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CHAPTER SIX. Gospel of Luke . Background. - Luke was a Gentile-Christian - Responsible for writing the gospel with the most words and its sequel (Acts of the Apostles) • Together make up more than a quarter of the New Testament
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CHAPTER SIX Gospel of Luke
Background - Luke was a Gentile-Christian - Responsible for writing the gospel with the most words and its sequel (Acts of the Apostles) • Together make up more than a quarter of the New Testament -Style, language, and organization of the Gospel and Acts are very similar • Both works addressed to Theophilus
Background Do we really know the author? - Identified as St. Paul’s coworker from Antioch • Remained Paul’s friend • Probably used a travel diary to construct some of the history of Acts • The prologue mentions Luke was from Antioch in Syria and died in Greece -Certain that he did not know the historical Jesus in person and did not come from the Holy Land
Background - Author of Luke was a brilliant artist with words • Wrote beautiful polished Greek - Wrote for Gentile Christian churches - Major Theme • Universality of Jesus’ offer of salvation - Gospel intended for everyone • Gentiles do not have to convert to Judaism to accept Jesus
Background - The prologue provides solid information on: • Why the gospel was written • What it is about • How the author went about writing it
Background - Luke dedicated his gospel to Theophilus • Name means “lover of God” • Name helps prove the unity of Luke’s two-volume work
Background - In his opening gospel address to Theophilus, Luke states his reasons for writing: • He wants to show Theophilus and all readers that the instruction in the Christian faith was sound. • His purpose in writing the Gospel was the strengthen their faith
Common Themes Common themes in Luke and Acts: 1.) Jesus as a prophet 2.) The Church continues Jesus’ prophetic ministry 3.) The role of the Holy Spirit in salvation history 4.) Prayer, joy, peace 5.) The special role of Mary and women
Common Themes 1.) Jesus the Prophet - Lk 4:14-44 - Jesus reveals that through him, the prophesy about the Messiah is taking place • God’s kingdom is present • What Isaiah prophesized is happening right now
Jesus outlines his ministry: • Preach the gospel • Help people live freely • Perform acts of mercy • Work for justice • Celebrate God’s presence in the world
1.) The scene at Nazareth foreshadows Jesus’ public life • Meets with initial acceptance, however, people change their opinion and reject and attempt to kill the innocent prophet in Jerusalem
- The synagogue scene underscores two other themes that appear in Luke and Acts: • The role of the Holy Spirit • The importance of prayer in the life of Jesus and of the early Church
Common Themes 2.)Church Continues Jesus’ Prophetic Mission: Read: Acts 1-2 Homework: According to these readings, describe the characteristics of an ideal Christian Community.
Luke depicts the characteristics of an ideal Christian community Acts 2:42-44 • • Christian fellowship or communion • Making sure everyone’s needs are taken care of • Working together • • Praying with and for each other • • Gospel truth as handed on by the apostolic eyewitnesses • Celebrating the Holy Mass
Scripture Search: • Find references within the gospel of Luke that can be • Used to prove that Luke is the • Gospel of the Holy Spirit • Gospel of Women • Gospel of the poor and outcast • Gospel of Prayer • Gospel of Joy/Hope • List at least two reference from scripture, Chapter and Verse, • For each of the above themes. Also give a short summary of • What takes place in the reference.
Common Themes 4.) Prayer - A pervasive theme in Luke and Acts - Jesus prayed: At His Baptism In the Synagogue In lonely places At His Transfiguration Hanging on the Cross The night before choosing the Apostles
Common Themes 4.) Prayer -Message to be learned is that we should pray as often as the Master did -Acts of the Apostles shows how the early Church heeded this advice well
Common Themes 5.) Special Role of Mary and Women - Women were considered inferior to men - Jesus’ attitude toward women was positive and revolutionary •He included women as the central characters in two of His parables (the Lost Coin and the Unjust Judge) - Most significant was the women who witnessed his death and resurrection - Mary illustrated a major Lucan theme - God’s preferential love for the poor
Marian Dogmas Know and define the four Marian Dogmas: Mother of God and Church Ever-Virgin Immaculate Conception Assumption
Universal Savior • Luke offers a portrait of Jesus as the Savior of all people, especially the poor, the vulnerable and the outcast. • - In Luke’s gospel, Jesus is a compassionate Savior who has come to prove God’s great love • Makes Jesus the friend of the friendless • • Shepherds, usually considered outcasts, were the first to visit Jesus’ birth • • Offering of the poor • • Presentation in the Temple
- More than the other three gospels Luke reassures the poor and warns the rich - God blesses the poor - not only those socially disadvantaged but also those that recognize they are nothing without God - Challenges the rich to repent before it is too late
Messiah & Savior -Luke’s is the only Gospel that records the story of Lazarus and the rich man -Lazarus means: “May God help” or “The one whom God helps” -Jesus is warning that those who have plenty in this life must share with those who have less
Messiah & Savior - Luke reports Jesus reached out to Zacchaeus, a tax collector • Jesus was enacting a living parable of God’s love for sinners • Jesus’ compassion also extended to outcasts Love of Enemies - God’s love and compassion knew no bounds - nor should ours • Parable of the Good Samaritan • Our neighbor is everyone
Love of Enemies - God’s love and compassion knew no bounds - nor should ours • Parable of the Good Samaritan • Our neighbor is everyone
Universal Savior Jesus Christ is the Lord of all people, not just the Jews. Luke traces Jesus’ genealogy all the way back to Adam in order to reveal to the Gentiles that God has always had them and their salvation in mind. Inclusion of the Good Samaritan story reveals righteousness of those who the Jews despise.
Perhaps the most telling way that Luke present Jesus as the Universal Savior is by getting rid of the Jewish/Hebrew terms. Its savior – not messiah, teacher, not rabbi, hell not gehenna. • Sermon on the Plain – [not the mountain] • Very deliberate attempt by Luke to portray Jesus as a Savior for all people. • He speaks to them on their level. He does not stand over them, the way the Law of Moses stands over the Gentiles. He is accessible.