approval.
Treating discipleship as identical for every believer, as though nearness to Jesus always means leaving home for formal ministry.
Why it conflicts: Jesus refuses the man’s request to travel with him and instead sends him home as a witness among his own people.
Textual pressure point: The direct command 'Go to your home and to your people and tell them...' defines obedience in this case.
Caution: The text does not diminish itinerant discipleship elsewhere; it shows that Jesus assigns different callings according to his purpose.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: Tombs, pigs, and an unclean spirit gather around the man as signs of life at the edge of holiness and social belonging. Jesus enters that space without contracting its uncleanness; instead, restoration moves outward from him.
Western Misread: If these details are treated as horror scenery or as a bare medical case, the narrative’s concentration of impurity markers is easy to miss.
Interpretive Difference: The episode becomes a deliberate demonstration that even a life enclosed by death and defilement is not beyond Jesus’ authority or mercy.
Dynamic: corporate_vs_individual
Why It Matters: Jesus sends the man 'to your home and to your people,' so the restoration is completed in relational return and public witness, not in inward relief alone.
Western Misread: A heavily individual reading can reduce the event to personal recovery plus private gratitude.
Interpretive Difference: The narrative presents deliverance as socially visible, communally significant, and immediately missional.
Idioms and figures
Expression: My name is Legion, for we are many
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The term evokes an organized, overwhelming occupying force. The text itself gives the controlling sense: 'for we are many.' Roman resonance is possible, but the narrative does not require a full anti-imperial code.
Interpretive effect: It intensifies the scale and coordinated oppression of the man’s bondage while keeping the emphasis on Jesus’ superiority over a seemingly massive hostile power.
Expression: Son of the Most High God
Category: other
Explanation: This title fits a Gentile-facing way of naming Israel’s God and signals compelled supernatural recognition, not saving faith. In this setting it sounds like acknowledgment of supreme divine rank from hostile powers.
Interpretive effect: It sharpens the irony that demons recognize Jesus’ status while the local population responds with fear and expulsion.
Expression: sitting there, clothed and in his right mind
Category: parallelism
Explanation: The threefold description is a compressed reversal of the earlier portrait of exposure, frenzy, and social ruin. It is not mere narrative decoration but a visible summary of total restoration.
Interpretive effect: It gives public criteria for the miracle’s authenticity: Jesus’ work produces dignity, order, and reintegration, not spectacle alone.
Application implications
- No case should be written off as beyond Christ’s authority; Mark describes a man whom chains, shackles, and social force could not master, yet Jesus does.
- Where deliverance is genuine, its fruit is ordinarily recognizable: restored order, renewed dignity, and obedient speech about mercy received.
- A community can prefer economic stability and managed fear to the presence of Christ; the request that Jesus leave is a warning as much as the exorcism is a comfort.
- Christian testimony should center on what the Lord has done and the mercy shown, not on fascination with darkness or on self-display.
- Jesus does not assign the same path to every follower; in this case, obedience means returning home and bearing witness there.
Enrichment applications
- Expect Christ’s mercy to reach people whom families or communities have learned only to restrain, fear, or avoid.
- Test claims of deliverance not by drama alone but by the durable signs visible here: order, dignity, soundness, and grateful witness.
- Beware the instinct to protect comfort, property, or social control at the cost of welcoming Christ’s disruptive mercy.
Warnings
- Do not turn 'Legion' into an elaborate political allegory; the text’s explicit emphasis is multiplicity, oppression, and Jesus’ authority over it.
- Do not flatten the account into a mental-health case study, and do not use it to classify every severe disorder as demonic.
- Geographical variation in the place-name tradition should be noted, but it does not carry the interpretive weight of the episode.
- The link between 'the Lord' in 5:19 and 'Jesus' in 5:20 is christologically significant, but the inference should remain proportionate to the narrative’s wording.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not construct a detailed method of exorcism from this scene; its primary purpose is to show Jesus’ authority and mercy.
- Do not force a choice between psychological suffering and demonic affliction as though the passage were written to settle every later diagnostic question.
- Do not press 5:19-20 beyond what the text says: the parallel strongly aligns Jesus’ work with the Lord’s mercy, but it should be expressed with textual care.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating the account as nothing more than an ancient description of mental illness.
Why It Happens: Modern readers often prefer explanations that leave no room for personal spiritual evil.
Correction: Mark presents the unclean spirits as agents who speak, plead, receive permission, and enter the herd. The passage should not erase human suffering categories, but it cannot be collapsed into them.
Misreading: Making 'Legion' into the controlling key for a full anti-Roman allegory.
Why It Happens: The military term invites political resonance, and some secondary echo is possible.
Correction: The narrative itself glosses the name with 'for we are many.' The main force is overwhelming demonic multiplicity and organized oppression, not a coded political scheme.
Misreading: Treating the pigs as the moral center of the story.
Why It Happens: The destruction of the herd is the most dramatic visual element and can eclipse the healed man.
Correction: The herd mainly makes the exorcism visible and discloses the spirits’ destructive character. The narrative emphasis remains on Jesus’ authority, the man’s restoration, and the region’s response.
Misreading: Assuming the man is refused discipleship because he is not allowed to travel with Jesus.
Why It Happens: Readers may equate true discipleship with physical closeness or itinerant ministry.
Correction: Jesus redirects him rather than rejects him. His obedience takes the form of local witness among his own people.