Fifth Sunday of Matthew: Matthew 8:28–34, 9:1

The Gospel passage for the Fifth Sunday of Matthew presents Christ arriving “on the other side,” in the country of the Gergesenes, a place spiritually wounded and a region of pagans. There He is met by two demon-possessed men, people living among the tombs, within the place of death. This image is deeply symbolic: the person who moves away from God loses not only his peace, but also dwells existentially in the realm of corruption, isolation, and the disintegration of his personality. The demoniacs are not merely sick individuals; they are persons held captive by a power that distorts human nature and perverts its true destiny.
The first theological message of this passage is the manifestation of Christ’s authority over demonic powers. The demons confess what many people still do not recognize: “What have we to do with You, Jesus, Son of God?” That is, they acknowledge Christ’s divinity and tremble before His presence. Their cry, “Have You come here before the time to torment us?” shows that they know of their final defeat at the Last Judgment. Christ, therefore, is not simply a teacher of morality; He is the Lord of life and death, before whom the powers of evil are stripped of…




