Commentary
Matthew places side by side two displays of Jesus’ authority. In Gentile territory the demons name him the Son of God, fear the coming time of torment, and leave at his command, while the town responds by asking him to depart. Back in his own town, Jesus tells a paralytic that his sins are forgiven and then heals him in public to show that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins. The paired scenes sharpen both Jesus’ identity and the divided reactions he elicits: recognition from demons, rejection from a town, accusation from scribes, and fearful glorifying of God from the crowd.
Matthew presents Jesus as the Son of God and Son of Man whose word expels demons and whose healing of the paralytic publicly confirms his authority on earth to forgive sins.
8:28 When he came to the other side, to the region of the Gadarenes, two demon-possessed men coming from the tombs met him. They were extremely violent, so that no one was able to pass by that way. 8:29 They cried out, "Son of God, leave us alone! Have you come here to torment us before the time?" 8:30 A large herd of pigs was feeding some distance from them. 8:31 Then the demons begged him, "If you drive us out, send us into the herd of pigs." 8:32 And he said, "Go!" So they came out and went into the pigs, and the herd rushed down the steep slope into the lake and drowned in the water. 8:33 The herdsmen ran off, went into the town, and told everything that had happened to the demon-possessed men. 8:34 Then the entire town came out to meet Jesus. And when they saw him, they begged him to leave their region. 9:1 After getting into a boat he crossed to the other side and came to his own town. 9:2 Just then some people brought to him a paralytic lying on a stretcher. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, "Have courage, son! Your sins are forgiven." 9:3 Then some of the experts in the law said to themselves, "This man is blaspheming!" 9:4 When Jesus saw their reaction he said, "Why do you respond with evil in your hearts? 9:5 Which is easier, to say, 'Your sins are forgiven' or to say, 'Stand up and walk'? 9:6 But so that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins" - then he said to the paralytic - "Stand up, take your stretcher, and go home." 9:7 And he stood up and went home. 9:8 When the crowd saw this, they were afraid and honored God who had given such authority to men.
Observation notes
- The two scenes are joined by travel notices ('to the other side,' 'he crossed to the other side') and by a common focus on Jesus’ authority expressed in speech and immediate effect.
- In 8:29 the demons give a higher Christological confession than the surrounding humans, calling Jesus 'Son of God' and recognizing a fixed future time of judgment.
- The demoniacs are associated with tombs and uncontrollable violence, marking them as socially and ritually defiled as well as spiritually oppressed.
- Jesus does not engage in a prolonged struggle with the demons; a single imperative ('Go!') is sufficient.
- The town’s response is not gratitude for deliverance but a request that Jesus depart, showing that recognition of power does not guarantee welcome or faith.
- In 9:2 Jesus responds first to 'their faith,' but the first spoken word addresses forgiveness rather than paralysis, showing that he identifies the deeper need before the visible one.
- The scribes’ charge is internal ('said to themselves'), yet Jesus knows their thoughts, which itself contributes to the portrayal of extraordinary authority.
- The rhetorical question in 9:5 does not deny either action’s difficulty; it distinguishes between an unverifiable pronouncement ('your sins are forgiven') and a visible miracle that can function as proof before observers.
Structure
- 8:28-29: Jesus arrives in the Gadarenes/Gerasenes region and is confronted by two violent demoniacs; the demons immediately identify him and anticipate eschatological torment.
- 8:30-32: The demons request transfer into the pigs, and Jesus expels them with a single command.
- 8:33-34: The herdsmen report the event, and the whole town asks Jesus to leave their region.
- 9:1-2: Jesus returns to his own town, where a paralytic is brought to him; instead of beginning with physical healing, he addresses the man’s sins.
- 9:3-6a: Scribes internally accuse Jesus of blasphemy; Jesus exposes their evil reasoning and frames the healing as proof of his authority to forgive sins on earth.
- 9:6b-8: The paralytic is healed immediately, and the crowd responds with fear and glorifying God for granting such authority to men.
Key terms
daimonizomai
Strong's: G1139
Gloss: to be under demonic domination
The term marks the encounter as more than illness or social disorder; Jesus is confronting personal evil powers.
huios tou theou
Strong's: G5207, G2316
Gloss: God’s Son
Their confession contributes to Matthew’s unfolding Christology: supernatural opponents recognize Jesus’ identity and authority even when many humans resist him.
basanizo
Strong's: G928
Gloss: to torment, afflict, punish
The wording assumes a future appointed judgment for demonic powers and shows that Jesus’ authority already intrudes into that coming destiny.
exousia
Strong's: G1849
Gloss: authority, delegated right, ruling power
This is the governing concept of the unit. Matthew is not merely narrating power but legitimate authority vested in Jesus.
aphiemi
Strong's: G863
Gloss: to forgive, release, remit
The verb frames the central controversy in 9:2-6 and locates Jesus’ mission at the level of guilt before God, not only bodily restoration.
huios tou anthropou
Strong's: G5207, G444
Gloss: Son of Man
The title joins humility, solidarity with humanity, and eschatological authority; here it supports a claim that would be blasphemous if false.
Syntactical features
Direct discourse driving the narrative
Textual signal: The two episodes are dominated by short speeches: the demons’ cry, Jesus’ one-word command, the scribes’ internal accusation, and Jesus’ explanatory challenge.
Interpretive effect: Matthew uses speech to reveal identity and authority. The key theological claims come through what is said and how immediately events answer those words.
Purpose clause introducing the miracle’s evidential function
Textual signal: 'But so that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins' (9:6).
Interpretive effect: The healing is explicitly interpreted by Jesus as a sign validating an invisible claim. This prevents reading the miracle as mere compassion detached from christological proof.
Rhetorical comparison in 9:5
Textual signal: 'Which is easier, to say ... or to say ... ?'
Interpretive effect: The comparison exposes the scribes’ hidden assumption and prepares the public miracle as a testable confirmation of Jesus’ prior declaration of forgiveness.
Temporal qualifier with eschatological force
Textual signal: 'before the time' (8:29).
Interpretive effect: The demons’ wording places the scene in relation to a future appointed judgment, showing that Jesus’ present ministry anticipates final defeat of evil.
Narrative contrast in response scenes
Textual signal: The town 'begged him to leave,' whereas the crowd later 'were afraid and honored God.'
Interpretive effect: Matthew juxtaposes rejection and reverent amazement to show that Jesus’ authority divides audiences rather than producing one uniform response.
Textual critical issues
Place-name in 8:28
Variants: Manuscripts read 'Gadarenes,' 'Gerasenes,' and 'Gergesenes.'
Preferred reading: Gadarenes/Gerasenes remains textually contested; the exact toponym is uncertain, but the scene is in predominantly Gentile territory east of the lake.
Interpretive effect: The variant affects geographical precision more than the theological meaning of the episode.
Rationale: The manuscript evidence is divided and likely reflects scribal attempts to harmonize geography or parallels. The narrative sense is stable across the variants.
Singular or plural in 8:31
Variants: Some witnesses read 'If you cast us out'; others have a slightly different wording or singularized forms in harmonizing tendencies.
Preferred reading: The plural request from the demons is preferred.
Interpretive effect: No substantial doctrinal change results; the plural fits the context of multiple demons speaking as a group.
Rationale: The broader context involves many demons entering the herd, so the plural best explains the transmitted forms.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 35:5-6
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The healing of the paralytic fits the Isaianic pattern of messianic restoration, where bodily renewal accompanies the saving visitation of God.
Daniel 7:13-14
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Jesus’ self-designation 'Son of Man' likely carries more than a generic human meaning; within Matthew it resonates with the figure invested with dominion and authority.
Isaiah 61:1
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Jesus’ liberating action over demonic oppression coheres with the prophetic expectation of Spirit-empowered release, though Matthew does not quote the text here.
Psalm 103:3
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The pairing of forgiveness and healing echoes the Old Testament pattern in which God both forgives iniquity and heals disease, making Jesus’ action theologically weighty.
Interpretive options
Why does Matthew mention two demoniacs while Mark and Luke focus on one?
- Matthew reports two actual demoniacs, while Mark and Luke concentrate on the more prominent spokesperson.
- Matthew has doubled a traditional figure for literary symmetry or juridical confirmation.
- The accounts are contradictory and cannot be reconciled historically.
Preferred option: Matthew reports two actual demoniacs, while Mark and Luke concentrate on the more prominent spokesperson.
Rationale: Matthew explicitly says two men met Jesus, but the dialogue can naturally be carried by one representative voice. The simpler harmonization preserves each evangelist’s narrative selectivity without forcing contradiction.
Why does Jesus forgive the paralytic before healing him?
- Jesus discerns that the man’s deepest need is forgiveness and uses the healing to authenticate that authority.
- The paralysis is being presented as a direct consequence of a specific sin, so forgiveness must come first.
- Matthew uses the order mainly for dramatic controversy, without implying any relation between sin and healing.
Preferred option: Jesus discerns that the man’s deepest need is forgiveness and uses the healing to authenticate that authority.
Rationale: The text explicitly ties the healing to proof of authority to forgive sins. It does not state that this man’s paralysis was caused by a particular sin, so that stronger causal claim goes beyond the passage.
What does the crowd mean by glorifying God 'who had given such authority to men'?
- They perceive that God has granted extraordinary authority to Jesus as the representative Son of Man, with 'men' reflecting amazement that such authority appears in a human figure.
- They already understand that this authority belongs broadly to human beings or to Jesus’ followers in general.
- The phrase deliberately minimizes Jesus’ uniqueness.
Preferred option: They perceive that God has granted extraordinary authority to Jesus as the representative Son of Man, with 'men' reflecting amazement that such authority appears in a human figure.
Rationale: The immediate context centers on Jesus alone exercising this authority. The crowd’s wording reflects their perception at that moment, not a full theological leveling of Jesus with humanity in general.
Why do the townspeople ask Jesus to leave?
- Economic loss from the pigs outweighs gratitude for deliverance.
- Fear before overwhelming supernatural power leads them to distance themselves from Jesus.
- The narrative intends both motives together: costly disruption and fearful rejection.
Preferred option: The narrative intends both motives together: costly disruption and fearful rejection.
Rationale: Matthew reports both the destruction of the herd and the town’s collective request that Jesus depart. The text does not reduce the response to a single motive.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read within Matthew 8-9, where a chain of miracles answers the question from 8:27 about who Jesus is. Both episodes function christologically, not as isolated healing stories.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The crowd’s statement about authority given 'to men' should not be expanded into a universal doctrine of human authority apart from the immediate mention of Jesus’ act in this scene.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Titles and actions in the unit require a christological reading: 'Son of God,' 'Son of Man,' command over demons, knowledge of hearts, and authority to forgive sins all converge on Jesus’ identity.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The scribes’ internal accusation is described by Jesus as 'evil in your hearts,' so moral posture affects interpretation; hostile hearts misread divine action even when evidence is present.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: The demons’ phrase 'before the time' introduces eschatological judgment categories. Jesus’ present ministry is a proleptic intrusion of the coming judgment and kingdom order.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: low
Note: The pigs and tombs should not be over-allegorized. Their narrative function is concrete: Gentile setting, uncleanness context, and visible transfer/destruction of the demons.
Theological significance
- Jesus’ authority reaches hostile spiritual powers; their violence is real, but they cannot resist his command.
- In 9:6 Jesus claims authority on earth to forgive sins, so God’s saving prerogative is active in his earthly ministry, not postponed to the last day.
- The healing of the paralytic is given as evidence for an unseen reality: the miracle confirms Jesus’ authority rather than standing as an isolated act of compassion.
- The demons’ fear of torment 'before the time' links the scene to final judgment, while Jesus’ command shows that this future defeat is already breaking into the present.
- Responses to Jesus are sharply divided within the passage itself: the town begs him to leave, the scribes inwardly accuse him of blasphemy, and the crowd glorifies God in fear.
- The crowd’s wording in 9:8 reflects astonishment that such authority is present in a human figure; within the scene, that authority is exercised uniquely by Jesus.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Matthew lets speech drive the scene. The demons cry out in dread, the scribes accuse inwardly, and Jesus answers with words that do what they say: 'Go,' 'Your sins are forgiven,' 'Stand up.' His speech is not commentary on events but the means by which events change.
Biblical theological: The two episodes join liberation from evil powers with remission of sins. Matthew does not separate bondage from guilt: Jesus confronts both, and in the paralytic scene he makes forgiveness the deeper issue before bodily restoration.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes a world in which visible and invisible realities interlock. Tombs, pigs, paralysis, and crowds belong to ordinary public life, yet demonic agency, divine judgment, and forgiveness of sins are equally real. Jesus acts with authority across both spheres.
Psychological Spiritual: Fear takes different forms in the passage. Demons fear judgment, the town fears a disruptive presence and asks Jesus to leave, the scribes cultivate hostile judgment within, and the crowd fears and glorifies God. Matthew distinguishes fear that recoils from Jesus from fear that begins to honor God.
Divine Perspective: God is shown as the giver of true authority, and that authority is exercised in holiness as well as mercy. Forgiveness is not treated lightly, and the coming punishment of evil powers is not in doubt.
Category: attributes
Note: God’s sovereign authority is displayed in Jesus’ command over demons and his right to forgive sins.
Category: character
Note: Mercy appears in Jesus’ readiness to forgive and restore, while holiness appears in the certainty of judgment for evil powers.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The crowd’s glorifying of God ties Jesus’ acts to God’s manifest glory.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: What Jesus says and does reveals God’s authority in concrete, public form.
Category: personhood
Note: The demons are treated as personal agents, and Jesus addresses them with personal authority.
- Demons recognize Jesus accurately, yet that recognition is not faith or allegiance.
- Jesus appears as a human figure and yet claims an authority that belongs to God’s saving rule.
- The same display of power leads one group to drive Jesus away and another to glorify God.
Enrichment summary
These scenes draw on two frames modern readers often thin out. In the tombs and among the pigs, Jesus enters a death-marked and unclean setting where the demons already know the time of their judgment is fixed. In Capernaum, his word of forgiveness touches a prerogative bound up with God’s own authority, which is why the scribes hear blasphemy and why the healing must serve as proof. Read together, the episodes are not generic wonder stories but a coordinated display of kingdom authority over evil powers and over sin itself.
Traditions of men check
Treating Jesus primarily as a therapist of felt needs rather than the one who addresses guilt before God.
Why it conflicts: Jesus does not begin with the paralytic’s visible condition but with forgiveness of sins, indicating a deeper diagnosis than immediate physical relief.
Textual pressure point: 9:2 places 'Your sins are forgiven' before 'Stand up and walk.'
Caution: This should not be used to minimize bodily suffering or compassion; the passage includes real healing, but it refuses to let physical need eclipse the sin problem.
Reducing demonic language to mere premodern symbolism for psychological disturbance.
Why it conflicts: The narrative presents demons as speaking, recognizing Jesus, fearing future judgment, requesting relocation, and leaving the men for the pigs.
Textual pressure point: 8:29-32 narrates personal demonic agency and Jesus’ direct authority over it.
Caution: This does not deny the reality of psychological illness; it warns against evacuating the text’s personal-spiritual dimension.
Assuming that clear displays of divine power automatically produce faith and welcome.
Why it conflicts: The townspeople witness liberating power yet ask Jesus to leave, and the scribes interpret mercy as blasphemy.
Textual pressure point: 8:34 and 9:3-4 show rejection and hostile interpretation in the face of evidence.
Caution: Do not weaponize this against all doubt; the point is that evidence alone does not overcome a resistant heart.
Using the crowd’s phrase 'authority to men' to flatten Jesus into a mere example of human potential.
Why it conflicts: The narrative focus is on Jesus’ singular act of forgiving sins and validating that claim by miracle.
Textual pressure point: 9:6 centers the authority in 'the Son of Man' within this episode.
Caution: The verse may have broader implications for God working through humans, but the immediate point is christological, not self-empowerment rhetoric.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: apocalyptic_imagery_frame
Why It Matters: The demons’ line about being tormented 'before the time' assumes an appointed future judgment. Jesus’ exorcism is therefore not an isolated oddity but an early intrusion of that coming defeat into the present.
Western Misread: Treating the exchange as dramatic language with no real eschatological content, or as a projection of inner distress.
Interpretive Difference: The scene reads as a sign that the reign of God has begun to press into the present and confront powers destined for judgment.
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: To declare sins forgiven apart from ordinary temple-linked patterns of repentance and sacrifice is a startling claim. That is the pressure behind the scribes’ charge of blasphemy.
Western Misread: Hearing 'Your sins are forgiven' as a comforting private reassurance with little covenantal or theological weight.
Interpretive Difference: The healing must be read as public confirmation of a contested authority claim, not merely as compassion added to a spiritual sentiment.
Idioms and figures
Expression: "before the time"
Category: idiom
Explanation: The phrase evokes an appointed divine moment of final judgment rather than an undefined future. The demons speak as those who know there is a set eschatological reckoning still ahead.
Interpretive effect: It gives the exorcism apocalyptic force: Jesus is not only relieving misery but confronting powers destined for judgment.
Expression: "Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins"
Category: other
Explanation: "On earth" heightens the shock of the claim: the authority to remit sins is being exercised here in the present human sphere, not deferred to the last day or confined to temple process.
Interpretive effect: The line sharpens the controversy and explains why the miracle must function as visible proof of an otherwise invisible claim.
Expression: tombs and pigs
Category: metonymy
Explanation: These concrete details mark the locale as associated with death, impurity, and Gentile space rather than serving as hidden allegorical code.
Interpretive effect: The setting intensifies the scope of Jesus’ authority: he enters a visibly defiled and feared region and masters it without resistance.
Expression: "Which is easier, to say ... ?"
Category: rhetorical_question
Explanation: Jesus is not comparing actual difficulty as though forgiveness were easier than healing. He contrasts what can be uttered without public verification with what can be immediately tested before witnesses.
Interpretive effect: The question frames the healing as courtroom-like evidence for the unseen reality of forgiven sins.
Application implications
- Care for suffering should not bypass the issue Jesus addresses first in 9:2: reconciliation with God. The passage keeps bodily need and forgiveness together, but it does not treat them as equal in order.
- The town’s plea that Jesus leave warns against welcoming his power only when it leaves comfort, property, and routine untouched.
- The scribes’ silent accusation shows that resistance to Jesus may stay unspoken and still be morally exposed before him.
- The passage encourages confidence in Jesus for both deliverance from enslaving powers and forgiveness of sins; Matthew does not divide those realities.
- 'Their faith' in 9:2 commends concrete, communal efforts to bring needy people to Jesus rather than leaving them to struggle alone.
Enrichment applications
- Preaching the paralytic scene as comfort without forgiveness misses the order Jesus himself sets in 9:2.
- Exorcism in this passage should direct attention to Jesus’ effortless authority, not to speculation about demons.
- The mixed responses in 8:34 and 9:8 prepare readers for the fact that Jesus’ authority may provoke both rejection and worship.
Warnings
- Do not force a direct one-to-one causal connection between this paralytic’s sin and his physical condition; the text foregrounds forgiveness and proof, not etiology.
- Do not flatten Matthew’s two demoniacs into an error because Mark and Luke narrate one prominent sufferer; the evangelists can narrate the same event with different selectivity.
- Do not overbuild doctrine from the crowd’s partial perception in 9:8; their response is important, but it does not exhaust Matthew’s christology.
- Do not turn the destruction of the pigs into a speculative ethic of animals, economics, or ritual purity beyond what the passage itself supports.
- Do not miss the narrative sequence from 8:27 onward: these episodes continue answering the disciples’ earlier question about Jesus’ identity through deed and response.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overbuild a demonology from the passage beyond the basic point that evil powers are real, doomed, and subject to Jesus.
- Do not allegorize the pigs, tombs, or geography into a hidden symbolic system; the impurity/death frame is enough to explain their narrative force.
- Do not let later doctrinal systems erase the local argument of 9:6: the miracle is given so observers may know that Jesus has authority on earth to forgive sins.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Reducing the demonic encounter to a symbol of mental illness or social exclusion.
Why It Happens: Modern readers often prefer psychological categories and resist personal evil as a real dimension of the passage.
Correction: Matthew presents the demons as personal agents who recognize Jesus, fear judgment, request transfer, and obey his command. That does not deny psychological suffering elsewhere; it simply refuses to flatten this scene.
Misreading: Claiming that the paralytic’s condition is explicitly traced to a particular personal sin.
Why It Happens: Jesus forgives before he heals, and readers may turn that sequence into a direct causal explanation.
Correction: The passage itself does not identify a specific sin behind the paralysis. The clearer point is that Jesus addresses the deeper need first and then heals as proof of his authority to forgive.
Misreading: Using 9:8 to argue that people in general, or church leaders in particular, possess authority to forgive sins in the same sense Jesus does here.
Why It Happens: The crowd says God gave such authority 'to men,' and later theological debates can be imported into the line.
Correction: Within this scene the authority belongs to Jesus as the Son of Man, and the crowd’s statement reflects amazement more than a worked-out doctrine.
Misreading: Explaining the town’s request that Jesus leave by a single motive alone.
Why It Happens: Readers often prefer either an economic reading focused on the pigs or a purely religious reading focused on fear.
Correction: Matthew’s wording supports both elements together: Jesus’ presence is costly and unsettling, and the town chooses distance over welcome.