Set Free At Last

Jun 12, 2026    Pastor Sean Pinder

There is a battle that does not just attack you. It separates you.


It does not come with noise. It comes with distance. It moves you away from the people who could help you, the community that could surround you, and the voice of anyone who might speak life into what you are facing. And by the time most people recognize what is happening — they are already alone with it.


Matthew 8:28-34 introduces a man whose battle had done exactly that. And what Jesus did when He arrived at that situation is one of the most misunderstood moments in the entire gospel — not because it is complicated, but because most people stop reading at the miracle and miss what the miracle was actually about.


Here is what nobody tells you about the battle that isolates — it does not just want to keep you suffering. It wants to keep you invisible. And there is a reason for that. Because the moment your battle ends — it does not end quietly. It ends in a way that everyone around you will have to acknowledge.


The man in this passage had been in his battle so long that the community had stopped trying to reach him. They had accepted what he had become. They had stopped expecting anything different. And then Jesus showed up — and the ending of that story was so public, so undeniable, so impossible to explain away, that the entire region heard about it before the day was over.


What was it about the way Jesus handled this particular battle that made the ending impossible to contain?


And why does the community's response at the end of this story reveal something about YOUR battle that most people never consider?


There is something Jesus said to this man after the battle ended — an instruction that seems small — that holds the key to why your battle ending publicly matters more than you may realize.


It is in this message.


Press play — because the battle that has been keeping YOU isolated was never meant to be the end of your story. And what happens when it ends will not be quiet.