Prof: Turn to the
beginning of the Gospel of Luke.
We're going to go through a lot
of Luke and Acts today.
Today I'll--I sort of lied on
the syllabus.
You know how untrustworthy I am
by now.
I said on the syllabus that
we're going to talk about Luke
today and have a lecture on Acts
on Wednesday.
That's not quite true because
you can't really talk about Luke
without also talking about Acts
and you can't much talk about
Acts without talking about Luke
because they're written by the
same person.
 
Almost no scholar doubts that
they're written by the same
person.
 
There are some scholars who
actually argue that you
shouldn't read them as two
volumes of the same work.
Some people even say they think
Acts was written a good bit
after the Gospel of Luke,
but I'm going to treat them as
basically two volumes of the
same work.
Part of the lecture today will
focus on Acts,
but a whole lot of the lecture
will also focus on--
I mean part of Luke but also on
Acts,
and then next time,
also, though talking about Acts
I'll go back and talk about
Luke.
Did everyone get a handout of
the outline of Luke and Acts?
If anybody doesn't--didn't get
a handout hold up your hands and
we'll get the teaching fellows
to hand them around.
Look at the beginning of Luke.
 
"Since many have
undertaken to set down an
orderly account--
" now what will
"orderly account"
mean?
"--of the events that have
been fulfilled among us,
just as they were handed onto
us by those who were from the
beginning eyewitnesses and
servants of the word."
When he tells you that he's
gotten some things from--
handed down,
traditions, accounts from
eyewitnesses what's the first
thing that that tells you about
this author?
 
He's not an eyewitness,
precisely.
I, too, decided,
after investigating everything
carefully from the very first,
to write an orderly account
[there again]
for you,
most excellent Theopholis,
so that you may know the truth
concerning the things about
which you have been instructed.
There are several things that
this prologue to the Gospel of
Luke tells us.
 
One of the things of course,
as you just noticed,
it's not written by someone who
was there.
Some people will say that when
we get to Acts,
at least part of Acts seems to
have been written by a person
who was actually there,
because about halfway through
the book of Acts he starts about
"we."
We did this,
and we did this,
rather than just Paul or other
people in the third person.
I don't believe that's the case.
 
I believe he may have used some
kind of written document that
was--
that used the term
"we"
or sometimes an ancient text,
I think sometimes a person
would just insert themselves
into the narrative to give it a
more directness.
So I'm not going to teach that
this author was an eyewitness of
any of the stuff that he writes
about,
but certainly he's not an
eyewitness of the stuff that
happens in the Gospels,
as he also says.
That's one thing that it tells
us.
This also tells us that this is
a compilation of sources.
Now already,
when you've been working on the
synoptic problem and how to
write an exegesis paper,
you have figured out that the
Gospel writers used other
sources.
 
Some of them are written
sources, some of them are oral
sources.
 
This guy actually admits it up
front, so it sounds like he's
using both written sources and
oral sources.
What's one of the written
sources we know he used?
Mark, exactly,
and we think that there's
another written source that we
call Q that he may have used.
What does he mean by
"orderly account"?
Does it mean that Mark kind of
wrote things in one order and
this guy knows a better
chronological order,
a historical order?
 
Is he talking about,
I'm writing to you an account
that's more like what actually
happened when it happened?
That's the way this has
sometimes been interpreted by
people.
 
As we'll see today that's not
likely right because we can even
tell when this author is
creatively shifting events
around for his own purposes.
 
He's claiming to write an
orderly account,
but if he is claiming that he's
giving us a more chronologically
accurate account then he's
wrong,
as we'll see.
 
Probably he doesn't even mean
that, probably this is no claim
to historicity.
 
He's probably just saying that,
the way I tell this is better
than the way that Mark or Q or
some other sources tell it.
He's thought about the order in
which he puts it and he's
thought about how he wants to
write his Gospel.
This also tells you what
literary form this is.
He knows he's writing something
that's like other literature in
the ancient world.
 
The Gospel of Luke is not a
biography but it could have been
thought of as a life.
 
In fact, the Greek word for
life is bios,
where we get biology.
 
Bios could be the name
of genre of literature that told
about some great man.
 
We separate it from biography
because it doesn't have the same
kind of concerns that a modern
biography does.
It seems like he knows that for
the Gospel of Luke anyway he's
writing a bios of Jesus,
a life of Jesus.
How do we know that?
 
Because he starts off later in
the Gospel with the same kind of
stuff that you would see if you
read a book about Augustus the
Emperor,
or Plato the great philosopher.
That is, he starts off with
narratives about a miraculous
birth.
 
Telling stories about a great
man and his miraculous birth was
a not uncommon way to start a
life of someone.
Then in Acts it also looks like
he knows he's writing something
that would look something like a
history,
and we have histories also from
the ancient world.
This guy is--much more then
Mark, this author is much more
self conscious in setting
himself forward and setting his
work up as a literary work,
it has literary form.
Who is Theophilus though?
 
Some people would think,
well maybe this is the guy's
patron,
because often in the ancient
world when you wrote a book you
started off with the dedication.
The dedication,
you didn't say,
dedicated to so and so,
what you said was Dear
Theophilus, I am writing this
because you've asked me to set
down my thoughts.
 
In other words you give a
fiction,
it's a fiction that your
patron, maybe the person who
supports you financially or
socially,
or whatever that person has
asked you to set down an account
of something.
 
You would start off,
Dear Mr. Smith you've asked
me repeatedly when we had lunch
at Mori's,
to describe my recent trip to
Africa,
so I'm writing this down at
your request.
That's a dedication to your
patron.
Who is Theophilus, though?
 
Some people say maybe he's an
actual historic person,
he calls him "most
excellent,"
the Greek word would seem to
imply that this guy is of fairly
high class or that our author
wants us to believe that he's
high class.
 
It's also, though,
possible, some people have
said,
maybe he's a fiction because
Theophilus comes from two Greek
words meaning theos which
is God,
and philos beloved or
friend.
 
Some people have said he's
making up a name that's sort of
a fictive name for any God
loving or beloved by God reader.
We really don't know,
so scholars are completely at
sea as far is if Theophilus a
real person or is he not.
Those are several things about
that we need to notice.
He sets himself up as writing a
history by the ancient standards
of history, but is it history by
our standards of history?
The only way to figure that out
is to analyze the text itself,
so that's what we're going to
do.
On your outline you have--on
your handout you have an outline
of Luke and an outline of Acts.
 
I think I didn't get one,
I gave mine away,
can I have one?
 
Thank you, Michael.
 
Notice how it's divided up.
 
First you get the beginning of
the Gospel which actually starts
off with the birth and childhood
narratives,
and Jesus and John the Baptist,
in chapter 1,
and then in chapter 3 you get
Jesus meeting--
Jesus relationship to John the
Baptist.
All of this starts off partly
in Galilee but also partly in
Judea.
 
The birth of John happens in
Judea, the birth of Jesus,
according to Luke,
happens in Galilee [correction:
Judea].
 
Luke also, though,
has Jesus family go from Judea
to Galilee [correction:
from Galilee to Judea]
for the birth.
 
Now that's different from
Matthew, Matthew just started
off with the holy family living
in Bethlehem.
Luke has the idea that this
family is living in Galilee and,
because of a census,
the family is required to go to
Bethlehem, which is in Judea.
 
The family is from Galilee,
but Luke really starts the
action of his Gospel,
both for John the Baptist birth
and for the birth of Jesus in
Judea.
That's going to be important.
 
Then you have,
starting in 3:23,
the beginning of Jesus'
Galilean ministry and that goes
all the way to 9:50.
 
You have the beginning of the
ministry,
there's an announcement in
3:23, this is Jesus began to--
in the fifteenth year of reign
of Tiberius,
then you have a genealogy,
then you have the temptation
story in chapter 4,
and then you have Jesus'
inaugural address,
which we'll talk about both
this time and next time.
 
In 4:14-30 is Jesus' first
sermon, it's very clear Luke
wants to set this up as Jesus'
first sermon and we'll talk
about why later.
 
Then you have 4:31 to 8:56,
the Galilean ministry proper.
That is, this is Jesus going
around Galilee,
healing people,
preaching, teaching.
Now look in chapter 9,
though, then you get a
transition period.
 
Most of chapter 9 is a
transition from the Galilee
ministry to the other main part
of Jesus'--
of Luke's passage in the Gospel
which is Jesus' trip to
Jerusalem.
 
9:1, "Then Jesus called
the twelve together and gave
them power and authority over
demons and cured diseases."
Notice now, he's not really
doing the Galilean ministry
anymore, he's setting up other
things to happen.
Look at--now look all the way
at the end of that chapter at
9:51.
 
This is a very big verse in
Luke although--but you'd never
know it unless you had a scholar
kind of point it out to you;
9:51: "When the days drew
near for him to be taken up,
he set his face to go to
Jerusalem."
Now what is that?
 
"Taken up,"
--does that refer to Jesus
ascension into heaven?
 
Is it for his crucifixion
because you put somebody up on a
cross?
 
Whatever it is,
but notice, we're not even
toward the end of the Gospel
here,
we're only about halfway
through--we're not even halfway
through the Gospel.
 
We're at still very early in
the Gospel compared to what the
rest of it is,
and yet, what Luke is doing is
turning your attention as a
reader now to Jerusalem.
"When the days drew near
for him to be taken up,
he set his face to go to
Jerusalem,
he sent messengers ahead of
him," and they go through
the villages.
 
So all the rest of the next ten
chapters Jesus is on the road.
"On the road again."
 
It's on the road to Jerusalem.
 
Now this big ten chapter on the
road trip, Jesus' road trip to
Jerusalem, is not found in the
other Gospels,
it's only in Luke.
 
What does--what is it there for?
 
Then in 19:45,
Jesus finally gets to
Jerusalem, and from 19:45 until
the end of Luke you have Jesus
in Jerusalem.
 
Then Acts starts out,
and as I've said before,
the next volume Acts starts by
retelling a bit of what happened
at the end of Luke.
 
You know you're in the second
volume of a two volume work here
because he rehashes at the
beginning of Acts.
First you get the time--from
one, Acts 1:1 to 9:43,
I've designated as the time
before the Gentiles.
The church is all a Jewish
community,
they all live mainly in Judea
and Jerusalem,
they worship together,
they even spend a lot of time
in the temple,
in the Jewish temple.
This is very much a Jewish
organization,
the Gentiles haven't been
brought in,
and then you have another
transition period just like when
we had a transition period in
Chapter 9 of Luke,
in Chapter 10 of Acts you have
a transition period from 10:1 to
12:25.
 
First you have the conversion
of the first Gentile convert,
he's a Roman Centurion,
Cornelius, and you have Peter
defending his conversion of
Cornelius,
because this is controversial
to bring someone into the church
without them being circumcised
at this point,
according to Luke's narrative.
 
Then you have 11:19-30,
look at that,
Acts 11:19-30:
Now those who were scattered,
because of the persecution that
took place over Stephen,
traveled as far as Phoenicia,
Cyprus, and Antioch.
And they spoke the word to no
one but Jews.
But among them were some men
from Cyprus and Cyrene who on
coming to Antioch spoke to the
Hellenists also,
proclaiming the Lord Jesus.
 
Now you may have a footnote
after the word
"Hellenists,"
does anybody have a food note
after the word Hellenist there
in your--
what does your footnote say?
 
Student: 
>
Prof: Greeks,
so some texts have
"Hellenists"
which would be sort of Greek
speaking Jews and other
manuscripts have just the word
"Greeks."
 
In fact, you can even take this
term "Hellenist"
to be just Greeks themselves.
 
At least there's some idea that
these people were speaking not
just too Greek--speaking to
Greek Jews but also to Greeks.
That introduces,
then, this period of the
Gentiles.
 
You have the introduction to a
predominantly Gentile church in
Antioch,
and that's what you get from
11:19-30,
and then you get some
persecution in Jerusalem in
Chapter 12,
and then you get a shift of
attention from Jerusalem to the
Gentiles in 12:25:
But the word of God continued
to advance and gain adherence.
 
Then after completing their
mission, Barnabus and Saul
returned to Jerusalem and
brought with them John,
whose other name was Mark.
 
I actually think that's
supposed to be "returned
from Jerusalem to Antioch."
 
There's again some manuscript
problems because in 13:1 you
have,
"Now in the church at
Antioch there were prophets and
teachers."
From chapter 13 to the rest of
Acts, the attention is not in
Jerusalem.
 
They go back to Jerusalem,
Paul goes back to Jerusalem a
few times,
and Paul is eventually arrested
in Jerusalem and there is a
trial,
and there's all kinds of
interesting,
exciting riots and things that
happen in Jerusalem.
But the rest of Acts the
attention is away from Jerusalem
and to the rest of the world,
the rest of--all the way there.
Then you have from 13:1 you
have the period called
"after the Gentiles,"
this is after Gentiles have
been brought into the church and
then the focus is going to be on
the Gentile church for the rest
of Acts.
You get, for example,
the first missionary journey of
Paul, then you have the
Jerusalem conference in chapter
15, which we've talked about
already.
Then you have the second
missionary journey of Paul,
and then the third missionary
journey of Paul,
and then you have Paul in
Jerusalem and then arrested and
taken to Rome,
and then you have Paul in Rome
and ending the whole book,
chapter 28:17-31.
Notice what's going on here.
 
Luke constructs his two-volume
work like this.
It starts off in Judea,
it keeps coming to Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, Jerusalem,
it focuses you on Jerusalem,
through all the Gospel of Luke,
and then the last week of
Jesus' life in Jerusalem where
he's crucified,
he's resurrected.
 
Where did Jesus appear to his
disciples after his resurrection
according to Matthew?
 
Galilee, exactly.
 
Did Jesus appear to any of his
disciples in Jerusalem according
to Matthew?
 
No.
 
All the appearances of
Jesus--the resurrected Jesus in
Matthew take place in Galilee
not Jerusalem.
Just the opposite of that,
at the end of Luke and the
beginning of Acts,
Jesus tells his disciples after
he's risen,
several of them see him,
and he says,
"Stay in Jerusalem,
don't go out of Jerusalem or
Judea until the Holy Spirit
comes."
 
And it says,
they stayed in Jerusalem the
whole--he--Jesus appeared to his
disciples for a stated period of
time, according to Acts;
I think its forty days.
Is that right?
 
Something like that.
 
After that period of time Jesus
no longer appeared to his
disciples,
according to Acts,
he ascended into heaven,
but that whole time they stayed
in Judea,
so all the appearances of the
resurrected Jesus,
according to Luke,
take place in Jerusalem.
 
That's interesting see that he
starts off in Galilee,
he ends up in Jerusalem,
and then Acts starts off again
in Jerusalem and then it goes
out and--
to part of the world--it
expands its vision to Antioch,
to Asia Minor,
to Greece, to Europe,
and finally Paul ends up in
Rome at the end.
There's a very schematic
geographical system to the way
Luke has organized this two
volume work,
and that's even reflected in
the layout of the outline of the
book,
which is why I wanted to give
you that very simple outline.
 
Now let's go back and see how
this is reflected in other
parts.
 
Look at Jesus' inaugural speech
as put forward by Luke in
chapter 4 of Luke.
 
Now we're going to spend a lot
of time talking about this
because you're going to imitate
me when you write your exegesis
papers.
 
You're going to pay really good
attention to all the details of
the pericope.
 
You've learned now that
pericope is just a fancy
Greek word for section,
it's the Greek form of section,
both of them mean something cut
out,
and so pericope is what we
biblical scholars often call a
little piece of text that you do
an exegesis of.
You want to concentrate on the
details of your pericope to try
to find out what the message is.
 
So that's what we're going to
do with this passage 4:16-30.
Now it would help if you also
compared this--
we're not going to do that so
much right now--
with Mark 6:1-6 because Luke is
getting this scene from Mark.
What's going to be interesting
to us is, what does Luke change
about the scene he gets from
Mark?
What does he add to the scene
he gets from Mark?
You could also compare it with
Matthew 13:53-58 because that's
where Matthew has it.
 
If you were to compare Mark and
Matthew, what you would see is
Matthew pretty much just follows
Mark here.
He takes this story about where
he finds it in the story of
Mark, and he puts it in his
story at chronologically about
the same place.
 
And he doesn't have Jesus give
a long speech,
he just has him appear there
and that sort of thing.
Now notice what Luke does.
 
Luke takes this text and he
does a lot more with it,
so we're going to read it and
talk about that.
"When he came to Nazareth,
where he had been brought up,
he went to the synagogue on the
Sabbath day, as was his
custom."
 
Now if you were a good exegete
you would notice,
"as was his custom"--
you might need to look up in a
concordance to see if Luke likes
that phrase,
because he does.
 
He stood up and read,
and the scroll of the Prophet
Isaiah was given to him.
 
He unrolled the scroll and
found the place where it is
written,
"The spirit of the Lord is
upon me because he has anointed
me to bring good news to the
poor.
 
He has sent me to proclaim
release to the captives and
recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free,
to proclaim the year of the
Lord's favor."
And he rolled up the scroll,
gave it back to the attendant
and sat down.
 
The eyes of all in the
synagogue were fixed on him.
Then he began to say to them,
"Today this scripture has
been fulfilled in your
hearing."
All spoke well of him and were
amazed at the gracious words
that came from his mouth.
 
They said, "Is not this
Joseph's son?"
He said to them,
"Doubtless you will quote
to me this proverb,
'Doctor, cure yourself!'
And you will say,
'Do here also in your hometown
the things we have heard you did
in Capernaum.'"
That's interesting,
because he hasn't really got to
Capernaum yet in Luke's Gospel.
 
And he said,
"Truly I tell you,
no prophet is accepted in the
prophet's hometown.
But the truth is,
there were many widows in
Israel in the time of Elijah,
when the heaven was shut up for
three years and six months,
and there was a severe famine
over all the land.
 
Yet Elijah was sent to none of
them except to a widow at
Zarephath in Sidon.
 
There were also many lepers in
Israel in the time of prophet
Elisha, and none of them was
cleansed except Naaman the
Syrian."
 
When they heard this--
Now notice they started out the
scene, they're all happy,
he's the hometown boy,
he's come home,
they are amazed at his
teaching, the mood changes.
 
Why does the mood change right
there?
When they heard this,
all in the synagogue were
filled with rage.
 
They got up,
drove him out of town,
and led him to the brow of the
hill on which their town was
built so that they might hurl
him off the cliff.
But he passed through the midst
of them and went on his way.
He went down to Capernaum,
a city of Galilee,
and was teaching them on the
Sabbath.
Notice, this is when he moves
to Capernaum from Nazareth in
Luke's Gospel.
 
In all the synoptic Gospels,
Jesus makes Capernaum his home
base in Galilee,
not his hometown of Nazareth.
According to Mark and Matthew
it's later in their Gospels that
Jesus is rejected in Nazareth
and makes his--
then moves and makes his home
in Capernaum.
Notice that Luke knows this,
Luke is giving us a clue that
he knows he's taking this
passage out of its context from
where he found it because the
people say,
"Do for us what you did in
Capernaum."
Implying that they think of
Capernaum as his home base,
well that's because by that
time in Mark and Matthew,
it was his home base,
by the time he gives this
speech in Nazareth.
 
Luke takes this passage that he
finds later in Mark and he moves
it and plops it down at the
beginning of Jesus' Galilean
ministry.
 
He wants this speech to be
Jesus' first speech,
this sermon,
Jesus' first sermon.
Maybe that means that if we
analyze the content of the
sermon we can try to figure out,
why did Luke change the setting
of the story to be at the
beginning of the ministry and
then also why did he make it so
much bigger?
It occupies only a few little
verses in Mark,
and Luke expands it into this
whole speech and makes it this
big conflict,
so let's look at several
different things.
 
First, I said--he says,
"as was his custom."
As we'll talk about next week,
one of the main themes of the
Gospel of Luke and Acts is that
good Jewish boys do good Jewish
things.
 
They go to synagogue,
they know their scripture,
they're circumcised,
they keep kosher,
they worship in the temple.
 
So Jesus also is depicted by
Luke as a good Jewish boy.
We'll see next time,
and I'm going to talk about
some of these themes a bit more
fully in both Luke and Acts.
And I'll talk about,
for example,
why is it only in Luke that he
tells us that Jesus' parents,
after he was born,
circumcised him on the eighth
day like they were supposed to,
after a month they take him to
the temple for the presentation.
 
All of this,
and Luke even tells us,
this is to fulfill the
scripture and to fulfill the
law, and he's referring back to
Leviticus.
So Jesus' mother and father are
good Jewish parents,
they do exactly what the law
tells them to do,
and Jesus is a good Jewish boy,
so another clue here,
"as was his custom,"
this is like Jesus goes to
temple every Saturday.
 
Look also, "the spirit of
the Lord,"
he says in verse 18,
he cites the text,
"The spirit of the Lord is
upon me because he has anointed
me to bring good news to the
poor."
Again, if you took a
concordance and searched all the
times in Luke and Acts,
when the spirit either called
the Holy Spirit or sometimes
just the spirit or the spirit of
God occurs,
you'll find this is one of
Luke's favorite themes.
 
The Holy Spirit,
in fact, is the main actor in
the book of Acts.
 
Jesus is the main actor in the
Gospel of Luke,
Jesus leaves the scene,
he kind of talks from offstage
every once in a while--
talk to Saul,
Saul why do you persecute me?
 
But Jesus is kind of saying
that from offstage.
The real actor in the book of
Luke is the Holy Spirit.
--So, again,
at the beginning of this
lecture, this sermon,
Jesus talks about the spirit.
Notice also the--"sent me
to bring good news to the poor,
he has sent me to proclaim
release to the captives,
recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go
free."
 
Any of you know the Magnificat?
 
The song that's sung by Mary
when she's told by the angel
that she is pregnant?
 
It's a very important
liturgical piece;
I'll talk about it again next
time in a little bit more depth.
If you go to a Catholic church
or an Episcopalian church,
chances are you'll say the
Magnificat,
"My soul blesses the
Lord."
It's called the Magnificat
because "my soul magnifies
the Lord."
 
In the Latin the first word of
the song that Mary says is
magnificat,
that is "magnifies,"
"my soul magnifies the
Lord."
That song that Mary says has
all this stuff about God
will--that her son will lift up
the poor and oppressed,
God will help the poor;
he will send the rich away
empty.
 
Over and over again that song
by Mary,
this idea that God's going to
perform this great reversal of
rich and poor,
the poor will be helped and
made rich,
the rich will be made poor,
the high will be sent down low,
the low will be raised up high,
so we've already seen this
theme already in the Gospel of
Luke,
and now it's right here in
Jesus' first sermon.
 
That's another theme.
 
Look at verse 19,
"To proclaim the year of
the Lord's favor."
 
If you use an older
translation, like the King James
Version,
anybody else have--what do you
have for 19,
"To proclaim the year of
the Lord's favor,"
anybody have a different
translation?
 
Nope--yes sir?
 
Student: 
>
Prof: "The year
acceptable to the Lord."
A lot of translations--the
older translations will say,
"To proclaim the
acceptable year of the
Lord."
 
That's--as we'll see--that's
another theme of Luke.
He's quoting it from scripture
but then he incorporates it.
For example,
there will be a time later
where we'll see that at one
point Jesus condemns Jerusalem
because "they did not
recognize the time of their
visitation."
 
Jesus' being there on earth
represents this special time.
It's a focus of history on one
point of time.
Again, Jesus in his first
sermon quotes this
"acceptable year of the
Lord" as being his year;
it's the Jesus year in Judea.
 
Then another theme that you see
here is what happens to Jesus.
First Jesus sets himself up as
a prophet,
right, by quoting--by citing
stories about Elijah,
who helped the woman--the
widow's son,
and Elisha, so Elijah and
Elisha are important prophets
for Luke and Jesus portrays as
being like that,
so that's why he says:
No prophet is accepted in the
prophet's hometown.
 
But the truth is there were
many widows in Israel in the
time of Elijah when the heaven
was shut up for three years and
six months,
there was severe famine,
yet Elijah was not sent to
them.
Elijah wasn't sent to the Jews,
to any Jewish widows
didn't--weren't there Jewish
widows who needed a little help
too, God?
 
Well yeah, but he wasn't sent
to the Jewish widows he was sent
to a non-Jewish widow,
a woman who lived in Sidon.
"There were many lepers in
Israel in the time of prophet
Elisha."
 
Elisha was the junior prophet
to Elijah,
Elijah anointed Elisha--not
anoint him,
he gave him his mantel and so
Elisha,
after Elijah went up in the
fiery chariot,
the flying fiery chariot you've
heard the story,
"swing low swing chariot,
coming for to take me
home."
 
Elijah doesn't die at the end
of his life he's swooped up in a
fiery chariot into heaven and,
right before that,
he gives his mantel to his
disciple Elisha and then Elisha
is the prophet from there.
 
Elisha also,
weren't there many Jewish
lepers Elisha?
 
Couldn't you take a nice Jewish
leper to heal Elisha?
No Jesus says,
he wasn't sent to them he was
sent to Naaman the Syrian.
 
So I said, when they heard
this, all in the synagogue were
filled with rage,
and I said, why this?
What were they so upset with?
 
Now you tell me,
why does he say they were
filled with rage right then?
 
What, just say it, shout it out.
 
You know.
 
Are there are no Jewish lepers,
Elisha?
Are there no Jewish widows,
Elijah?
Why are they mad?
 
Student:  He's saying
he's not there for them.
Prof: Yeah,
Jesus is saying,
I'm not here for you,
or at least he's saying Elijah
and Elisha were sent to
Gentiles,
not to Jews.
 
Notice what Luke has done here.
 
He's set up Jesus as a prophet
like Elijah and Elisha,
and he had Jesus himself
predict that the message will go
out to the Gentiles.
 
It hasn't gone out yet to
Gentiles, in the Gospel of Luke
Jesus pretty much sticks with
the Jews.
In fact, Peter has to have a
revelation in Acts before he
will go preach to a Gentile,
as we'll see next time.
The Gentiles are not receiving
the Gospel yet but Jesus is
predicting that they will,
so that's another theme here
that Luke is playing on.
 
Notice the other thing,
what happens when Jesus does
this?
 
He's rejected by his own people.
 
So another theme of Luke and
Acts is true prophets get
rejected by their own people.
 
A prophet in his own country is
not accepted.
Jesus is a great Prophet like
Elijah and Elisha,
he's not accepted in his own
country,
he's rejected,
and the Gentile mission happens
after the rejection by the Jews.
 
That's going to be a theme that
we'll see over and over in Acts;
not so much in the Gospel of
Luke.
Luke is foreshadowing the book
of Acts in this chapter with
Jesus' sermon because Jesus
himself doesn't go preach to
Gentiles.
 
You have to wait until Acts to
get that.
But Luke is foreshadowing the
rejection of the Gospel by Jews
and the taking of the Gospel to
the Gentiles that you'll then
see in Acts,
and he foreshadows it all right
here in this first sermon by
Jesus.
Then the last theme that you
have here is them trying to kill
Jesus for what he says,
which that's going to
foreshadow the theme all the way
through that the Gospel--
wherever the Gospel goes you
get persecution.
When we get to Acts you'll see
this in a way that just drums it
into your head:
Paul goes to a town,
he goes first to the synagogue
in the town,
he preaches to the Jews in the
synagogue,
they get all mad,
some of them usually accept,
a few of them will accept,
we'll see that as a theme in
Acts also,
but the majority of them don't.
They reject Paul,
they throw him out,
they try to stone him,
or they try to persecute him,
or they try to throw him out
town and then Paul turns and
preaches the same message to the
Gentiles,
and they accept,
and they form a church.
He goes to the next town,
he does this in Thessalonica,
he does it in Philippi,
he does it in Corinth,
he tries it in Athens but he's
not successful because nobody
pays any attention to him in
Athens.
That's a university town after
all, they know better,
right?
 
This theme of the prophets
being rejected and it's the
rejection of the message by the
Jews that causes the message
then to be taken to the
Gentiles.
That will play out over and
over again, and here again you
get it here.
 
So Luke has transposed the
story about Jesus preaching in
Nazareth from where he finds it
in Mark,
which is later in Jesus'
ministry, and he puts it at the
beginning of Jesus' ministry,
and he packs it up with all
this other stuff.
 
That should be a very good clue
to you if you're comparing Luke
with Mark;
you just know this must be
important;
this must be a way where we
really see what this author is
about.
Notice: is Luke concerned about
when the event in Nazareth
actually historically happened?
 
No, he's even--you can tell
he's even getting it out of his
source from one spot and
consciously transferring it to
another spot,
which tells us one thing,
is that to him it's not that
important chronologically when
this story actually happened.
 
What's important to him is
using the story to emphasize the
theological message that he
wants to emphasize.
Now let's look at another place
where Luke does this.
You have to turn to Acts for
this though, look at Acts 11.
Any questions about that before
I go on?
No questions?
 
I love good docile students,
always happy with everything I
say.
 
Look at Chapter 11:19.
 
Now I already read this earlier
and then I read it actually in
another lecture,
but it's very important to see
what Luke is doing.
 
Now those who were scattered,
because of the persecution that
took place over Stephen,
traveled as far as Phoenicia,
Cyprus,
and Antioch,
and they spoke the word to no
one except Jews.
But among them were some men of
Cyrus and Cyrene who,
on coming to Antioch spoke to
the Hellenists also,
proclaiming the Lord Jesus.
 
The hand of the Lord was with
them, and a great number became
believers and turned to the
Lord.
News of this came to the ears
of the church in Jerusalem,
and they sent Barnabas to
Antioch.
When he came and saw the grace
of God,
he rejoiced,
and he exhorted them all to
remain faithful in the Lord with
steadfast devotion for he was a
good man,
full of the Holy Spirit and of
faith.
 
And a great many ...
 
Then Barnabas went to Tarsus to
look for Saul,
and when he found,
him he brought him to Antioch.
So it was that for an entire
year they met with the church
and taught a great many people,
and it was in Antioch that the
disciples were first called
Christians.
Isn't that a nice little
encapsulation?
In that little paragraph Luke,
the author,
who we still tend to call these
Gospel writers by these names
even though we don't believe
historically that this was the
historical Luke,
but I'll still keep calling him
Luke because it's easier then
saying "the author"
each time.
 
Luke takes a little paragraph
in which he shifts your focus
here from the whole Jerusalem,
Judea, Jewish oriented form of
the movement,
and now he goes to Antioch and
now you get this Greek kind of
movement,
it's predominantly in a Greek
speaking city,
Antioch.
 
This is one of the reasons that
I think that that word that my
translation translates,
"Hellenist,"
they spoke to Hellenists in
verse 20;
I think that's not correct.
 
I think that either in the
original Greek,
and some manuscripts have this,
or you just would translate
this word,
it must be that they--it's
saying that they spoke to
Greeks,
that is ethnic Greeks.
 
Why do I think this is a
reference to ethnic Greeks and
not just Greek speaking Jews?
 
Anybody have an idea?
 
Because this isn't the first
time that people--that followers
of Jesus have spoken to Greek
speaking Jews.
We already have in
Jerusalem--he has already told
us in the earlier part of Acts
that in Jerusalem there were
already Greek speaking Jews part
of the community.
In fact it says that,
Stephen himself would have
talked with these Greek speaking
Jews.
So we already have before we
get to chapter 11,
the idea that the Gospel of
Jesus has been taken both to
Aramaic speaking Jews and Greek
speaking Jews because it's
already there in Jerusalem.
 
He's talking about something
new happening here,
this is people not just
speaking to Aramaic speaking
Jews or to Greek speaking Jews,
they're actually speaking to
non-Jews.
 
This is the first time you get
this indication in the book of
Acts,
that the movement has now
spread out from Jerusalem,
and it's also being spread to
Greeks,
ethnic Greeks.
And I think by
"Greeks"
he just means Gentiles,
not just Greeks ethnically but
anybody who wasn't a Jew is what
he mainly means here.
What's interesting is that this
is kind of out of place.
One of the things I'm arguing
is that unlike this translation
I just read,
which might lead you to believe
that the author is telling us
this is the first time they
spoke to Greek speaking Jews,
I think that the original text
must have meant that,
this is the first time that
these people are speaking to
actual non-Jews.
Now it's not the first time,
though, that people in Acts
have spoken to non-Jews,
right?
When's the first time,
according to Acts,
that people actually speak to
non-Jews and preach the Gospel
to non-Jews,
and non-Jews become members of
the church?
 
When?
 
Have you read Acts yet?
 
Cornelius, the centurion,
the Roman centurion.
Remember I said,
Peter has to have a whole
series of revelations on top of
the roof before he's convinced
to finally go preach to a
Gentile and convert him and that
takes place in Acts 10.
 
Now keep your finger on Acts
11:19 and flip over to Acts
8:1-4.
 
I think I may have mentioned
this already but let's look at
it a bit closer now.
 
Acts 8:1-4, this takes place
right after the stoning of
Stephen.
 
Hmmm.
 
Stephen, is that a good Hebrew
or Aramaic name?
No, does anybody know where the
word--where the name Stephen
comes from?
 
Raise your hand, yes sir?
 
Student:  Crown.
 
Prof: Crown,
are you a Stephen?
No, you just know.
 
Yes, it comes from the word
stephanos in Greek,
which means "crown."
 
Notice already there are Greek
speaking Jews who have Greeks
names in the church,
and Stephen's one of them.
In fact, the seven deacons who
are appointed that we could have
read about just right before
this in Acts,
those are appointed precisely
in order,
according to Acts,
to be able to minister to the
Greek speakers,
because some Greek speaking
widows were being neglected in
the distribution of food and
funds,
according to the text.
The seven deacons are appointed.
 
Those seven deacons some of
them have--they have Greek
names, so there are Greek
speaking Jews in Jerusalem
already.
 
So right after the stoning of
Stephen you have this,
chapter 8:
And Saul approved of their
killing him.
 
That day a severe persecution
began against the church in
Jerusalem,
and all except the apostles
were scattered throughout the
countryside of Judea and
Samaria.
 
Devout men buried Stephen and
made loud lamentation over him.
But Saul was ravaging the
church by entering house after
house, dragging off both men and
women, he committed them to
prison.
 
Now those who were scattered,
after the stoning of Stephen,
went from place to place
proclaiming the word.
Phillip, who was one of those
deacons along with Stephen,
Phillip, that's a good Greek
name right?
At least it's a Macedonian
name, named after the king of
Macedon.
 
"Phillip went down to the
city of Samaria and proclaimed
the Messiah to them."
 
Then you get Phillip going to
Samaria and so forth and you'll
have other things happening.
 
Now keep your finger--you had
your finger there,
notice that he's saying,
"Now those who were
scattered went from place to
place proclaiming the
word."
 
Flip over without thinking
anything,
don't think anything,
Acts 11:19, "Now those who
were scattered because of the
persecutions that took place
over Stephen traveled as far
as."
You see Luke seems to have had
a source,
maybe a written source,
that had this message about the
stoning of Stephen,
the persecution that arose in
Jerusalem,
and then the dispersal of Greek
speaking followers of Jesus,
and they don't just go to
Samaria as Phillip did,
it actually says, "Then,
they went to Phoenicia,
Cyprus, Antioch ...
speaking to no one but
Jews," but then it has this
message to the Greeks and the
Gentiles.
In other word,
from 8:4 it must have
originally joined on to what
goes with 11:19 because you can
just see this narrative stops,
and then it picks up again in
11:19.
 
Luke took what was a text or a
source for him that had this
story that this kind of thing in
order.
Stephen preaches the Gospel to
the Jews, they get mad at him,
they persecute him and stone
him.
The persecution of Stephen
leads to more persecution of the
church in Jerusalem,
the rejection of the Gospel by
the Jews,
the disciples are scattered and
they go and who do they preach
too?
The Gentiles.
 
Haven't we seen this pattern
before?
We all saw it in the very first
sermon of Jesus,
right?
 
What Luke has done is he's
split this thing which showed
that pattern,
and in it he put all the stuff
that's in chapters 8,
9, and 10 and the first part of
11 in between there.
 
Now you tell me,
why did Luke split a narrative
and put this material in between
those two sentences?
What's in that material between
8,9, 10, and 11 that was--that
Luke wanted to insert there?
 
What?
 
Pardon?
 
Student: 
>
Prof: Peter preaching to
Cornelius, the Gentile.
What Luke is doing is he has a
source that basically--who were
the first people to preach to
Gentiles?
They're anonymous,
according to his source;
we don't know who they are.
 
Just some people,
some followers of Jesus,
Greek speaking followers of
Jesus who were--
left Jerusalem and Judea,
they traveled around different
parts,
they went to the Eastern
Mediterranean,
and as they went they took the
Gospel with them,
and along the way they even
spoke not only to Greek speaking
Jews but they even spoke to
Gentiles,
that's what his source says.
Luke splits that and--he
doesn't want to do that.
First he wants to say,
well Phillip went to Samaria
and he preached to Samaria,
so you have Samaria there.
Then you have this whole thing
with Peter.
And you know the story about
Peter,
he's up on the rooftop praying
and this sheet with all these
unclean animals,
with alligators and snakes,
and stuff that was somehow some
Sunday school material I had,
had a sheet with alligators and
snakes and stuff coming down for
Peter.
 
It doesn't tell us in the text
that there were alligators and
snakes, it just part of my
Sunday school memory.
There are unclean animals,
and he's commanded to kill them
and eat them,
and he says,
I'm a good Jew,
I don't eat that,
that's not kosher,
and a voice from heaven says,
what God has cleansed don't you
declare unclean.
The vision happens three times.
 
Why?
 
Because Peter does not want to
take the message to Gentiles.
Is your hand up?
 
Nope okay.
 
So finally Peter is forced to
take the message to Gentiles,
by God, by revelation,
and then you have the story of
the baptism of Cornelius and his
house,
the first Gentile converts.
 
And then Peter goes back to
Jerusalem and all the people--
the Jews in Jerusalem say,
why did you do that,
you're not supposed to bring in
uncircumcised people in the
church.
 
And Peter has to defend the
whole thing and then finally
Peter wins the argument,
and even James,
the conservative head of the
church,
turns to them and says,
okay well God must have been
including the Gentiles also.
 
Luke wants Peter to be the
first person to take the message
to Gentiles, and he wants Peter
to do so only after being
compelled by God to do so.
 
Luke knows that the first
people who took the message to
Gentiles were probably just
anonymous followers of Jesus,
because in the source it's
there.
He splits that source and he
puts all this stuff about Peter
there because he wants Peter to
be the first and only then the
others.
 
In other words,
what you get there is a key to
what is the entire outline of
Acts.
Look back at Acts 1:8.
 
Acts 1:8 gives you,
in a sense, the outline of
Acts.
 
This is Jesus about to ascend
into heaven, talking to his
disciples, right outside
Jerusalem in the suburbs of
Jerusalem.
 
"But you will receive
power when the Holy
Spirit,"
again there's that Holy Spirit
important for Luke,
"has come upon you.
You will be my witnesses in
Jerusalem and all Judea,
and Samaria,
and to the ends of the
earth."
 
That's exactly the way he will
construct the book of Acts.
Jerusalem--Judea is the country
of Jerusalem;
Samaria is actually another
part here, but you have this
idea that the message is going
out in concentric circles.
That's why Phillip went--he has
Phillip going to Samaria right
before Peter goes to the
Gentiles with--Cornelius in
chapter 10.
 
In chapter 8,
Phillip goes to Samaria and
then chapter 10 Peter goes--
and then so Gentiles--then you
have the Gentiles,
and you have Rome as where the
book ends up.
 
Rome sort of representing
symbolically the very ultimate
ends of the earth.
 
This is the whole world so
why--by looking at the details
we can tell that the Luke is not
telling us what happened by
chronological or historical
accuracy.
He puts it in an order--even in
the order he puts it,
even the outline on his books
because he wants to have this
message of the Gospel centering
on Jerusalem,
that's why the whole first part
of Luke centers in--
that's why he has ten full
chapters on the journey to
Jerusalem.
 
He wants to focus your
attention on Jerusalem--through
the book, the Gospel.
 
But then what he does is once
you're in Jerusalem he focuses
your attention on the fact that
the Gospel goes beyond
Jerusalem.
 
One last thing,
look at Luke 21:20-27.
We'll unpack a lot of this much
more--next time when we talk
about both Luke and Acts as far
as what are the major thematic
issues in these two.
 
I'll start in again next time
with this, or I'll reiterate
this, but just to get you
thinking look at Luke 21.
Luke gets this from Mark 13.
 
Do you remember when we talked
about how could we tell when
Mark was written because it has
this abomination of desolation
being set up in the temple,
which probably refers
to--recalls this idea of the
profanation of the temple by
Antiochus IV Epiphanes,
but Mark believed it was going
to happen in the future,
probably by the Romans.
Right after that happens then
the Messiah comes,
you have all these terrible
things happen and the Messiah
comes.
 
Luke is using Mark as his
source, Mark 13,
but notice how Luke changes it.
 
Verse 20, "When you see
Jerusalem surrounded by
armies,"
that's not in Mark.
When you see Jerusalem
surrounded by armies,
then know that its desolation
has come near.
Then those in Judea must flee
to the mountains,
those inside the city must
flee, for these are the days of
vengeance--
I'm going quickly through this,
you'll have to read over it
yourself.
Look at verse 24,
"They will fall by the
edge of the sword,"
so the Jews will be defeated,
he says.
 
Not only do you have Jerusalem
surrounded by the Roman army,
but you have them defeated,
fall by the sword.
"They will be taken away
as captives among all
nations."
 
Yes, the Jews were taken as
slaves to Rome,
and then they were sold off and
dispersed throughout the nations
as slaves.
 
"And Jerusalem will be
trampled on by the Gentiles
until the times of the Gentiles
are fulfilled."
None of that was in Luke's
source of Mark.
This tells us that Luke is
writing after the destruction of
Jerusalem because he tells you
it happens.
It even says that there's going
to be a time of the Gentile
domination of Jerusalem.
 
If you read on it's only after
that that you have the Messiah
coming on the clouds then as--he
picks up again the story.
Notice all over Luke and Acts,
we can tell by looking at his
sources, his editing procedure.
 
Luke was written sometime after
the destruction of Jerusalem,
and the time he's telling this
story is here.
What's that time?
 
"the time of the
Gentiles."
Any questions?
 
See you next time.
 
