Gadarenes, Girgesenes, Gerasenes
(These three names are used indiscriminately to designate the place where Jesus healed two demoniacs. The first two are in
the Authorized Version. (Matthew 8:28; Mark 5:1; Luke 8:26) In Gerasenes in place of Gadarenes. The miracle referred to took place, without doubt, near the town of Gergesa, the modern
Kersa, close by the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, and hence in the country of Gergesenes. But as Gergesa was a small
village, and little known, the evangelists, who wrote for more distant readers, spoke of the event as taking place in the
country of the Gadarenes, so named from its largest city, Gadara; and this country included the country of the Gergesenes
as a state includes a county. The Gerasenes were the people of the district of which Gerasa was the capital. This city was
better known than Gadara or Gergesa; indeed in the Roman age no city of Palestine was better known. “It became one of the
proudest cities of Syria.” It was situated some 30 miles southeast of Gadara, on the borders of Peraea and a little north
of the river Jabbok. It is now called Jerash and is a deserted ruin. The district of the Gerasenes probably included that
of the Gadarenes; so that the demoniac of Gergesa belonged to the country of the Gadarenes and also to that of the Gerasenes,
as the same person may, with equal truth, be said to live in the city or the state, or in the United States. For those near
by the local name would be used; but in writing to a distant people, as the Greeks and Romans, the more comprehensive and
general name would be given.—ED.)