Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Background to Luke's Gospel
- Sources for
Luke
- L= Luke's own writtings
- The Call of the
Disciples, The Sinful
Woman, Martha & Mary,
The Widow of Nain, The
Parable of the Good
Samaritan, The Parable
of the Persistent
Neighbour, The Parable
of the Lost Son, The
Parable of the Rich Man
& Lazarus, The Parable
of the Pharisee & the
Tax Collector
- More than 1/3 of
Luke's Gospel is L
material
- M = Mark's Gospel
Anmerkungen:
- Almost all of Mark's
Gospel is in Luke,
just with more detail
- Mark used Peter as
one of his main
sources
- Q = Quelle
- German word for "source"
- Writings and oral
traditions of Jesus'
sayings and preachings
which circulated around
the Early Church
- Who was Luke?
- Almost certainly a Gentile
- May have been Greek
Anmerkungen:
- The Greek he wrote in is more advanced than that of Mathew or Mark
- Earliest tradition says
he was a physician who
accompainied St. Paul
on his missionary
Anmerkungen:
- "beloved physician" (Colossians 4:14)
"fellow worker" of Paul (Philemon 24)
"with Paul" whilst he was awaiting trial (2 Timothy 4:11)
- From the end of
the 2nd Century
- Later traditions say
he was a painter who
died childless and
unmarried at the age
of 84
- Thought to have written Acts
of the Apostles
- Continues the story, starting
with Jesus' ascension to
Heaven
- "In my former book"
- Introduction to Luke
- Theophilus
- Greek for "lover of God"
- May be for an
individual or larger
audience
- "Most Excellent"
- Luke does
not name
himself in the
introduction
- Wants to write
an "orderly
account" of
Jesus' life
- Writing around 80
CE
- Jesus Preaches at
Nazareth/ Isiah Reference
- As Jesus read the prophecy,
the charcteristics of the Messiah
and his actions were identified
- He will be annointed by the spirit
of the Lord
Anmerkungen:
- Refers to the Baptism
important theme in Luke
Messiah = annointed one
- He will preach good news to
the poor
- He will proclaim release to captives
- He will give sight to the blind
- He will free those who are oppressed
- He will proclaim the year of the Lord
- The Old Testament teaches
that every 49 years, in Israel,
there would be a Jubilee year
in which 4 things would
happen
- Slaves would be freed
- Debts would be wiped out
- Property would
return to its original
owner
- The land would
become very fertile
- People lived in hope
of these things
happening
- Isiah's prophecy
- Jesus was certain that this
prophecy related to him. He thought
it was his role to fulfil this prophecy
- "Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing"
- He had been baptised and felt that he was
definetly being called by God after his period in
the desert
- It was normal for the Synagogue leaders
to invite people to read, it was Jesus'
interpretation and the people's reaction
that was odd
- At this point in Jesus' life he was still
working alone
- Jesus is rejected at Nazareth
- The Reaction of the Crowd
- It was prophesied in the Old
Testament that the Messiah
would be rejected
- The crowd questioned whether
this was "Joseph's son and not
someone special
- They demanded that
Jesus perform a
miracle as he had in
Capernaum, Jesus
was building a
reputation and the
crowd knew this
- Eventually the crowd got so
angry they tried to throw Jesus
down a cliff. The text says that
Jesus "walked through the
crowd", this is a mysterious
comment but indicative of Jesus'
power.
- Elijah & Elishah
- Both prophets had experienced
rejection from the Israelites
- Told people what God expected of them
- Both performed miracles with Gentiles
- Early sign that Jesus had not just come for the Jews
- The important thing
is that Jesus was
rejected in Nazareth,
just as the prophets
had said he would
be
Anmerkungen: