HOW MANY PIGS IS A HUMAN WORTH?
THE GADARENE PIGS
PART II
“The moral problem can be safely dismissed:
one man is of greater value than many swine.”
~ I.
Howard Marshall[1]
Last week I began
a discussion about the troubling story told in all three synoptic gospels in
which Jesus heals a man (or two men) possessed by demons by allowing the demons
to enter a nearby herd of swine, who then rush into the sea and drown. In that post, I took a careful look at the
context and details of the story, with particular emphasis on the Gospel of
Matthew. I argued that the context of
the story, Jesus’ escalating demonstrations of power, and the setting, in the
tombs of the city, point to an apocalyptic message. The purpose of the story is to demonstrate
that Jesus has power not only over sickness, as various healings had shown, and
not only over the natural elements, commanding the wind and water, but also
over the powers of darkness. With “one
little word,” he conquers demons who had terrorized the population of the
city.
This week, I’d
like to examine some of the interpretations that have been made of the story,
and of the significance of the pigs, and to offer my own. As I noted at the close of last week’s post, most
commentaries addressing this story do not focus on the pigs, but have nevertheless
considered a variety of interpretations of their meaning and role. The pigs have been regarded as ironic, comic,
symbolic, evidentiary, disposable, and fictional. They have rarely been considered as sentient
being with inherent value to God.
Pigs, of course,
are unclean animals under Jewish law, and so to Matthew’s largely Jewish
audience, it would be fitting to allow the demons to enter the pigs and the
fate of the pigs would not be troubling to them. John Nolland, one of the few commentators
even to recognize the issue, has observed,
Miracle of the Gadarene Swine, Briton Riviere, 1883, Tate Gallery |
The kinds of animal welfare issues to
which modern Western peoples have been sensitized are not issues for ancient
Mediterranean peoples. As far as Jews
were concerned, pigs should not have been raised in the first place. As far as others were concerned, the pigs
were destined for slaughter (for food or religious sacrifice). As the ongoing story hints, the people
involved are concerned about their own loss, not the experience of the pigs.[2]
This underscores the fact that this
story is not intended to illustrate appropriate human relations to
animals. This very disregard, however,
is an important aspect of the story that modern readers concerned about human
treatment of animals must address. In
his exegesis of this story, Nolland concludes that the focus is on the exorcism
- the first in Matthew, but not the last.
These exorcisms, he explains, are intended to emphasize Jesus’
authority.[3] As for the pigs, he notes that the story may
make pigs the destination for the demons because of the use of pigs in pagan
ritual slaughter, making a connection between pagan worship and the worship of
demons, as suggested by 1 Corinthians 10:20.
Or, it may simply have been considered appropriate because the animals
were unclean.[4] He concludes, in keeping with his focus on
Jesus’ authority, “The fate of the pigs illustrates the sheer destructiveness
of demons to their hosts.”[5]
J.
Andrew Overman, in notes to the New Oxford Annotated Bible, regards the pigs
merely as something akin to Shakespearean comic relief: “The irony and humor of
the scene with the pigs would not have been lost on Matthew’s Jewish audience.”[6]
For
Warren Carter, “With demoniacs, tombs, and pigs charging into the sea, the
scene is like a political satire or cartoon, which mocks the empire’s
pretensions with visions of demise.”[7] Warren discusses in detail potential symbolic
understandings of the pigs. Referencing
a strong Roman presence in Gadara, Warren explains that the Romans often mocked the
Jewish aversion to pigs and that pigs were used by Romans both as food and for
various religious rites. Moreover, a pig
was the symbol of Tenth Fretensis
Legion stationed in Syria, which fought against Jerusalem in the 66-70
war. For Warren, the story has nothing
to do with actual pigs. Instead,
God’s empire destroys the pigs, symbols
of Roman commercial, religious, and military power . . . possessed by demons,
agents of the devil’s reign. . . . The representatives of Roman power end up in
the same place as Pharaoh’s armies (Exod. 14:23-15:5). The story celebrates Jesus’ liberating reign,
which subverts claims made by religious and imperial powers and point to God’s
sovereignty over Rome.[8]
For
Tom Wright, the point of this story is that Jesus has control over “the shadowy
forces of evil, however we think about them or describe them.”[9] Jesus is not just a good teacher, but one
with authority, worthy of our complete trust.
As for the pigs, Wright mentions them only indirectly, “what happens to
these demons -- entering pigs and driving them into the lake -- is a sign of
what Jesus will do, in his death and resurrection, with evil of whatever sort.”[10] For Wright, they are a vehicle or an
illustration.
Christ heals a possessed man at Gerasa, Alexander Master circa 1430 |
In
contrast to these interpretations, which see the pigs as standing in for
something else or fulfilling only a literary role, the New Bible Commentary
asserts that the swine running into the sea “provided the man with convincing
proof that his affliction had been cured. It also showed that human life is of more
value than that of animals.”[11] While the idea that the man would need proof
that he was no longer possessed is startling, the idea that this story can
be used to assert that humans are of more value is, for those who care about
animals, even more startling, and requires careful evaluation. It is, unfortunately, the traditional
view. It stems from St. Augustine
himself, who, as explained by Peter Singer, reasoned that “Jesus caused the
Gadarene swine to drown in order to demonstrate that we have no duties to
animals.”[12],[13] Spalde and Stindlund point to both I. Howard
Marshall, a biblical scholar, and Marc Driscoll, pastor of the megachurch Mars
Hill in Seattle, as echoing this sentiment in the modern day. Marshall’s view is represented in the opening
quote for this post. Driscoll, with
remarkable callousness, joked in a recent book about a “bacon famine” resulting
from the loss of the pigs.[14]
Since Augustine’s day, this reasoning has been used
to justify great deal of animal abuse, in particular vivisection (scientific or medical experiments on live animals).[15] The issue was particularly hotly debated in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when the ethics of animal
experimentation were being closely examined.
In our day, unfortunately, the mistreatment of animals, including
painful and debilitating medical experiments and tests for almost any human
purpose, is taken as a given, even for such vanity items as cosmetics.
Two
references to the Gadarene swine in early public debates stand out. In a 1904 President’s Address to the British
Medical Association, William Collier recalled various episodes in the
development of Oxford’s medical school, including debates on vivisection. He told in particular of “the most fantastic argument ever put forward
in favour of vivisection, namely, that the Gadarene -miracle sanctioned it,
inasmuch as it was a well-known fact that swine in swimming crossed their
forelegs, and in so doing cut their own throats.”[16] By contrast, a letter in the December 1907
issue of The Animal Defender and
Zoophilist, in response to an earlier writer who relied on the Gadarene
pigs story to justify vivisection, observed, “while it is quite like a
vivisector to put himself in the place of the Deity, he is obviously wrong in
doing so this time. In the analogy, if
there is any analogy at all in these cases, the licensed vivisectors obviously
fill the place of the devils, who, by
their own request, are allowed to
torment the poor swine.” The writer
concludes that why this is allowed in either case is a mystery.[17]
Norman Phelps and Spalde and
Strindlund are among the very few modern authors to attempt to come to grips with what this story, on its own terms,
means for animals.[18] Spalde and Strindlund, in their essay, "Doesn't Jesus Treat Animals As Property?" in A Faith Embracing All Creatures, favor a political
reading and conclude that “no moral lesson regarding our relationship with
animals can be derived from this text since it is really about Jesus’
interaction with a powerful military regime” and to “have a callous attitude
toward sentient creatures based on this passage would certainly go against the
trajectory of the gospel, which is about expanding love and mercy.”[19]
Phelps,
in his book The Dominion of Love, considers
this story in order to respond to “defenders of vivisection [who] sometimes
remind us that this story shows Jesus killing two thousand animals for the
health of one human being.”[20] Phelps also takes a political perspective,
beginning with textual analysis of the story, noting that it “existed in
several versions and underwent changes over time, after the fashion of folk
legends.”[21] Next he examines the social context of the
story and what the repercussions for Jesus would likely have been had he really
taken an action that would have cost “a man of great wealth and influence” such
“a sizable fortune.” He concludes it
would have been viewed as “a political act of aggression, a Jewish nationalist
protest against Roman rule over the land of Israel.” This would surely have set off “a legal and
political firestorm,” leading inevitably to Jesus’ arrest. However, because this does not happen,
indeed, “Jesus goes on his way undisturbed,” Phelps can only conclude that the
incident never occurred.[22] Therefore, he asserts, the story shows not
that Jesus approved of killing
animals for human benefit, but only that some
early Christians took this view, and those early Christians were gentiles, “as
we can see from their failure to appreciate the political subtext of the
story.”[23]
While I appreciate the fact that
Phelps has at least tackled the issue, I find this to be a largely
unsatisfactory analysis. Whatever the
historical merits of his theory, the fact that the story is in the canon means
that we need to address what it says for us a Christian community. Whether it reflects actions by Jesus or the
view of early Christians, it is still deemed to be authoritative by the
Christian church and must be examined accordingly. For me, Spalde and Strindlund come
closer to the mark by stating that the story is about something other than our
relationship with animals and so we cannot draw a lesson about animals
here. I part ways with them, however, in
their understanding of the story from a political angle, calling it a story
about “a person possessed by a military spirit, whom Jesus freed.”[24]
Jesus did not preach about overthrowing Rome or political change, and these
kinds of interpretations, while appealing, seem to me to be out of place.
If the story is not about politics, it is also clear from the biblical context that it is also not about human relationships with pigs. It’s not even a story about curing
demoniacs. It is a story about a
confrontation between Jesus and overwhelmingly powerful and numerous demons. It is a story about Jesus’ authority over
those - and all - demons, pointing to Jesus
as the one who will judge all at the end of time. Here Jesus does not “kill[] two thousand
animals for the health of one human being,” as Phelps describes the
pro-vivisection position. Rather, as
Eugene Boring explains, “For Matthew, the exorcism story is not an
isolated incident, not merely the sensational account of Jesus’ power to help
an individual or two, but represents the cosmic conflict between the kingdom of
God and the kingdom of Satan.”[25] Indeed, if this were a simple story of a
healing or exorcism, it would be difficult to explain the extreme reaction of
the townspeople, who were terrified by this display of Jesus’ power. Instead, this is a story with a much bigger
point; a point so important, it is made in all three synoptic gospels.
Jesus healing the possessed
(CAROLSFELD, Julius Schnorr von)
|
With this understanding, and assuming that Jesus did,
as a matter of historical fact, allow the demons to enter the pigs, they were
allowed to do so not for the benefit of one or two human beings; they were
allowed to do so for the sake of the created order and for the triumph of good
over evil. The Book of Revelation tells
us, as do other places in scripture, that in the days leading up to the time of
judgment, it will not only be pigs who suffer.[26] Pigs, then, are not singled out as disposable
commodities whose suffering does not matter.
This is
not to suggest that no difficulties remain.
In this story, animals are sacrificed and humans are saved. The biblical witness regarding the place of
animals and human relationships to them is complex and sometimes seemingly
contradictory. The scriptures in general
do not address many of the issues confronting animals today, such as factory
farming, animal experimentation, fur farms, and puppy mills, just as they do
not directly condemn slavery or the oppression of women. They do address, however, power used without
mercy to exploit the helpless. They do
address the blessedness of the compassionate.
And they do state that “The righteous man cares for the needs of his
animal.”[27] No one episode can be taken out of context to
develop a theology for our relationships with animals - whether that theology
says that animals have been provided solely for human benefit or that humans
have a responsibility to care for animals as God does. What is clear is that the story of Gadarene
pigs is not a means to calculate the relative worth of animals and humans. Nor is it an appropriate justification for
the claim that human needs always come first, regardless of the cost to
animals.
We must not reach too far to justify our own cruelty
by appealing to one story in Scripture.
Instead, our lessons about animals must be drawn from the scriptures as
a whole, which instruct us to imitate Christ, the perfect image of God, who,
although He is worth more than all humans, died for human benefit.
Shutterstock.com |
[1] The Gospel of Luke: A Commentary on the
Greek Text. Grand Rapids:Eerdmans, 1978, p. 336, quoted in York, Tripp and Alexis-Baker, Andy, eds., A Faith Embracing All Creatures: Addressing
Commonly Asked Questions About Christian Care For Animals. Eugene:Cascade
Books, 2012, p. 102.
[2] Nolland,
John. The Gospel of Matthew: A
Commentary on the Greek Text. Grand
Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2005, p. 377, n. 132.
[3] Nolland,
p. 374.
[4] Nolland,
p. 376.
[5] Nolland., p. 377.
[6] Overman,
J. Andrew, in The New Oxford Annotated
Bible, p. New Testament 19, footnote regarding Matthew 8:31-33.
[7] Carter,
Warren. Matthew and the Margins: A
Sociopolitical and Religious Reading. Maryknoll: Orbis Books, 2005, p. 211.
[8] Carter, p. 213. In their essay, “Doesn’t Jesus Treat Animals
As Property?” in A Faith Embracing All
Creatures, at pages 103-107, Annika Spalde and Pelle Strindlund also
discuss this political interpretation of the story.
[9] Wright,
Tom. Matthew for Everyone: Part One
Chapters 1-15. Louisille: Westminster John Knox Press, 2004, pp.
93-94.
[10] Wright,
p. 94.
[11] Nixon,
R.E., note to Matthew 8:32, in Guthrie, D. and Motyer, J.A., eds., The New Bible Commentary, Revised. Grand Rapids: William B Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 1970, p. 827.
[12] Singer,
Peter. Animals, from Ted Honderich (ed.), The Oxford
Companion to Philosophy, Oxford, 1995, pp. 35-36. See also, Saint Augustine. "The Catholic and Manichaean Ways of
Life". Gallagher, D.A. and Gallagher, I.J. (trans.) Boston University
Press, 1966, p. 120, cited in Singer, Peter. "Animal
Liberation". Random House,
1990, p. 192.
[13] Spalde
and Strindlund also recognize Augustine’s interpretation of this story, as well
as Aquinas’ interpretation, which was that Christ “allowed the demons he chased
out to do men some harm, either in his body or in his property, for the
salvation of man’s soul – namely, for man’s instruction.” A Faith Embracing All Creatures, p. 102, quoting Aquinas, Summa Theologiciae, III-II 44, ad.4.
[14] A Faith Embracing All Creatures, p. 102,
citing Driscoll and Breshears, Vintage
Jesus, p. 43.
[15]
Augustine’s position that we have no duty toward animals (taken largely from
Aristotle), was taken up and advanced by Aquinas and has thoroughly permeated
the Christian tradition, although there has always been a minority voice for
the animals. The episode of the Gadarene
pigs is only one aspect of this larger issue, noted here for its particular
impact on the issue of vivisection.
[16] Collier, William.
President’s Address Delivered AtThe Seventy-Second Annual Meeting of the British Medical Association, reprinted
in the British Journal of Medicine, July 30, 1904, p. 221.
[17] Hall,
Earnest. The Zoophilist and Animals’ Defender, December 1907, p. 139
(emphasis original).
[18] Andrew
Linzey is the leading theological scholar of animal welfare and animal
rights. It seems inconceivable that he
has not specifically addressed the issue, but if he has, I have not been able
to find it. He makes a passing
reference, as part of a list of other issues, in his book Animal Theology, refuting what he calls “the Predator view of
Jesus.” There, he merely asks, “Did
Jesus really send the demons into the Gadarene swine? . . . I do not deny the difficulty and ambiguity
in these stories . . .” Linzey, Andrew. Animal Theology. Urbana: University of
Illinois Press, 1994, p.121.
[19] Spalde
and Strindlund, in A Faith Embracing All
Creatures, p. 107.
[20] Phelps,
Norm. The Dominion of Love: Animal Rights According To The Bible. New York: Lantern Books, 2002, pp.
139-140. Note that Phelps is addressing
the story in general, not the story as it is told in exclusively Matthew ,
Mark, or Luke.
[21] Phelps, p. 140.
[22] Phelps, pp. 140-41.
[23] Phelps, p. 142.
[24] Spalde
and Strindlund, A Faith Embracing All
Creatures, p. 107.
[25] Boring,
Eugene M. “The Gospel of Matthew.” In
the New Interpreter’s Bible, Volume VIII,
pp. 89-505. Nashville: Abingdon Press,
1995, p. 232.
[26] See, e.g., Lk. 23:28-31,
“Jesus
turned and said to them, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me; weep for
yourselves and for your children. For the time will come when you will say,
‘Blessed are the barren women, the wombs that never bore and the breasts that
never nursed!’ Then “‘they will say to the mountains, “Fall on us!” and to the
hills, “Cover us!” ’ For if men do these things when the tree is green, what
will happen when it is
dry?”
[27]
Proverbs 12:10, NIV.
3 comments:
Hi Lois:
"This underscores the fact that this story is not intended to illustrate appropriate human relations to animals. " The key to the theology - very good observation, thanks!
This is an excellent theological perspective (both posts on the Gadarene pigs) - thank you for sharing it with us! God bless you Lois, and continue to use you for the sake of His kingdom and His animals!!
Kathy Dunn
Thank you, Kathy! I'm glad your commenting function is working again! I so appreciate your involvement and support!
Thank you for your commentary. I have a hard time with what seems like Jesus' lack of concern or compassion for the pigs.
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