Mark Chapter 5 [YLT]

Bibles:        [about KJVwc]

Mark 4   Mark (YLT) Chapter Index   Mark 6

Expanded Bible Comments
Additional Comments
References  About EBC
Open Refs in New Window
Go to Verse:1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43
Scripture Expanded Comments

1 And they came to the other side of the sea, to the region of the Gadarenes,
2 and he having come forth out of the boat, immediately there met him out of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit, Immediately – The story of the demons is connected with that of the storm on the sea, intimating that the demons will have considerable to do with stirring up the great "time of trouble." R5059:1

Out of the tombs – As there were no asylums at the time, the maniacs, demonized, were subject to the private care of their friends. R3771:6

An unclean spirit – Obsessed--that is to say, demons, the fallen angels mentioned in Jude 6 and 2 Peter 2:4 had gained access, and were in control of him. R5059:1

We should expect similar possessions today. In our judgment a large proportion of the so-called insane are in just that condition. R3771:3

They could not materialize, so the next best thing was to try to get possession of human bodies. Q671:T

Those who deny the personality of Satan must logically also deny the personality of demons, so frequently referred to in the Scriptures. R3771:3

While mankind are not all possessed of devils, through the spirit of evil they are all more or less possessed with the spirit of demons, the spirit of selfishness and thus, slightly insane, some more so, some less so. R3773:1

Being debarred from all association with God, these fallen angels have no longer any pleasure in things on the spiritual plane, but crave association with depraved mankind and a participation with him in sin. R1678:3


3 who had his dwelling in the tombs, and not even with chains was any one able to bind him, Had his dwelling – Having broken his cords and fetters and having left his home. R3771:6

4 because that he many times with fetters and chains had been bound, and pulled in pieces by him had been the chains, and the fetters broken in pieces, and none was able to tame him, Plucked asunder – Manifesting a wonderful strength. R3771:6

5 and always, night and day, in the mountains, and in the tombs he was, crying and cutting himself with stones.
6 And, having seen Jesus from afar, he ran and bowed before him, Afar off – He must have seen the boat coming across the lake of Galilee, because he met Jesus immediately upon the landing of the ship. (Verse 2) R3772:1

7 and having called with a loud voice, he said, 'What to me and to thee, Jesus, Son of God the Most High I adjure thee by God, mayest thou not afflict me!' To do with thee – The expression "What have I to do with thee?" might be more literally rendered, "What have we in common?" R3772:2

There is nothing in common between the Lord and spirit mediums, hypnotism, mental science, Christian Science, etc.; and none should have anything whatever to do with them. R3772:2

Son of the most high God – The demons, fallen angels, recognized Jesus and spoke through the man's lips. R5059:1

While the Pharisees said, "Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph?" (John 6:42) R1680:1

Torment me not – Apparently Jesus had already begun to command the unclean spirit to come out. R3772:1

Demon's answer to the command of Jesus. R5059:1

The demons apparently understood God had a time appointed which would Mark the limitation of their liberties and opportunities in connection with the tormenting of mankind by obsession. R3772:1

"Art thou come to torment us before the time?" (Matt. 8:29) R3772:1

The demons thus implied that an interference with their tormenting of mankind would be an injury to their rights. R3772:1

There are many amongst men who have similarly perverted notions of what are their rights, to impose upon others, to defraud, mislead, injure, pillage. R3772:2


8 (for he said to him, 'Come forth, spirit unclean, out of the man,' ) Come out – This miracle was a demonstration of the power of the Lord over evil spirits. A lesson intended more for the Lord's people of the Gospel age. R3772:5

Of the man – This poor man is an extreme example of all out of whom the spirit of evil is cast through the power of the truth. R3773:2


9 and he was questioning him, 'What [is] thy name ' and he answered, saying, 'Legion [is] my name, because we are many;' What is thy name? – We may suppose that the Lord knew the man was possessed of a great number of fallen spirits, but brought out the answer for the sake of his disciples and the others crowded about. R3772:2

Legion: for we are many – About 2000, as indicated by the number of swine. R4976:2, 5059:4, 3772:5

So anxious were the demons to possess human bodies that there was a legion of them in one man. Q671:T

Hypnotism, mesmerism, clairaudient power and clairvoyant power are all part and parcel of the same great deception. R5059:5

Anxious in some manner to become associated with humanity, yet unable to assume human form, when they found a man willing, a legion crowded into him, thereby making him a maniac. R1678:4, 3772:3


10 and he was calling on him much, that he may not send them out of the region. He besought him – The demons realized that they were subject to the commands of Jesus. R5059:2

Not send them away – The evil spirits apparently do not have special pleasure in their own company, and are debarred from all intercourse with the holy angels. R3772:3

Out of the country – To the abyss--to the second death, to utter destruction. R3772:4


11 And there was there, near the mountains, a great herd of swine feeding, Swine feeding – Swine were condemned under the Jewish Law, and may therefore have been considered contraband. R3772:4

While the Jews did not eat swine's flesh, the foreigners did, especially the Roman soldiers, and the swine industry must have been a very lucrative one. R3772:4

The Jews of the vicinity were probably favorable to the industry, being interested in its prosperity; in the same manner farmers are interested in the prosperity of breweries, because through them they find a Market for their crops. R3772:4

Scholars are of the opinion that this part of the country was largely inhabited by foreigners, the owners of large herds of swine. R3772:4


12 and all the demons did call upon him, saying, 'Send us to the swine, that into them we may enter;' And all the devils – They did not attempt to deny their identity, but admitted Jesus' lordship and power over them. F626

Obviously spirit beings. Those who deny obsession must account for the transfer of a disease of the mind from a man to a herd of two thousand hogs. R3772:5

Besought him – Apparently evil spirits cannot impose themselves, even upon dumb animals, until granted some sort of permission. R2173:3, 4976:3

Demonstrating that they cannot trouble us except as we permit them, or tamper with, or allow our minds to come under their hypnotic or obsessing influence. R4976:3

Into the swine – Rather than have no animal body at all, they prefer to have the bodies of swine. R4976:3

May enter into them – To obsess them. R5059:2

The entertainment of evil thoughts, the practice of vicious habits, seems to break down the will and give admittance to these evil spirits to have control of it. R3772:3


13 and immediately Jesus gave them leave, and having come forth, the unclean spirits did enter into the swine, and the herd did rush down the steep place to the sea and they were about two thousand and they were choked in the sea. Jesus gave them leave – Demonstrating evil spirits cannot trouble us except as we permit them. R4876:3

The herd ran violently – Swine are not easily stampeded; if you want them to move you must whip everyone of them. R4976:2

They were crazed by the strange outside influence which took possession of their brains. R5059:4

Man, with his higher organism, is able apparently to stand much more mental torment than the brute creation. R3772:5

Two thousand – This part of the country may have been largely inhabited by foreigners, the owners of large herds of swine. R3772:4

There were enough demons to enter the whole herd. R4976:2

Were choked – Swine were condemned under the Jewish Law, and may therefore have been considered contraband and their destruction authorized. R3772:4

Because unwilling to cooperate for their own deliverance, mankind's help must come in another way--by the fall of present institutions. R3772:6


14 And those feeding the swine did flee, and told in the city, and in the fields, and they came forth to see what it is that hath been done; And told it – To clear themselves of responsibility and to tell them that the man who caused the difficulty was still near the spot. R3772:5

15 and they come unto Jesus, and see the demoniac, sitting, and clothed, and right-minded him having had the legion and they were afraid; Clothed – In his insanity he had torn off clothing and everything, but now peace and serenity reigned. R3772:6

Thank God for the clothing which we have in Christ's robe of righteousness, covering our blemishes and imperfections, the bruises of sin and the injury which we did to ourselves. R3773:2

In his right mind – Released from his obsession. R5059:4

Sane enough, when rid of the evil influence. R4976:3

Thank God that we can now see things from the better standpoint, from the only true standpoint. R3773:2


16 and those having seen [it], declared to them how it had come to pass to the demoniac, and about the swine;
17 and they began to call upon him to go away from their borders. To depart out – Disregarding the healing of the man, selfishness reigned. If Jesus remained their hog business might be wrecked. R3772:6

This is exactly the reasoning of many in respect to the liquor traffic. R3772:6

They loved better the ways of sin than the promised ways of righteousness. R3773:1

Instead of desiring others to be similarly helped, they reasoned on the selfish side of the question, that his continued presence might wreck the business and economy of this prosperous country. R3772:6

Wherever the truth goes it creates a division and an uproar. R1633:3


18 And he having gone into the boat, the demoniac was calling on him that he may be with him, Might be with him – "To you, who believe, he is precious." (1 Pet. 5:7) R3773:2

Perhaps fearful of being repossessed by the demons, perhaps ashamed of his previous course of life and old associates; but more probably to be a witness to the Lord. R3773:2

He wanted to preach to others of the great deliverance which he had experienced and to tell them of this further proof that Jesus was the Messiah. R5059:4


19 and Jesus did not suffer him, but saith to him, 'Go away to thy house, unto thine own [friends], and tell them how great things the Lord did to thee, and dealt kindly with thee; Jesus suffered him not – Because it was not in harmony with the Lord's judgment of the Father's will. R5059:4

While Jesus refused the request, he did not spurn the consecration. R3773:3

Go home – If we cannot be the apostles to follow his footsteps, we can go to our own homes and to our friends and there confess the Lord and his mighty power in us. R3773:4

And tell them – Our Lord's journey on this occasion seems to have resulted in the conversion of but one person, the demoniac, his subsequent work there being done through him. R3773:4

How great things – We should not only witness with our lips, but in all the departments of our life, testifying that we are now sane, that we now have the "spirit of a sound mind." (2 Tim. 1:7) R3773:5


20 and he went away, and began to proclaim in the Decapolis how great things Jesus did to him, and all were wondering. And he departed – Our Lord did not force himself upon them. R3773:1

Had done for him – Our Lord's journey seems to have resulted in the conversion of but one person, the demoniac, his subsequent work there being done through him. R3773:4


21 And Jesus having passed over in the boat again to the other side, there was gathered a great multitude to him, and he was near the sea,
22 and lo, there doth come one of the chiefs of the synagogue, by name Jairus, and having seen him, he doth fall at his feet, There cometh – While Jesus was enjoying the banquet at the house of Matthew. (Matt. 9:18) R2617:2

Rulers of the synagogue – In charge of its affairs, inviting readers, managing its schools, etc. R2617:1

According to the custom of that time he was, therefore, a member of the local Sanhedrin, the court which tried certain classes of offenders. R2617:1

Jairus – As a man of high station, no doubt he was acquainted with the noblemen of the same city whose son Jesus had healed. (John 4:46-53) R2617:1


23 and he was calling upon him much, saying 'My little daughter is at the last extremity that having come, thou mayest lay on her [thy] hands, so that she may be saved, and she shall live;'
24 and he went away with him. And there was following him a great multitude, and they were thronging him,
25 and a certain woman, having an issue of blood twelve years,
26 and many things having suffered under many physicians, and having spent all that she had, and having profited nothing, but rather having come to the worse,
27 having heard about Jesus, having come in the multitude behind, she touched his garment, Touched his garment – The methods of restitution will doubtless be as varied as were the methods employed by Jesus in healing diseases at his first advent. One touched the hem of his garment, another stretched forth his withered hand, for another he prayed. R759:3

28 for she said 'If even his garments I may touch, I shall be saved;'
29 and immediately was the fountain of her blood dried up, and she knew in the body that she hath been healed of the plague.
30 And immediately Jesus having known in himself that out of him power had gone forth, having turned about in the multitude, said, 'Who did touch my garments ' Virtue had gone out of him – Life, vitality, vigor. "Himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses" (Isa. 53:4; Matt. 8:17), a prophecy that has had its fulfillment. R2028:5, 3885:6, 1359:3, 133:1; A230; E125; F633

The Master was not merely using a divine power, but was using up his own physical power for man's relief. R5104:1, 454:3

Vitality, strength. During his ministry he was continually imparting his vitality to the suffering ones around him, thus impoverishing himself. R1359:4,3; E125; SM651:2

He did not partake of sin, nor did he share in imperfection, except as he voluntarily shared the sorrows and pains of some during his ministry, taking their pains and infirmities as he imparted to them his vitality, health and strength. A230

Jesus experienced the woes and sufferings of humanity without sharing in the imperfections and sins. He suffered for those around him, and made use of his own vitality in healing their diseases. R454:3

It is a fact coming daily to be more recognized among scientific men, that some persons possess greater vitality than others, and possessing more can communicate it to others who have less. R574:4

The greater the number healed, the greater was our Lord's loss of vitality and strength. E124

No wonder he was "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." (Isa. 53:3) R574:5

"Touched with the feeling of our infirmities." (Heb. 4:15) R1359:4, 2028:6; E126

To bless and heal in mind and body the sinners about him was part of his dying. SM645:1

Turned him about – We can imagine the feelings of Jairus in consequence of this delay; while it added to his faith in the power of Jesus, it at the same time tested his faith in respect to the recovery of his child. R2617:2

Similarly, he gives us a ground for faith, and then, as we exercise that faith and act in harmony with it, he gives fresh corroboration; meanwhile testing it by permitting fresh difficulties, contrary suggestions, doubts, fears, etc. R2617:3


31 and his disciples said to him, 'Thou seest the multitude thronging thee, and thou sayest, 'Who did touch me!'
32 And he was looking round to see her who did this,
33 and the woman, having been afraid, and trembling, knowing what was done on her, came, and fell down before him, and told him all the truth,
34 and he said to her, 'Daughter, thy faith hath saved thee; go away in peace, and be whole from thy plague.' Thy faith – Some were healed in answer to their own faith and some in answer to the faith of another. (Verses 23, 42) R759:3

35 As he is yet speaking, there come from the chief of the synagogue's [house, certain], saying 'Thy daughter did die, why still dost thou harass the Teacher ' Why troublest thou – Hope is gone, submit to the inevitable. R2617:3

36 And Jesus immediately, having heard the word that is spoken, saith to the chief of the synagogue, 'Be not afraid, only believe.' Only believe – Divine promises and blessings are to the faithful only--both as respects the present and the eternal life. R2617:4

Faith, not credulity, is the prime essential of an "overcomer." R2617:3


37 And he did not suffer any one to follow with him, except Peter, and James, and John the brother of James; Peter, and James, and John – The Lord evidently loves fervency (warmth) of spirit or disposition. R2617:4

Not a selfish partiality, but rather as an indication that these three, specially zealous amongst the apostles, were further advanced in spiritual things, and best able to appreciate the privileges granted them. R2617:4

Noting our Lord's appreciation of zeal should lead all who are his followers today to strive after greater fervency of spirit. R2617:4


38 and he cometh to the house of the chief of the synagogue, and seeth a tumult, much weeping and wailing; Seeth the tumult – The preparations for the burial were far advanced at the time of our Lord's arrival, for it was the Jewish custom to have a speedy burial after death. R2617:5

Them that wept – Matthew designates them as "minstrels." R2617:5


39 and having gone in he saith to them, 'Why do ye make a tumult, and weep the child did not die, but doth sleep; But sleepeth – A common word for death in both the Old and the New Testaments. (1 Kings 2:10; Acts 7:60; 1 Cor. 15:51; 1 Thes. 4:14) R2617:5, 2197:6

Since there is to be an awakening of the dead, Jesus spoke of death as sleep, a period of rest, of quiet, of unconsciousness. R5059:6, 2617:6, 1939:4

He spoke in the same manner of the death of Lazarus. R5059:3, 5611:5, 2617:5

He did not say she was in heaven or in purgatory or in hell. R5611:5

Our word cemetery means "sleeping place." R2617:5

Heaven is not a sleeping place, but a place of joyful activity and life. Neither could we imagine mankind sleeping in a Catholic purgatory, nor in a Protestant hell of eternal torture. R5060:1

Dr. Trench: "Thereby the reality of death is not denied, but only the fact implicitly assumed that death will be followed by a resurrection, as sleep is followed by an awakening." R2617:5

The Talmud contains the expression "when he slept" hundreds of times, as signifying the time of death. R2617:5

The second death is never called "sleep." R1939:4


40 and they were laughing at him. And he, having put all forth, doth take the father of the child, and the mother, and those with him, and goeth in where the child is lying, Laughed him to scorn – Not appreciating what he meant, even as the disciples did not appreciate the word "sleep" when used in connection with Lazarus. R2617:5

41 and, having taken the hand of the child, he saith to her, 'Talitha cumi;' which is, being interpreted, 'Damsel (I say to thee), arise.' Talitha cumi – In the ordinary Aramaic dialect of the people, a term of endearment to a young maiden. The words are equivalent to, "Rise, my child." --Alford R2618:2

Greek, egeiro, meaning "to awaken, arouse, stir: (Liddell and Scott); a word used in speaking of the temporary awakenings of our Lord's miracles. R1512:2


42 And immediately the damsel arose, and was walking, for she was twelve years [old]; and they were amazed with a great amazement, The damsel arose – Awakened temporarily, not counted as a resurrection. OV352:1; R360:2

A foreshadowing, typifying or illustrating the resurrection. R4603:4

Jesus was "the first fruits of them that slept." (1 Cor. 15:20) Christ should be the "first that should rise from the dead." (Acts 26:23) R2618:4

He merely awakened her, leaving her upon the same plane of death on which she had been born, and had thus far lived for twelve years. R2617:6

Nowhere is this designated a resurrection. R2617:1, 2618:2, 360:2

She did not come back from heaven or from hell; was not resurrected, but merely awakened out of the sleep of death. R2618:2

Our Lord's miracles were merely illustrations of the great work which he will do on a world-wide, gigantic scale by and by--through the power and influence of his kingdom. R5060:4


43 and he charged them much, that no one may know this thing, and he said that there be given to her to eat. Given her to eat – Indicating that the revived ones (in the Millennium) will require clothing, nourishment, and assistance, and will acquire strength gradually. R734:2

Mark 4   Mark (YLT) Chapter Index   Mark 6
Top of Page