Mark 1:21-28 · Jesus Drives Out an Evil Spirit
Casting Out An Evil Spirit
Mark 1:21-28
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

[While King Duncan is enjoying a well deserved retirement we are going back to his earliest sermons and renewing them. The newly modernized sermon is shown first and below, for reference sake, is the old sermon. We will continue this updating throughout the year bringing fresh takes on King's best sermons.]

Original Title: Casting Out An Evil Spirit
New Title: Good Religion

The idea of casting out an evil spirit sounds too much like superstition to many of us. We prefer to relegate such things to the mindset of a pre-scientific world.

Perhaps it is because we have been exposed to so much human evil in our century. William Barclay tells of a traveler in Soviet Georgia in the days before the Second World War. She was taken to see a very humble old woman in a little cottage. The old peasant woman asked her if she was going to Moscow. The traveler said she was. "Then, " asked the woman, "would you mind delivering a parcel of homemade toffee to my son? He cannot get anything like it in Moscow." Her son's name was Josef Stalin. This is the Stalin of youth but the same Stalin who is said to have murdered millions of his own people in his adulthood.

Confronted with monsters like Stalin and Adolph Hitler who seemed in every respect normal human beings but found it possible to rationalize barbaric behavior, we feel no need to look behind every bush for demonic spirits. The human face of evil is enough.

Outside the Christian community, however, there is tremendous interest in the demonic. Hollywood has discovered that our primordial fears are fertile ground for grinding out one gory horror movie after another. Interest in the occult and witchcraft is probably more widespread in western society than at any time since the Salem witch trials. I am told that there are more self-proclaimed witches today in Paris, France than there are Roman Catholic priests. Since that is traditionally a Roman Catholic stronghold, such a statistic is disturbing.

Some people contend that the resurgence of interest in the occult and witchcraft is a sign of our society's hunger for the supernatural. I am not sure. Perhaps such people are looking for a cheap thrill.

We really do not know what the New Testament means when it speaks of casting out evil spirits. Is it referring to mental and emotional illness? Would physical problems with unusual manifestations such as epilepsy have been considered demonic in a pre-scientific world? Most scholars are convinced that this is the nature of so-called demon possession in the Scriptures. Does this mean that we should forget these stories and consign such problems to modern medicine and psychiatry? Absolutely not! Jesus still casts out demons whether they be physical, emotional or spiritual.

GOOD RELIGION HEALS THE BODY. Modern science has helped us see more clearly than ever before that there is a remarkable interrelationship between the mind, the soul and the body. Our thoughts and our attitudes can literally make us sick. We know that.

Of course, we must approach this subject with care. We are not advocating replacing medicine with so-called "faith healing." This is a field where so much damage has been done by spiritual quacks that most responsible religious people are even afraid to approach the subject. Even as great a man as Mahatma Gandhi was guilty of a grievous error in this regard. Gandhi's wife was severely ill with pneumonia and was fading. Gandhi refused to let her have penicillin, arguing that alien substances should not be introduced into the body. Accordingly, his wife died.

A similar tragedy befell the Larry Parker family. In his book, WE LET OUR SON DIE, Larry records the tragic story of the devastation his family experienced when their diabetic eleven year-old died.

Why did the boy die? Because the family "by faith" withheld his insulin. They were encouraged by friends and their pastor to take this so-called "step of faith."

Such actions are not steps of faith. Penicillin and insulin are themselves gifts from God. I believe in prayer but I look at the two hands of prayer and I see one hand open to God and the other reaching out to the world. 

Good health is God's plan for life. The greatest enemies our bodies have are our own destructive habits.We know, for example, that vigorous daily exercise will add years to our life. Excessive worry or stress can subtract those years. Smoking more than two packs of cigarettes a day will cost us many more years. The greatest enemies of our bodies are our own bad habits.

The greatest ally we have in maintaining the healthfulness of our bodies is first of all the conviction that our bodies are the temple of the living God therefore we must not mistreat them and secondly the confidence that if we trust in God He will provide for our needs. Thus we can relax and enjoy life. We are delivered from the destructiveness of nervous habits and sleepless nights.

Not only is trust in God good preventive medicine, there is evidence that there is healing power in such faith even for the body already diseased.

Some people, when they are given bad news by a doctor immediately fold up emotionally. Their worst fears have been realized and thus they simply give in to the inevitable. That doesn't have to happen.

Sean Swarner is an incredible example of triumph over adversity. At the age of 13, he was diagnosed with stage IV Hodgkin's lymphoma and given only three months to live. Remarkably, he survived despite his grim prognosis after rigorous treatments of chemotherapy and radiation.

However, Sean's battle with cancer wasn’t over. At age 16, he was diagnosed with a different form of cancer—Askin's sarcoma, a rare and aggressive cancer. Despite the odds stacked against him, Sean didn't give up hope.

Miraculously, he not only survived a second cancer but also achieved something extraordinary. He decided to push the boundaries of what was considered possible for cancer survivors. He decided to climb. He became the first cancer survivor to reach the summit of Mount Everest, the highest peak in the world, in 2002.

But Sean didn't stop there. He set out to climb the tallest peak on each continent, aiming to inspire and give hope to cancer patients. His incredible journey took him to the top of the Seven Summits, an accomplishment known as the "Explorer's Grand Slam."

Through his foundation, the Sean Swarner Cancer Climbs, he continues to motivate and support individuals affected by cancer, demonstrating that despite the most daunting challenges, the human spirit, perseverance, and a positive mindset can achieve remarkable feats.

Sean Swarner’s story is a testament to resilience, courage, and the limitless potential of the human spirit. Today Sean is a speaker and author inspiring others. I like to put it this way: Good religion heals the body. I believe Sean is still alive today, years later, because of his attitude and determination. 

This is not to say that disease need not ever be fatal. If that were true none of us would ever die. That is ridiculous. It is to say,however, that we are a unitary being. We cannot separate our lifestyle from your general well-being. The best possible lifestyle is one in which we trust God and live responsibly in the light of His love. Good religion heals the body.

GOOD RELIGION ALSO HEALS THE EMOTIONS. All of us sometimes reach the breaking point emotionally. There is a story about a monastery in Europe perched high on a cliff several hundred feet in the air. The only way to reach the monastery was to be suspended in a basket which was pulled to the top by several monks who pulled and tugged with all their strength. Obviously, the ride up the steep cliff in that basket was terrifying. One tourist got exceedingly nervous about halfway up as he noticed that the rope by which he was suspended was old and frayed. With a trembling voice he asked the monk who was riding with him in the basket how often they changed the rope. The monk thought for a moment and answered brusquely, "Whenever it breaks."

There have been times in my life when emotionally I have been suspended in that basket. All of us come to that moment at some time in our life, though many of us would rather die than show it.

There is a story of Roland, an officer in Charlemagne's army. Roland was in charge of the rearguard of the army. Suddenly his company was ambushed. The battle raged fiercely against terrible odds. The situation was not completely hopeless, however. Roland had a horn whose blast could be heard thirty miles away. Oliver, his friend besought him to blow the horn so that Charlemagne would hear and come back to help. But Roland was too proud to ask for help. One by one his men fell fighting till only he was left. Then at last with his dying breath he blew the horn, and Charlemagne rushed to his aid. But it was too late, for Roland was dead, because he was too proud to ask for help.

The things we keep in shadows, afraid of ridicule, admitting weakness, afraid to admit we need help. 

Despite his phenomenal success in swimming, Michael Phelps, the most decorated Olympian in history, encountered profound internal struggles outside the pool. He battled anxiety and depression, which escalated after the 2012 Olympics. His mental health issues reached a point where he contemplated suicide.

For a long time, Phelps avoided acknowledging the depth of his emotional turmoil. He hesitated, afraid of the stigma, after all, he is Michael Phelps, 23 gold and 28 overall. Eventually, he overcame that pride and sought professional help. He engaged in therapy and openly shared his journey with the world through interviews and advocacy work. He has since encouraged countless others to break through the stigma. 

It is really sad and unhealthy to bottle up our pain.There are times when all of us reach the breaking point. At such times we desperately need a friend. That is one reason a church family is so important. For many of us this is where we turn with our hurts.

Our relationship with God is also critical to the healing process,however. One psychotherapist has concluded that the major factor in the effect of treatment on an emotionally disturbed patient is the therapist's expectation. According to this study the therapist can literally communicate a winning or losing feeling with the patient almost unobtrusively. For example the therapist might say: "You're the kind of person who can pull yourself out of depression. You can get yourself out of the house, join a social organization, get out to meet people, I believe in you." Compare that to this: "You're now too fragile to go out on your own."

Isn't it good to know that there is One who always believes in us? Who says to us, "You are created in my image. You can make it. I will be with you." Good religion heals the body. Good religion heals the emotions.

GOOD RELIGION HEALS THE SOUL. By the soul we mean "the whole person." Who we really are inside. Not what other people see. Not a tiny fragment of our being, but the totality of our being. Our personality, our dreams, our fears. When we understand who we are under God when we surrender ourselves to his love and trust in his providence there is healing.

Such a healing took place in the life of actress Betty Hutton. This is an old story but one I love. One night Miss Hutton joined the cast of the Broadway production of the musical ANNIE in New York City. Immediately prior to this time Miss Hutton had experienced a spiritual awakening and was making a comeback after many years of failure, family breakdown, bankruptcy and a bout with alcoholism.

The program notes for ANNIE that night at the Alvin Theatre contained extensive biographical sketches about members of the cast. All except Betty Hutton. Her biography consisted of five words, but those words spoke to everyone in the audience. And when Betty finally appeared on stage, the theatre burst into joyful applause. No one minded that the production was held up for several minutes as she stood in the spotlight, eyes glistening with tears. What were the five words Betty Hutton had written? "I'm back. THANKS TO GOD." (2)

Jesus was teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum when a man in the grip of an evil spirit began shouting at him. We don't know the nature of that evil spirit, but we know that Jesus delivered the man. We don't know whether that man had a family but in our imagination, we can see him returning home in his right mind with a serene look on his face. His wife greets him at the door. His children peer suspiciously from behind their mother's skirt. He gently calls them out and lifts them into his arms. He turns to his wife and says softly, "I'm back. THANKS TO GOD."

Good religion heals the body. Good religion heals the emotions. Most important of all, good religion heals the soul.
---------------------------------------

(1) Larry Parker, WE LET OUR SON DIE (Harvest House, 1980)

(2) Barbara Hudson Dudley in DAILY GUIDEPOSTS, 1982 (Carmel, New York: Guideposts, 1981)



[ORIGINAL SERMON]

The idea of casting out an evil spirit sounds too much like superstition to many of us. We prefer to relegate such things to the mindset of a pre-scientific world.

Perhaps it is because we have been exposed to so much human evil in our century. William Barclay tells of a traveler in Soviet Georgia in the days before the Second World War. She was taken to see a very humble old woman in a little cottage. The old peasant woman asked her if she was going to Moscow. The traveler said she was. "Then, " asked the woman, "would you mind delivering a parcel of homemade toffee to my son? He cannot get anything like it in Moscow." Her son's name was Josef Stalin, the same Stalin who is said to have murdered millions of his own people.

Confronted with monsters like Stalin and Adolph Hitler who seemed in every respect normal human beings but found it possible to rationalize barbaric behavior, we feel no need to look behind every bush for demonic spirits. The human face of evil is enough.

Outside the Christian community, however, there is tremendous interest in the demonic. Hollywood has discovered that our primordial fears are a fertile ground for grinding out one gory horror movie after another. Interest in the occult and witchcraft is probably more widespread in western society than at anytime since the Salem witch trials. I am told that there are more self-proclaimed witches today in Paris, France than there are Roman Catholic priests. Since that is traditionally a Roman Catholic stronghold, such a statistic is disturbing.

Some people contend that the resurgence of interest in the occult and witchcraft is a sign of our society's hunger for the supernatural. I am not sure. Perhaps such persons are looking only for a cheap thrill.

We really do not know what the New Testament means when it speaks of casting out evil spirits. Is it referring to mental and emotional illness? Would physical problems with unusual manifestations such as epilepsy have been considered demonic in a pre-scientific world? Most scholars are convinced that this is the nature of so-called demon possession in the Scriptures. Does this mean that we should forget these stories and consign such problems to modern medicine and psychiatry? Absolutely not! Jesus still casts out demons whether they be physical, emotional or spiritual.

GOOD RELIGION HEALS THE BODY. Modern science has helped us see more clearly than ever before that there is a remarkable interrelationship between the mind, the soul and the body. Our thoughts and our attitudes can literally make us sick. We know that.

Of course we have to approach this subject with care. We are not advocating replacing medicine with so-called "faith healing." This is a field where so much damage has been done by spiritual quacks that most responsible religious people are even afraid to approach the subject. Even as great a man as Mahatma Gandhi was guilty of a grievous error in this regard. Gandhi's wife was severely ill with pneumonia and was fading. Gandhi refused to let her have penicillin, arguing that alien substances should not be introduced into the body. Accordingly his wife died.

A similar tragedy befell the Larry Parker family. In his book, WE LET OUR SON DIE (Harvest House, 1980), Larry records the tragic story of the devastation his family experienced when their diabetic eleven-year-old died.

Why did the boy die? Because the family "by faith" withheld his insulin. They were encouraged by friends and their pastor to take this so-called "step of faith."

Such actions are not steps of faith. Penicillin and insulin are themselves gifts from God.

Good health is God's plan for life. The greatest enemies our bodies have are our own destructive habits.

We know, for example, that vigorous daily exercise will add three years to our life. Excessive worry or stress can subtract those three years, however, plus one more. Smoking more than two packs of cigarettes a day will cost us eight years. The greatest enemies of our bodies are our own bad habits.

The greatest ally we have in maintaining the healthfulness of our bodies is first of all the conviction that our bodies are the temple of the living God therefore we must not mistreat them and secondly the confidence that if we trust in God He will provide for our needs. Thus we can relax and enjoy life. We are delivered from destructiveness of nervous habits and sleepless nights.

Not only is trust in God good preventive medicine, there is evidence that there is healing power in such faith even for the body already diseased.

Some people when they are given bad news by a doctor immediately fold up emotionally. Their worst fears have been realized and thus they simply give in to the inevitable. That doesn't have to happen.

The most famous example of not giving in is that of Norman Cousins, former editor of the SATURDAY REVIEW. Doctors had told Cousins he was suffering from a painful collagen illness--a disease of the connective tissues. Nodules had begun to appear on his body and at one point his jaws were almost totally locked. The doctors told him he had only one chance in five hundred to live. One physician told him that he had never witnessed a single recovery from this ailment.

Immediately Cousins embarked on a program of combining massive doses of Vitamin C with a program of daily laughter. He began with funny films shown on his own projector. Among them were "Candid Camera" and some Marx Brother's films. "I made the joyous discovery," he relates, "that ten minutes of genuine belly laughter had an anesthetic effect and would give me two hours of pain-free sleep." He repeated the procedure as needed. Within months he was free from pain and able to return to his work.

This is not to say that disease need not ever be fatal. If that were true none of us would ever die. That is ridiculous. It is to say,however, that we are a unitary being. We cannot separate our lifestyle from your general well-being. The best possible lifestyle is one in which we trust God and live responsibly in the light of His love. Good religion heals the body.

GOOD RELIGION ALSO HEALS THE EMOTIONS. All of us sometimes reach the breaking point emotionally. There is a story about a monastery in Europe perched high on a cliff several hundred feet in the air. The only way to reach the monastery was to be suspended in a basket which was pulled to the top by several monks who pulled and tugged with all their strength. Obviously the ride up the steep cliff in that basket was terrifying. One tourist got exceedingly nervous about halfway up as he noticed that the rope by which he was suspended was old and frayed. With a trembling voice he asked the monk who was riding with him in the basket how often they changed the rope. The monk thought for a moment and answered brusquely, "Whenever it breaks."

There have been times in my life when emotionally I have been suspended in that basket. All of us come to that moment at some time in our life, though many of us would rather die than show it.

There is a story of Roland, an officer in Charlemagne's army. Roland was in charge of the rearguard of the army. Suddenly his company was ambushed. The battle raged fiercely against terrible odds. The situation was not completely hopeless, however. Roland had a horn whose blast could be heard thirty miles away. Oliver, his friend besought him to blow the horn so that Charlemagne would hear and come back to help. But Roland was too proud to ask for help. One by one his men fell fighting till only he was left. Then at last with his dying breath he blew the horn, and Charlemagne rushed to his aid. But it was too late, for Roland was dead, because he was too proud to ask for help.

It is amazing how fearful some people are of revealing that they need help. Perhaps they are afraid that someone will take advantage of them. Colorful former football coach John Madden says that some professional football players won't have an injury treated when anybody else is around for that reason. Quarterback Kenny Stabler was like that, he says. So was the legendary Jim Brown.

Instead of going to the trainer's room after a game, Brown treated himself at home. He didn't want anybody to know that he was hurt. He figured that if even the trainer or one teammate, knew, then somebody on the other team might know.

And if the other team knew, their tacklers might try to gang up on him, hoping to re-injure him. (1)

We can understand such fears in a football player. But it is really sad when a normal person is afraid to share his or her hurts.

There are times when all of us reach the breaking point. At such times we desperately need a friend. That is one reason a church family is so important. For many of us this is where we turn with our hurts.

Our relationship with God is also critical to the healing process,however. One psychotherapist has concluded that the major factor in the effect of treatment on an emotionally disturbed patient is the therapist's expectation. According to this study the therapist can literally communicate a winning or losing feeling with the patient almost unobtrusively. For example the therapist might say: "You're the kind of person who can pull yourself out of depression. You can get yourself out of the house, join a social organization, get out to meet people, I believe in you." Compare that to this: "You're now too fragile to go out on your own."

Isn't it good to know that there is One who always believes in us? Who says to us, "You are created in my image. You can make it. I will be with you." Good religion heals the body. Good religion heals the emotions.

GOOD RELIGION HEALS THE SOUL. By the soul we mean "the whole person." Who we really are inside. Not what other people see, not a tiny fragment of our being, but the totality of our being…our personality, our dreams, our fears. When we understand who we are under God when we surrender ourselves to his love and trust in his providence there is healing.

Such a healing took place in the life of actress Betty Hutton. One night several years ago Miss Hutton joined the cast of the Broadway production of the musical ANNIE in New York City. Immediately prior to this time Miss Hutton had experienced a spiritual awakening and was making a comeback after many years of failure, family breakdown, bankruptcy and a bout with alcoholism.

The program notes for ANNIE that night at the Alvin Theatre contained extensive biographical sketches about members of the cast. All except Betty Hutton. Her biography consisted of five words, but those words spoke to everyone in the audience. And when Betty finally appeared on stage, the theatre burst into a joyful applause. No one minded that the production was held up for several minutes as she stood in the spotlight, eyes glistening with tears. What were the five words Betty Hutton had written? "I'm back. THANKS TO GOD." (2)

Jesus was teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum when a man in the grip of an evil spirit began shouting at him. We don't know the nature of that evil spirit, but we know that Jesus delivered the man. We don't know whether that man had a family but in our imagination we can see him returning home in his right mind with a serene look on his face. His wife greets him at the door. His children peer suspiciously from behind their mother's skirt. He gently calls them out and lifts them into his arms. He turns to his wife and says softly, "I'm back. THANKS TO GOD."

Good religion heals the body. Good religion heals the emotions. Most important of all, good religion heals the soul.
------------------------------------------------

(1) John Madden ONE KNEE EQUALS TWO FEET (New York: Jove Books, 1986).

(2) Barbara Hudson Dudley in DAILY GUIDEPOSTS, 1982 (Carmel, New York: Guideposts, 1981)

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan