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												Verse 1Matthew 8:1. When he was come 
												down from the mountain — Where 
												he had delivered the divine 
												discourse contained in the 
												preceding chapters; great 
												multitudes followed him — To the 
												town toward which he went, 
												desirous, probably, of receiving 
												further instruction from him, or 
												of witnessing the performance of 
												some of his miraculous acts. 
												And, behold, there came a leper 
												— Leprosies, in those countries, 
												were seldom curable by natural 
												means, any more than palsies or 
												lunacy. It is likely, though 
												this leper might not mix with 
												the people: he had heard our 
												Lord at a distance. And 
												worshipped him — That is, 
												kneeled, or fell down before 
												him; saying, Lord, if thou wilt, 
												thou canst make me clean — 
												Doubtless, he had seen or been 
												informed of some of the 
												miraculous cures which Christ 
												had wrought. Jesus put forth his 
												hand and touched him — Though 
												leprosies were the most nauseous 
												of all the distempers incident 
												to the human body, and the most 
												infectious, insomuch that the 
												bare sight of a leper could not 
												fail to raise a loathing in all 
												who looked on him; nevertheless, 
												Jesus, with great benignity, 
												drew near and touched this man, 
												and, instead of being polluted 
												by touching him, cleansed the 
												leper with his touch, and sent 
												him away very joyful by reason 
												of his cure, which rendered him 
												agreeable to himself, and gave 
												him access again to the society 
												of men. Immediately his leprosy 
												was cleansed — Immediately on 
												Christ’s touching him, and 
												saying, I will, be thou clean — 
												How wonderful the power thus 
												displayed! and how irresistible, 
												one would suppose, must be the 
												evidence, arising from such a 
												fact, of the divine mission and 
												authority of the person who 
												performed such a cure; who 
												restored, in a moment, to 
												perfect soundness, the body of a 
												man covered all over with the 
												most loathsome disease 
												imaginable! Observe, reader, the 
												instruction which this miracle 
												gives us. Our souls are by 
												nature entirely overspread with 
												the leprosy of sin, and where 
												can we apply for help but to the 
												healing power and recovering 
												grace of this Divine Saviour? 
												And be the malady ever so deep, 
												spreading, or inveterate, we may 
												surely adopt the words of this 
												leper, and say, Lord, if thou 
												wilt, thou canst make me clean. 
												And we have every reason to 
												hope, if we so apply, that his 
												compassion will be moved in our 
												favour, and his power exerted 
												for our cure.
 
 Verse 4
 Matthew 8:4. Jesus saith, See 
												thou tell no man — Although our 
												Lord was now followed by a great 
												multitude of people, yet it 
												seems not many of them were 
												witnesses of this miracle, 
												Jesus, probably, taking the 
												person aside from the people 
												before he wrought it, otherwise, 
												as Doddridge observes, it does 
												not appear that there could have 
												been room for this charge of 
												secrecy; the meaning of which 
												undoubtedly was, Tell no man 
												that thou wast healed by me; 
												that is, as some suppose, till 
												thou hast offered thy gift to 
												the priest; and he, by receiving 
												it, hath owned thee to be clean 
												from thy leprosy; lest they, 
												hearing that thou wast cleansed 
												by me, should, out of envy to 
												me, refuse to acknowledge thy 
												being cleansed. It must be 
												observed, however, that he 
												commanded many others absolutely 
												to tell none of the miracles he 
												had wrought upon them. And this 
												he seems to have done, chiefly 
												for one or more of these 
												reasons: 1st, to prevent the 
												multitudes from thronging him, 
												in the manner related Mark 1:45; 
												Mark 2 d, to fulfil the 
												prophecy, (Isaiah 42:1, &c.,) 
												that he would not be vain or 
												ostentatious: this reason St. 
												Matthew assigns, Matthew 12:17, 
												&c.; 3d, to avoid being taken by 
												force and made a king, John 
												6:15; John , , 4 th, that he 
												might not enrage the chief 
												priests, scribes, and Pharisees, 
												who were the most bitter against 
												him, any more than was 
												unavoidable, Matthew 16:20-21. 
												But show thyself to the priest — 
												That is, to any one of the 
												priests to whom the rest have 
												committed the office of 
												examining cases of leprosy. Here 
												it is well observed by Dr. 
												Lightfoot, that, though the 
												priesthood was much degenerated 
												from its primitive institution, 
												and many human inventions were 
												added to God’s law, touching the 
												priest’s examination of the 
												lepers who pretended to be 
												cleansed; yet Christ sends this 
												leper to submit to all these 
												human inventions, as knowing 
												that, though they indeed 
												corrupted, yet they did not 
												destroy the divine institution, 
												and annihilate the office. For a 
												testimony to them — That is, 
												offer thy gift for a testimony 
												that thou art cleansed from thy 
												leprosy. Dr. Campbell, by the 
												them here mentioned, 
												understands, the people, and 
												therefore translates the clause, 
												Make the oblation prescribed by 
												Moses for notifying [the cure] 
												to the people. The them here, 
												says he, “could not be the 
												priests, for it was only one 
												priest, (namely, the priest then 
												intrusted with that business,) 
												to whom he [the man cleansed] 
												was commanded to go. Besides, 
												the oblation could not serve as 
												an evidence to the priest. On 
												the contrary, it was necessary 
												that he should have ocular 
												evidence, by an accurate 
												inspection in private, before 
												the man was admitted into the 
												temple, and allowed to make the 
												oblation; but his obtaining this 
												permission, and the solemn 
												ceremony consequent upon it, was 
												the public testimony of the 
												priest, the only legal judge, to 
												the people, that the man’s 
												uncleanness was removed. This 
												was a matter of the utmost 
												consequence to the man, and of 
												some consequence to them. Till 
												such testimony was given, he 
												lived in a most uncomfortable 
												seclusion from society. No man 
												durst, under pain of being also 
												secluded, admit him into his 
												house, eat with him, or so much 
												as touch him. The antecedent, 
												therefore, to the pronoun them, 
												though not expressed, is easily 
												supplied by the sense. To me it 
												is equally clear: that the only 
												thing meant to be attested by 
												the oblation was, the cure. The 
												suppositions of some 
												commentators on this subject are 
												quite extravagant. Nothing can 
												be more evident, than that the 
												person now cleansed was not 
												permitted to give any testimony 
												to the priest, or to any other, 
												concerning the manner of his 
												cure, or the person by whom it 
												had been performed. ‘ ορα μηδενι 
												ειπης, See thou tell nobody. The 
												prohibition is expressed by the 
												Evangelist Mark in still 
												stronger terms. Prohibitions of 
												this kind were often 
												transgressed by those who 
												received them; but that is not a 
												good reason for representing our 
												Lord as giving contradicting 
												orders.”
 
 Verse 5
 Matthew 8:5. There came unto him 
												a centurion — A captain of a 
												hundred Roman soldiers, in 
												Herod’s pay; saying, My servant 
												lieth sick of the palsy, 
												grievously tormented — Or, 
												afflicted, as the word 
												βασανιζομενος often signifies. 
												Palsies are not attended with 
												torment. Jesus saith, I will 
												come and heal him — Thus showing 
												both his kindness, and how 
												acceptable to him the humanity 
												of this centurion to his servant 
												was. The centurion answered, 
												Lord, I am not worthy, &c. — 
												That is, he signified that he 
												did not mean Christ should take 
												the trouble of going to his 
												house, he being a Gentile, but 
												only that he would be so good as 
												to command his servant’s cure, 
												though at a distance; for he 
												knew his power was equal to that 
												effect, diseases and devils of 
												all kinds being subject to his 
												command, as his [the 
												centurion’s] soldiers were to 
												him. For I am a man under 
												authority, &c. — As if he had 
												said, If I, who am but an 
												inferior officer, can make the 
												soldiers under my command, and 
												the servants in my house, go 
												whither I please, and do what I 
												please, merely by speaking to 
												them; much more canst thou make 
												diseases go or come at thy word, 
												seeing they are all absolutely 
												subject to thee. When Jesus 
												heard it, he marvelled — Our 
												Lord’s marvelling on this 
												occasion, by no means implies 
												that he was ignorant either of 
												the centurion’s faith, or of the 
												grounds on which it was built. 
												He knew all this fully before 
												the man spake one word. But as 
												he possessed a real human, as 
												well as a real divine nature, 
												and is elsewhere represented as 
												susceptible of the human 
												affections of desire, aversion, 
												joy, and sorrow, so he is here 
												represented as influenced by 
												that of admiration, a passion 
												excited by the greatness and 
												beauty of an object, as well as 
												by its novelty and 
												unexpectedness. And he expressed 
												his admiration of the 
												centurion’s faith, in the praise 
												which he bestowed on it, with a 
												view to make it the more 
												conspicuous, declaring he had 
												not found such great faith, 
												namely, in the divine power 
												resident in Jesus, (who, by 
												outward appearance, was only a 
												man,) no, not in Israel. Thus he 
												taught those around him what to 
												admire; not worldly pomp, or 
												glory, or valour, but the beauty 
												of holiness, and the ornaments 
												which are in the sight of God of 
												great price. Observe, reader, 
												the wonders of grace, should 
												affect us more than the wonders 
												of nature or providence, and 
												spiritual attainments more than 
												any achievements in this world.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Matthew 8:11-12. From this 
												exalted pitch of faith, found in 
												a heathen, Jesus took occasion 
												to declare the merciful purpose 
												which God entertained toward all 
												the Gentiles, namely, that he 
												would accept their faith as 
												readily as the faith of the 
												Jews, and admit them, with the 
												founders of the Jewish nation, 
												to the privileges and blessings 
												of his kingdom. Many, says he, 
												shall come from the east and 
												west, &c. — Many, from the 
												farthest parts of the earth, 
												shall embrace the terms, and 
												enjoy the rewards, of the gospel 
												covenant established with 
												Abraham. But the Jews, who have 
												the first title to them, shall 
												be shut out from the feast; from 
												grace here, and glory hereafter. 
												The words, ανακλιθησονται μετα 
												αβρααμ, &c., properly signify, 
												shall sit down at table with 
												Abraham, &c., a phraseology 
												often used in Scripture, which 
												represents the present 
												privileges and future rewards of 
												the righteous, and especially 
												the latter, under the idea of a 
												sumptuous entertainment. See 
												Luke 14:15; Matthew 22:1; 
												Revelation 19:9. And, though the 
												joys of heaven be all of a 
												spiritual kind, this metaphor 
												needs not be thought strange, 
												since, as Le Clerc observes, “we 
												can neither speak ourselves, nor 
												understand others speaking of 
												our state in the life to come, 
												unless phrases taken from the 
												affairs of this life be made use 
												of.” But the children of the 
												kingdom — So he terms the Jews, 
												even the unbelieving Jews, 
												because they had been born and 
												brought up within the pale of 
												the visible Church, and enjoyed 
												all the advantages which it 
												afforded its members: shall be 
												cast out into outer darkness — 
												Our Lord here alludes to the 
												custom which the ancients had of 
												making their great 
												entertainments, for the most 
												part, in the evening, with 
												candlelight. And the outer 
												darkness, or darkness without 
												the house, signifies, 1st, the 
												state of heathenish darkness, or 
												of ignorance and error, in which 
												those are who are without the 
												pale of the Church of God, and 
												into which, it is here foretold, 
												the Jews should be cast for 
												their rejection of Christ; and, 
												2d, the state of future misery, 
												into which, as many of them as 
												continued till death in 
												impenitence and unbelief, should 
												finally be cast, with all 
												hypocrites and unbelievers. And 
												Jesus said, Go thy way, &c. — 
												Having spoken, as observed 
												above, he dismissed the 
												centurion with an assurance that 
												his servant was well; and at the 
												same time intimated that the 
												miracle had been wrought in 
												consequence of, and according 
												to, his faith, which, though not 
												the meritorious cause of the 
												cure, had been the means through 
												which the Lord Jesus had been 
												pleased to effect it. And his 
												servant was healed in the 
												self-same hour — Or, rather, in 
												that instant, as εν τη ωρα 
												εκεινη, here evidently means.
 
 Verse 14-15
 Matthew 8:14-15. And when Jesus 
												was come into Peter’s house — As 
												is related Mark 1:29, &c.; he 
												saw his wife’s mother laid — 
												Peter was then young, as were 
												all the apostles; sick of a 
												fever — Fevers are ordinary 
												distempers, and often cured by 
												ordinary means, but this was a 
												great fever, Luke 4:38; and it 
												is probable such means, though 
												used, had proved ineffectual. 
												And he touched her hand, and the 
												fever left her — Namely, 
												immediately. The cure was 
												wrought in an instant, and not 
												slowly, like cures produced in 
												the course of nature, or by 
												medicine. For though the length 
												and violence of her distemper 
												had brought her into a weak and 
												languid state, her full strength 
												returned all at once, insomuch, 
												that, rising up immediately, she 
												prepared a supper for them, and 
												served them while at meat, 
												showing hereby that she was 
												perfectly restored.
 
 Verse 16-17
 Matthew 8:16-17. When even was 
												come, they brought unto him 
												many, &c. — The news of this 
												miracle being spread through the 
												town, those who had sick 
												relations or friends resolved to 
												apply to Jesus for a cure. Only, 
												because it was the sabbath, they 
												did not come immediately to him. 
												They waited till the holy rest 
												was ended, which, according to 
												the Jewish form of the day, was 
												at sunsetting, at which time, 
												according to Mark 1:32, and Luke 
												4:40, they brought the sick in 
												great numbers to him: and he 
												took pity on them and healed 
												them all, casting out the devils 
												from the demoniacs with his word 
												— His authoritative and powerful 
												word, the same by which he made 
												the world, and all things 
												therein. That it might be 
												fulfilled which was spoken by 
												Esaias — That is, whereby was 
												fulfilled, namely, in a lower 
												sense than that primarily 
												intended by the prophets; 
												saying, Himself took our 
												infirmities, &c. — Isaiah spoke 
												it in a more exalted sense. The 
												evangelist here only alludes to 
												those words as being capable of 
												this lower meaning also. Such 
												instances are frequent in the 
												sacred writings, and are 
												elegances rather than 
												imperfections. He fulfilled 
												these words in the highest 
												sense, by bearing our sins in 
												his own body on the tree: in a 
												lower sense, by sympathizing 
												with us in our sorrows, and 
												healing us of the diseases which 
												were the fruit of sin.
 
 Verses 18-20
 Matthew 8:18-20. Now when Jesus 
												saw great multitudes — When 
												Jesus did the things before 
												mentioned he was in Capernaum, 
												Matthew 8:5, but the multitude 
												pressing him, he gave orders to 
												pass over the sea of Galilee, 
												otherwise called the sea of 
												Tiberias, that both himself and 
												the people might have a little 
												rest. And a certain scribe came 
												— Namely, as they went in the 
												way from the house, out of which 
												he came, to the shore where he 
												proposed to embark. See Luke 
												9:57. And said unto him, with 
												all the appearance of profound 
												respect, Master, I will follow 
												thee whithersoever thou goest — 
												Being determined to devote 
												myself entirely to the service 
												of thy kingdom. This scribe 
												seems to have concluded, from 
												the zeal with which the people 
												flocked about our Lord, that he 
												would soon declare himself to be 
												the Messiah, and become a mighty 
												prince; Jesus, therefore, 
												knowing his motives to be of a 
												worldly and ambitious nature, 
												saith unto him, The foxes have 
												holes, &c. As if he had said, Do 
												not flatter yourself with the 
												expectation of any temporal 
												advantages from attending me, 
												for I plainly tell you, that 
												whereas (not to speak of 
												domestic animals which are under 
												the care of man) even the very 
												foxes have holes, &c., for 
												themselves and their young, but 
												the Son of man, successful as 
												his kingdom must at length be, 
												now appears in such low 
												circumstances, that he has not 
												so much as a place where he may 
												lay his head; and his followers 
												must expect no better condition. 
												Therefore do not follow me from 
												any view of temporal advantage. 
												The phrase Son of man, is 
												borrowed from Daniel 7:13, where 
												the prophet describes the 
												universal dominion to which the 
												Messiah, in quality of the Son 
												of man, was to be raised. This 
												name, therefore, when applied to 
												our Lord, at the same time that 
												it denotes his human nature, 
												brings into view the glorious 
												kingdom over which, in his human 
												nature, he was to preside. 
												Nevertheless, on several 
												occasions it is used in a sense 
												which implies deep humiliation, 
												being the name given to the 
												ancient prophets on account of 
												the low estimation in which they 
												were sometimes held by their 
												countrymen. It is the 
												appellation which Christ 
												commonly gives himself, and 
												that, as it seems, out of 
												humility, as having a relation 
												to his mean appearance in this 
												world.
 
 Verse 21-22
 Matthew 8:21-22. And another 
												said, Lord, &c. — Luke informs 
												us, Luke 9:59, that Christ had 
												said to this man, Follow me, to 
												which command he replied, as is 
												here stated, Lord, suffer me 
												first to go and bury my father — 
												His meaning seems to be, Suffer 
												me to continue at home with my 
												father, who is far advanced in 
												years, till I have performed the 
												last filial office to him, in 
												committing his body to the dust: 
												for it does not appear that his 
												father was already dead. But 
												Jesus said, Follow me — Namely, 
												immediately; and let the dead 
												bury their dead — Let such as 
												are dead in sin, spiritually 
												dead, being insensible to the 
												concerns of their souls and 
												eternity, employ themselves in 
												interring their deceased 
												relatives and friends: or, leave 
												the business of the world to 
												those that are alive to it, and 
												dead to God and things divine.
 
 Verses 23-27
 Matthew 8:23-27. When he was 
												entered into the ship — Being, 
												as is said above, about to cross 
												the lake; his disciples followed 
												him — Even as many as were 
												desirous of learning of him, and 
												could get a passage, either in 
												that vessel or any others that 
												were near. And there arose a 
												great tempest in the sea — 
												σεισμος μεγας, a great 
												commotion, or, agitation of the 
												waters, namely, in consequence 
												of a sudden change of the 
												weather, and storm coming on: an 
												emblem this of the storms of 
												persecution which should 
												afterward assault his church. 
												Insomuch that the ship was 
												covered with the waves — Which 
												threatened to sink it and all 
												that were in it to the bottom. 
												So the time of man’s extremity 
												is God’s opportunity: but he was 
												asleep — Being fatigued, it 
												seems, with the labours of the 
												day. And his disciples awoke him 
												— Being terribly afraid, while 
												they beheld the sky lowering, 
												heard the winds roaring, and 
												observed the sea and the clouds 
												to be driven with the fury of 
												the tempest; saying, Lord, save 
												us, we perish — Thus manifesting 
												both their faith in his power, 
												and their weakness in not 
												considering who was with them in 
												the ship. And he saith, Why are 
												ye fearful — Can ye imagine that 
												God would suffer me to be lost 
												in a tempest? or that I would 
												consult my own safety in the 
												neglect of yours? The disciples, 
												having seen their Master perform 
												many miracles, had abundant 
												reason to rely on his power and 
												goodness, even in a greater 
												danger than this. For, though 
												their vessel had sunk, he who 
												gave sight to the blind, 
												cleansed the lepers, drove away 
												palsies and fevers with speaking 
												a word, could easily have saved 
												them all, by making them walk 
												firmly on the water, as he 
												enabled one of them to do 
												afterward. Their timidity, 
												therefore, was altogether 
												culpable, and the reproof he 
												gave them just; O ye of little 
												faith? — As if he had said, You 
												undertook this voyage at my 
												command, and are you afraid that 
												you should perish in it? Then he 
												arose, and rebuked the winds — 
												As a master might do a company 
												of turbulent servants. First he 
												composed the spirits of his 
												disciples, then the sea. And 
												there was a great calm — Namely, 
												instantly, as soon as he had 
												uttered the words, Peace, be 
												still, Mark 4:39. But the men 
												marvelled — Luke says, Being 
												afraid, they wondered, Luke 8:25 
												: and Mark, They feared 
												exceedingly; saying, What manner 
												of man is this? — Surely he is 
												more than man, who can thus 
												command winds and seas! This 
												reflection of theirs, as well as 
												their fear in the time of 
												danger, may seem to some 
												unaccountable, considering to 
												how many and great miracles of 
												his they had been witnesses. But 
												it must be observed that 
												hitherto his miracles were 
												generally upon diseased persons, 
												and that, till now, he had given 
												no proof of his dominion over 
												the elements of wind and water, 
												which, it seems, were thought 
												less subject to human power than 
												distempers of the body.
 
 Verse 28
 Matthew 8:28. And when he was 
												come to the other side, &c. — 
												This history is related by Mark 
												5:1-4, &c.; and by Luke 8:26-27, 
												more at large than here by 
												Matthew: and they report it to 
												be done in the country of the 
												Gadarenes, who, it is evident, 
												were the same people with those 
												called here Gergesenes; Gadara 
												and Gergesa being towns near 
												each other, and the country 
												between them taking its name 
												indifferently from either place. 
												There met him two possessed with 
												devils — St. Mark and St. Luke 
												mention only one, who was 
												probably the fiercer of the two, 
												and the person who spoke to our 
												Lord first. But this is no way 
												inconsistent with the account 
												which St. Matthew gives. The 
												tombs — Doubtless those 
												malevolent spirits love such 
												tokens of death and destruction. 
												Tombs were usually in those days 
												in desert places, at a distance 
												from towns, and were often made 
												in the sides of caves, in the 
												rocks and mountains. No one 
												could pass — Safely. And behold, 
												they cried out — Namely, the 
												devils, using the man’s tongue, 
												What have we to do with thee — 
												Why dost thou concern thyself 
												about us? — It is a Hebrew 
												phrase, made use of when men 
												wish not to be troubled with the 
												company or importunity of 
												others. Jesus, thou Son of God — 
												The devils knew him to be the 
												Son of God, though the Jews 
												would not believe that he was. 
												Art thou come to torment us 
												before the time — Before the 
												great day of judgment?
 
 Verses 30-32
 Matthew 8:30-32. And there was a 
												good way off from them — That 
												is, at a considerable distance, 
												although, it seems, within their 
												view; a herd of many swine — 
												Which it was not lawful for the 
												Jews to keeps much less to eat: 
												yet great numbers of them were 
												bred up in that extreme part of 
												the country, out of regard to 
												the gain of such merchandise, 
												for they sold them to the Roman 
												soldiers, and other Gentiles, 
												who were very numerous in these 
												parts. So the devils besought 
												him — For they were entirely in 
												his power, and under his 
												control; saying, if thou castest 
												us out — Which they suspected he 
												would do; suffer us to go into 
												the herd of swine — By making 
												this request the devils 
												acknowledged that it was not in 
												the power even of a legion of 
												them to do any mischief to so 
												contemptible a creature as a 
												swine without Christ’s 
												permission, far less could they 
												destroy the man in whom they 
												lodged. Indeed the whole of this 
												history teaches us to rely on 
												the providence of God, and not 
												to live in fear of evil spirits. 
												They are under the strictest 
												restraint, and cannot hurt us 
												without the divine permission. 
												Mark says that they first 
												besought him much, that he would 
												not send them out of the 
												country; and Luke, that he would 
												not command them to go into the 
												deep, εις αβυσσον, into the 
												abyss, meaning, doubtless, the 
												place where wicked spirits are 
												punished. By requesting to be 
												permitted to enter into the 
												swine, “they doubtless proposed 
												to prevent any good effect which 
												the miracle of delivering the 
												men from their power might have 
												had on the Gadarenes, and to 
												render Christ odious to that 
												wicked people.” Their design 
												could not be hid from Jesus, 
												nevertheless he granted their 
												request, “not only because he 
												knew it would render the miracle 
												more public, but because it 
												would prove the reality of the 
												possession, and make men 
												understand both how great the 
												power of evil spirits is, and 
												how terrible the effects of 
												their malice would be, if they 
												were not restrained. For no 
												sooner was the permission 
												granted, than the keepers, who 
												were with the swine, and the 
												disciples, who were at a 
												distance, beheld, to their great 
												astonishment, the whole herd 
												running furiously down the 
												mountains, and leaping from the 
												tops of the rocks into the sea, 
												where they were drowned, to the 
												number of two thousand; while 
												the possessed furious madmen 
												became all of a sudden meek and 
												composed, having recovered the 
												entire use of their reason, the 
												first exercise of which 
												doubtless would lead them to a 
												high admiration of his goodness, 
												who had delivered them from the 
												oppression of the devil. Jesus 
												might permit the devils thus to 
												fall on the herd as a punishment 
												also to the Gadarenes for 
												keeping swine, which were a 
												snare to the Jews, and to make 
												trial of their disposition, 
												whether they would be more 
												affected with the loss of their 
												cattle, than with the recovery 
												of the men, and the doctrine of 
												the kingdom. Whatever were the 
												reasons, it is certain that, 
												though he might rightfully have 
												used all men’s properties as he 
												pleased, yet this, and the 
												withering of the barren 
												fig-tree, are the only instances 
												wherein man suffered the least 
												damage by any thing our Lord 
												ever did. However, neither the 
												owners of the herd nor of the 
												fig-tree could justly complain 
												of their loss, since the good of 
												mankind, not in that period and 
												corner only, but in every 
												succeeding age, through all 
												countries, has been so highly 
												promoted at such a trifling 
												expense to them.” “No miracles 
												are more suspicious than 
												pretended dispossessions, as 
												there is so much room for 
												collusion in them; but it was 
												self-evident that a herd of 
												swine could not be confederates 
												in any fraud: their death, 
												therefore, in this instructive 
												and convincing circumstance, was 
												ten thousand times a greater 
												blessing to mankind than if they 
												had been slain for food, as was 
												intended.” — See Macknight and 
												Doddridge.
 
 Verse 33-34
 Matthew 8:33-34. They that kept 
												them — went into the city, and 
												told every thing — And also in 
												the country, Luke 8:34. They 
												circumstantially related what 
												had happened to the two 
												demoniacs, and how the demons 
												had been ejected from them. And 
												the whole city came out to meet 
												Jesus — Their curiosity was 
												excited, and they went out in 
												crowds to see what was done, and 
												to satisfy themselves, on the 
												testimony of their own senses, 
												as to the truth of so 
												unparalleled a fact. And when 
												they saw him — And observed the 
												demoniacs sitting at his feet, 
												clothed, and in their right 
												minds: (the disciples having, it 
												seems, charitably supplied them 
												with such upper garments as they 
												could spare,) they perceived how 
												great Christ’s power was, and 
												were exceedingly afraid, having 
												trespassed in the matter of the 
												swine, which was an unclean 
												food; or, if the herd belonged 
												to the Syrian inhabitants of the 
												town, they might know the law, 
												and consequently, taking the 
												destruction of their cattle as a 
												rebuke, they could not but dread 
												further punishment from this 
												prophet of the Jews, who was 
												come to vindicate the neglected 
												institutions of Moses; and 
												therefore besought him that he 
												would depart out of their coasts 
												— For they loved their swine 
												better than their souls! And are 
												not many of the same mind? And 
												Jesus, who never forced his 
												company on those who were so 
												insensible of its value as not 
												to desire it, nor wrought 
												miracles of healing without 
												being asked, went into the ship 
												and returned back again, Luke 
												8:37. Thus the destruction of 
												the swine had the effect which 
												the devils proposed. The men, 
												however, who had been possessed 
												by the demons, but were now 
												delivered, and in their right 
												minds, and, no doubt, full of 
												the praises of Jesus, remained 
												in the country, by his 
												direction, to be living 
												witnesses of his power and 
												goodness, and of the stupidity 
												and ingratitude of these 
												Gadarenes. Mark 5:19.
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