Suicide Pigs and Romans
Did Mark write the story of the pigs called Legion to have a go at the Romans? Mark has the event mistakenly at Gerasa, which is over nine kilometres from the Sea of Galilee. Can pigs run that far? But was this intentional? In our world, we want everything to line up for the gospel to say the exact thing, but that was not a necessity of the gospel writer. Matthew’s Gospel has the pigs at “the region of the Gerasenes” (τὴν χώραν τῶν Γερασηνῶν) to “the region of the Gadarenes” (τὴν χώραν τῶν Γαδαρηνῶν). Nicholas Elder says, in Mark at the Borderland of Orality and Textuality, that Mark’s author wrote this anecdote as a disguised criticism of the Roman legions during the Roman-Jewish War of 66–70 CE. He explains why the demons purportedly said their name was ‘Legion’ and why the tale had to take place near Gerasa: Vespasian’s military actions in Gerasa in the years preceding 70 CE will have made the city culturally significant for Mark’s audience. In J.W. 4.487–489, Josephus re...