In Scripture, to “find” is never mere discovery.
It is encounter—
a turning of the text where mercy meets rebellion,
where favor walks hand-in-hand with wrath.
In Gerasa, the people find the healed man—clothed, sane, silent—
and they tremble.
He is a mirror, a testimony they cannot bear.
Restoration becomes a scandal. Mercy, a threat.
As well it should be.
They send away the one who scattered their demons
because he disturbed their peace.
The Scriptures whisper:
To find a man is to stand at the edge of wrath—
to be weighed, watched.
Will you be spared?
In Hebrew: to find, to meet, to expose.
In Arabic: to find—yes—
but also to be found out.
To be found wandering.
To be guided.
The disbeliever finds God waiting—
and no one can shield him.
Every expectation collapses under the weight of divine wisdom.
Everything found is double-edged:
Grace, if received.
Judgment, if refused.
So—finders, beware.
The light of instruction burns.
This week, I discuss Luke 8:35-37.
Show Notes
εὑρίσκω (heuriskō) / מ־צ־א (mem–ṣade–aleph) / و–ج–د (wāw–jīm–dāl)
find; reach; meet accidentally; obtain, achieve
FOUND THE MAN
The people “find” the healed man—מ־צ־א (mem–ṣade–aleph)—and become afraid, encountering divine judgment. He stands as a sign of both judgment and mercy: restored and sent out as a witness. In Scripture, finding a man—whether by apparent chance, deliberate search, or divine appointment—often precedes divine entrapment: a moment of redirection, confrontation, or exposure.
Their encounter with this man echoes a biblical pattern in which finding a man signals the onset of divine action.
FOUND FAVOR
In Luke 8:35–37, after Jesus casts out Legion, the people come and find the man “sitting at Jesus’ feet, clothed and in his right mind.” Rather than rejoicing in the mercy extended, they are seized with fear. They do not celebrate the restoration but instead beg Jesus to leave. This rebellion—typical of the עֵדָה ʿ(ēdāh) that Jesus scatters throughout the Gospel of Luke—reveals a tragic irony: grace is offered, but rejected.
This moment echoes a recurring biblical pattern centered around the root מ־צ־א (mem–ṣade–aleph), which signifies finding, meeting, or encountering. When someone “finds favor” [מָצָא חֵן (māṣāʾ ḥēn)] in God’s sight, it often leads to intercession on behalf of others—even the wicked:
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