Some of them said, "By the power of Beelzebul, the prince of demons,
he drives out demons."
It should have been obvious that Jesus driving out a demon is not something that the prince of demons would appreciate, nor something to which he would give the assistance of his power. But people in the crowd were looking for reasons to undermine Jesus, to impugn his ever growing reputation. They insinuated that he was too good to be true. This was in keeping with people's normal experience of the world. There really was no comparison. There was no one as selfless as Jesus, and none with such power. Because it was not normal they had some level of justification being a little defensive. But they went too far when they refused to recognize the finger of God at work in their midst. To discount that power they made implicit one of their assumptions, which was that real power was more likely to originate from the forces of darkness than elsewhere. Jesus rightly pointed out that their own people drove out demons by means of the same power at work in him. But clearly there was something different about what was happening through Jesus compared to those other exorcists, something that demanded explanation.
Every kingdom divided against itself will be laid waste
and house will fall against house.
And if Satan is divided against himself,
how will his kingdom stand?
Jesus was entirely united within himself in his mission to seek the will of the Father and the salvation of humanity. Satan was completely opposed to this plan, and desired to prevent Jesus from his mission of gathering the human race together into his Kingdom. It was the crowds who were lingering between the two ultimate alternatives. Jesus thus reminded them, or tried to, that they were in fact on the same side, or should be, when he asked, "by whom do your own people drive them out?" He tried to demonstrate that the fact that they were scattering what he was trying to gather meant that they and not he were the ones succumbing to the influence of the evil one.
When a strong man fully armed guards his palace,
his possessions are safe.
But when one stronger than he attacks and overcomes him,
he takes away the armor on which he relied
and distributes the spoils.
The reason Jesus was able to bring freedom was not because he was in league with the prince of darkness, but rather, because he was, at last, one stronger than the prince of darkness. This implied that apart from him the possessions of the evil one were relatively safe. Without him, it wasn't possible to get free on one's own or to make much of a dent in the armor of the powers of darkness. That implied that the only good way forward was not one of dividing people against Jesus, which would only play into the plan of the enemy. The only way was to join him in his mission of gathering. But this meant that Jesus must ultimately be the head, the center, and the cornerstone of the people who were gathered. This implied the need to break free, not only from the devil, but even from one's own ego which would not readily relinquish the leading role in one's life. The stories we make up and tell ourselves are shallow and unfulfilling. The story that can truly captivate and satisfy us is the Theo-drama that God is telling. May we set aside our insistence on creating our own private stories so that we may find our place in the larger meta-narrative of God's good plan.






