Podcast

The Gospel According to Luke – Continuing the Ministry in Galilee

January 26, 2008

Beginning in Chapter 8, our study continues Luke’s account of Jesus’ active ministry. Accompanied by "the twelve […], some women who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities; Mary, called Magdalene […] and many others," Jesus draws large crowds when he preaches (v. 2-3).

To one great crowd, Jesus delivers the parable of the Sower and the Seed, or what we might more aptly call the Parable of the Soils. These different soils are a good illustration of a number of stages of the spiritual life. After Jesus lists the various soils, we see that each type represents richer grade of soil, and each is more able to bear and sustain a healthy spiritual life than the last. Lastly, He describes our final goal, "And as for that in the good soil, they are those who, hearing the word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, and bring forth fruit with patience" (v. 15). This and all the parables of this chapter relay that in order to achieve this, we must seek Him, persevere in our seeking, ask his aid and never relent.

Exhausted from His ministry, Jesus then falls asleep while traveling across the Sea of Galilee. Soon thereafter, a sudden storm of wind begins to overtake their boat. His apostles awake Him with such little faith that as soon as He has rebuked the wind and the water, he chastises them for their weak faith. How often do we act like the disciples and doubt whether God will protect His people in times of peril?

Upon arrival at the shore, we see the Lucan account of a man possessed by Legion who lives among the catacombs in the country of the Gerasenes. Confronting this man, Jesus casts out the numerous demons into a herd of swine that hurl themselves over a cliff and into the sea. Jesus then gives the healed man a mission to speak of God’s miraculous power.

In verses 40 through 48, one faithful touch of Jesus’ cloak heals a woman with a twelve-year hemorrhage, although the miraculous power of God will not go out into any other member of the jostling crowd surrounding Him. Jesus then raises Jairus’ daughter from the dead amidst the of laughter her hired mourners (v. 49-56).

In the beginning of Chapter 9, Jesus sends out the twelve throughout the villages of Galilee with "no staff, nor bag, nor bread, nor money" to minister to the people through "preaching the gospel and healing" (v. 3). Even at this relatively early stage of Jesus’ public ministry, Herod hears of all that has been done and seeks to see Jesus.

Upon the return of the disciples from their missionary activity, they gather with Jesus in the lonely desert area of Bethsaida. Here Jesus multiples five loaves and two fish into enough food to feed five thousand men, in addition to the accompanying women and children, with twelve baskets of food left over (v. 10-17).

Luke quickly relays crucial gospel events in verses 18-27: Peter confesses that He is "the Christ of God," Jesus speaks to the suffering He will undergo at the hands of the Jewish leaders, and Jesus describes what it means to truly be His disciple, "let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me."

At the Transfiguration of Jesus, John, James and Peter witness Jesus transfigured with Moses and Elijah (v. 28-36). Peter’s impetuous line contrasts the voice of God calling heaven and bellowing "This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to Him!"

As Jesus and the three return from the mountain, they witness the plea of a father whose son foams from the mouth with a demon, one whom His own disciples could not expel. Luke, unlike the other synoptic writers chronicles Jesus response to the man’s request, "O faithless and perverse generation, how long am I to be with you and bear with you?" (v. 41). The words of Jesus hearken to God’s complaint against His people in the 14th chapter of Numbers, where people look only for miracles and have no recourse to God or His ways. As the crowd cheers that Jesus has expelled the violent demon, Jesus reminds them that He will go to the cross for them, but they do not understand.

The conclusion of Chapter 9 showcases three teachings on discipleship. Jesus shows the price of discipleship when he says "foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of man has nowhere to lay his head," and later "Leave the dead to bury their own dead; but as for you, go and proclaim the kingdom of God" and finally "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God" (v. 57-62). In all of these, we see how Jesus calls all of his disciples to follow Him in total self-giving.

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The Gospel According to Luke – Chapters 6 and 7

January 19, 2008

At the start of Chapter 6, the scribes and Pharisees confront Jesus on two occasions regarding how He and His disciples observe the sabbath. Jesus implies that while the law of the Lord is perfect and provides guidance, the law is not an end in and of itself, but a means to the end – a roadmap to God, if you will.

We see the scribes and Pharisees scrutinize the actions of Jesus and His disciples, watching for even the smallest mistake and demanding a strict observance of the law. When his disciples pluck heads of grain on the sabbath, Jesus transcends their reasoning and cites David’s eating the bread of the Presence, claiming "the Son of man is lord of the sabbath" (v. 3-5). On another occasion, despite knowing the thoughts of the scribes and Pharisees, He heals on the sabbath after asking, "is it lawful on the sabbath to do good or to do harm, to save life or to destroy it?" (v. 9).

In verse 12, Jesus retires "in these days" to the mountain to pray, and spends all night in prayer before appointing twelve disciples, a period of time that is akin to Mt. Sinai and Moses’ preparation prior to receiving God’s covenant. From his numerous disciples, Jesus selects twelve by name to be His apostles. One sees in this the continuation of the Hebrew office of "shaliach" wherein a master sends out a representative, oftentimes giving them their full power.

In verse 17, Luke first expounds on the core of Jesus’ message in the Sermon on the Plain. Among these tenets, we hear, "Blessed are you when men hate you, and cast out your name as evil, on account of the Son of man! Rejoice in that day, and leap for joy, for behold, your reward is great in heaven; for so their fathers did to the prophets" (v. 20-24).

Accompanying these promises and exhortations, Jesus expounds on the following warnings, in order that we might not follow imprudent paths, most notably He says, "Woe to you, when all men speak well of you, for so their fathers did to the false prophets" (v. 25-26).

Jesus demands a radical adherence to all of the gospel message in one’s actions. He fleshes out many ethical teachings in verses 27-38. Overall, we see that we must rely completely on God instead of desiring security or clinging to what is comfortable. If we are not radical disciples of Jesus and only take His message half-heartedly, we are no better than blind men and possess no credible Christian identity (v. 39). Verses 40-49 further describe Jesus’ lofty call, containing many wonderful images and lessons for us all.

The start of Chapter 7 describes the miraculous healings in Capernaum and Nain. In the first, Jesus says of the centurion "not even in Israel have I found such faith" before healing the man’s son (v. 9). Soon after this, Jesus travels to Nain and raises a young man from the dead by touching the platform on which he is being carried out of the city, saying, "Young man, I say to you, arise" (v. 14).

Somewhat unlike the depiction of John the Baptist given to us in the Gospel of John, Luke describes that the Baptizer is in need for a final answer whether or not Jesus is the Messiah. After the disciples of John describe the events in Capernaum and Nain to him, John and Jesus communicate with one another through messengers. Giving the last statement, Jesus’ disciples cite elements from Isaiah, imply His Messianic identity, acclaim John’s ministry and justify those who receive John’s baptism.

In verse 36, Luke describes a striking incident while Jesus dines in the house of Simon, a Pharisee. During the meal, a sinful woman enters, wetting his feet with her tears, kissing them, wiping them with her hair and anointing them with oil. Jesus contrasts her devotion with the lack of honor Simon bestows upon Him. He says, "her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much; but he who is forgiven little, loves little" (47). Simon who is only aware of formal religion, does not break through to God and thus cannot honor Jesus in the same manner. By following Jesus’ message wholeheartedly, not only do we receive His forgiveness, but break beyond formal religion to encounter Christ Himself.

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The Gospel According to Luke – Chapter 5

January 12, 2008

In Luke
4:31 Jesus teaches at the synagogue in Capernaum on the
Sabbath. For the first time, Jesus publicly commands an unclean
spirit to listen to Him, and instantly it comes out of the man. This
very important event along with the healing of Peter’s mother-in-law
are the first episodes that bring Jesus into the public eye as a
healer and miracle-worker. These form a turning point Jesus’
ministry, for He is now unable to travel anywhere without large
crowds following Him.

In Chapter 5, Luke opens
with the catching of a multitude of fishes and Peter’s confession on
the Sea of Galilee where, amidst a tremendous haul of
flopping fish, Peter becomes convicted, kneels down and asks Jesus to
leave the boat (without realizing that there is no place to go). John’s
Gospel tells us that Jesus knows Peter before this event, but
Luke here highlights the moment where Jesus first breaks through to
the man who would become the Rock.

In verse 12, Jesus heals a
man with leprosy, an event which compels "great multitudes
gathered to hear and to be healed of their infirmities. But he
withdrew to the wilderness and prayed." Because the recipients
of Jesus’ miracles do not heed his words to "tell no one,"
the crowds that follow Him become increasingly burdensome.

The healing of the paralytic is the dramatic moment that turns the
Pharisees against Jesus. Luke says "the
power of the Lord was with him to heal," a subtle reminder that
Jesus did not even do miracles unless they were in accord with the
will of the Father (v. 17). The room being full of dignitaries and
scholars, earnest men creatively carry a paralytic up to the roof,
seeking to bring him in through it and lay him before Jesus. One
must note that Jesus "saw their faith," the faith of the
majority in the crowd, before saying, "Man, your sins are
forgiven you." Because God alone can forgive sins, this miracle
forces all to decide whether He is God’s chosen one or a blasphemer.

Luke then describes the
call of Levi the tax collector, commanding him to "follow me"
(v. 27). The Pharisees and scribes murmur at this, and Jesus
responds, "Those who are well have no need of a physician, but
those who are sick; I have not come to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance" (v. 31-32). His indictment of their
maligned form of religion truth brings to mind the words of Fulton
Sheen, "those who deny the disease make the cure impossible."

We close with the incident
of verse 33, when they question "the disciples of John fast
often and offer prayers, and so the disciples of the Pharisees, but
yours eat and drink."

And Jesus said to them,
"Can you make wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with
them? The days will come, when the bridegroom is taken away from
them, and then they will fast in those days." He told them a
parable also: "No one tears a piece from a new garment and puts
it upon an old garment; if he does, he will tear the new, and the
piece from the new will not match the old. And no one puts new wine
into old wineskins; if he does, the new wine will burst the skins and
it will be spilled and the skins will be destroyed. But new wine
must be put into fresh wineskins. And no one after drinking old wine
desires new, for he says, ‘The old is good…’" (36-39)

Jesus makes it clear that He has not come to fit inside ordinary Judaism,
but to transform the establishment entirely in accord with the
Father’s will. All too often, those who are the most invested in
traditional ways are the most unwilling to give up their old wine and
accept God’s challenging
invitation to new wine.

As we read of Jesus coming
into Galilee, we must digest these verses and examine where we stand
with God, asking Him what we must to do follow Him. We must be like Levi,
a man undoubtedly engrossed in the world who left everything to follow
Him. Will we be among those religious that don’t leave their
comfortable lifestyle to follow Him, or will we respond to Jesus in a
credible way and amend our lives?

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The Gospel According to Luke – Beginning of the Gospel Proper

January 5, 2008

At the start of the Gospel proper, Luke focuses on John the Baptist: his ministry and his message. It seems Christians today often shrink the role of John the Baptist and the roles other Prophets in the history of salvation, and instead embrace a "let’s cut to the chase" mentality. The fact that John is present at the onset of all four Gospels speaks to his priority early Christians gave him. Far more than Jesus’ emcee, John is a thundering voice who preaches repentance and preparation for the one who is to come after him.

Luke’s Third Chapter records events of A.D. 29 or 30, when the word of God calls John out of his repose in the wilderness and into ministry. His "baptism of repentance which led to the forgiveness of sins," while not a Sacramental Baptism, shows how God’s salvific grace acts throughout all history and looks forward to the grounds of forgiveness through Jesus Christ (v. 3). John is the "herald’s voice in the desert, crying […]" of the necessity of preparation for reception of the Gospel:

"You brood of vipers! Who told you to flee from the wrath to come? Give some evidence that you mean to reform. Do not begin by saying to yourselves, ‘Abraham is our father.’ I tell you, God can raise up children to Abraham from these stones. Even now the ax is laid to the root of the tree. Every tree that is not fruitful will be cut down and thrown into the fire." (v. 7-9)

Condemning injustices of all kinds, John’s ministry is so electric that men of all kinds ask him whether or not he is the Christ. He clarifies that "there is one to come who is mightier than I […] He will baptize you in the Holy Spirit and in fire" (v. 16).

As the Holy Spirit descends visibly in a "form like a dove" upon Jesus at his baptism, God shows John the one who will baptize in the Holy Spirit and whose "winnowing fan is in his hand to clear the threshing floor and gather the wheat into his granary, but chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire" (v. 22). In no need of John’s Baptism, Jesus travels to the Jordan to bless the waters and open the way for future Sacramental Baptism.

In verse 23, we see that Luke’s genealogy that begins with Adam, Son of God. This contrasts Matthew’s Judaic genealogy places Abraham as Jesus’ eldest relative.

"Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, then returned from the Jordan and was conducted by the spirit into the desert for forty days, where he was tempted by the devil (4:1). Although the devil tempts Jesus three times by using Scripture Jesus is able to rebuke the devil with Scripture and does not succumb. In all three instances, the devil proposes that Jesus compromise his principles to accomplish a so-called greater good.

In 4:14, Jesus returns into Galilee to begin his active ministry by teaching in the synagogues to much praise. Yet, Luke does not mention the arrest of John as the catalyst in the start of Jesus’ active ministry as do the other Gospel writers.

In one notable instance, Jesus is teaching in the synagogue at Nazareth and reads powerfully from a scroll of Isaiah 61:11, announcing the advent of the Messianic age:

"The spirit of the Lord is upon me; therefore, He has anointed me. He has sent me to bring glad tidings to the poor; to proclaim liberty to captives, recovery of sight to the blind and release of prisoners, to announce a year of favor from the Lord" (18).

Initially lauded by all in attendance, Jesus soon questions the assembly’s sincerity and speaks of the hardness of their hearts. This enrages crowd, so much so they "rose up and expelled him from the town, leading him to the brow of the hill […] and intending to hurl him over the edge" (29). Jesus, however, is able to pass through their mist and walk away. The first of many instances where Jesus’ message pushes the limits of human receptiveness, we will contrast this noticeable instance with Jesus’ teaching at Capernaum in next week’s podcast.

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The Gospel According to Luke – Presentation and Finding in the Temple

December 29, 2007

Following the Presentation Luke omits the flight into Egypt
and focuses on Jesus’ upbringing in Nazareth. He emphasizes that throughout this time "Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature, and in favor with God and man".

The childhood of Jesus has serious Christological implications. The Gnostic Gospels show Jesus acting on a whim but the Scriptures attest that Christ did nothing in his life unless it was the will of His Father.

At age 12 Jesus entered the Temple on his own two feet. After his parents left the boy Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem. On the third day of searching Mary and Joseph found him in the Temple "sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions; and all who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his answers". Though his actions may seem rebellious, they
were not. "Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?" Even at 12 Jesus was fully aware of His unique
identity as the Son of God.

With Mary, we do well to pray through the childhood
narrative of Luke, ‘keeping all these things in our hearts.’ Only after many prayerful readings will we
begin to appreciate the life of God incarnate, the redeemer of every aspect of our humanity.

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The Gospel According to Luke – The Census and the Nativity

December 22, 2007

The study begins with the controversy regarding the census that sent Joseph from Nazareth to Bethlehem and the dating of the birth of Christ. The historical reading of the historian Josephus is that Herod died in 4 B.C. and thus it is logical for Christ’s birth to be sometime before that. Although some favor 6 B.C. as Christ’s birth year, modern readings of Josephus push his death up to around 1 B.C. and complicate the matter. Because "history is a history of fragments," both the issue of Christ’s birth year and the verification of Quirinius’ governorship during the census are more difficult to verify than many realize.

Luke 2:2 speaks of the census that compels Joseph to travel to Bethlehem as " the first census that took place when Quirinius was governor of Syria." After looking at the career of Quirinius and the writings of the Early Christian Tertullian, however, it appears that he was neither governor during the time that Luke dates the birth of Christ nor would Quirinius have authority to carry out a census within Herod’s territory. It seems Luke may be referring to a different census or that his definition of a census is different than that of the writers of history in his age. In the end, we have no sufficient evidence to either verify that Luke is historically correct in this or prove a clear contradiction against Luke’s depiction and dating of the census.

The rest of this session focuses on the Christmas story and on the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple.

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The Gospel According to Luke – Annunciation, Canticles and God’s Preparation

December 15, 2007

In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, God sends the mighty Archangel Gabriel to Mary, announcing that this "virgin betrothed to a man named Joseph, of the
house of David," will conceive and bear a son, Jesus (LK 1:26-28). He specifically chooses this Holy Virgin for an absolutely amazing vocation: to be the mother of the Messiah, the instrument through whom the infinite God becomes incarnate.

Great will be his dignity and he
will be called Son of the Most High. The
Lord God will give him the
throne of David his father. He will rule
over the house of Jacob forever and
his reign will be without end.
(32-33)

In this
child, the Messianic Kingdom of David will emerge as "the stone […] hewn
from the mountain without a hand" that shatters all the kingdoms of this
world forever and rules for eternity (Daniel2:44).
According to the tradition of the historic Davidic court, the Queen
mother holds a prominence in the King’s life.
This is all the more true of relationship between Jesus and Mary.

The study
then shifts to how God has provided a safe place for the virgin to spend her
pregnancy, for her parents and neighbors would have thought Mary was crazy or might
even have handed her over to be stoned according to the Law. Moreover, because
God makes Mary’s pregnancy known to Elizabeth, Mary does not have to convince
her cousin that she is to pregnant with the Savior.

Analyzing
the Magnificat reveals that this simple, tender-hearted young woman possessed a
deeply intimate knowledge of Scripture (Lk 46-55).Her Canticle is a wonderful bouquet of many
Psalms and the writings of the Prophets which mirrors the Canticle of Hannah in
1 Samuel. The implications of Mary’s
prayer are truly astounding, as is the connection between Samuel and
John/Jesus. The Canticle of Zechariah is
similarly profound and Luke purposefully includes this prophecy from the
once-mute father of John that alludes to Malachi.

The study
concludes with a look at the preparatory nature of God, who not only profoundly
prepares the way for his Son, but also opens the doors of our hearts and is even
now preparing us to be a people transformed according to his divine plan – if
we but let him in.

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The Gospel According to Luke – John the Baptist

December 8, 2007

Starting at Luke 1:5, this session focuses on the man God destined to "prepare the way of the Lord," John the Baptist (Is 40:3). He is the long-awaited son of the Zechariah
the priest of Abijah and the barren Elizabeth, an elderly couple who were "blameless before the Lord, following all this commandments and ordinances" (Lk 1:6)

The so-called "Little Annunciation" refers to Luke 1:8-22, when the Archangel Gabriel appears to Zechariah in the Temple and announces that Elizabeth will conceive of John. As he towers over Zechariah before the Altar of Insence, Gabriel proclaims that John will not only be a Nazirite who lives according to the ordinances of Numbers 6, but he will "be filled with the
Holy Spirit" from his mother’s womb and will fulfil the prophecies of the end of the Book of Malachi and Sirach 48:10. Moreover, he will
"turn many of the
sons of Israel to the Lord their God, and he will go before Him in the spirit
of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the disobedient
to the wisdom of the just, to make ready for the Lord a people prepared."

When Zechariah questions the messenger of God, he is struck mute until John’s birth
for his lack of faith, but his tongue loosens at the remarkable naming of his
son. Now eight days old, John has been
the talk of the hill country of Judah for five months, for some of his neighbors marvel at him, others are frightened and all ask "What then will
this child be?"

Simply put, John is the greatest of all the prophets who effectively sums up all the
prophets and a saint of saints. All four
Gospels begin with John the Baptist as the herald and preparer for Christ. Intentionally consecrated for divine
intervention, John is filled with the Holy Spirit from within his mother’s
womb. The first prophet in 400 years,
his ministry of baptism and repentance was unique in all of Judaism quickly
attracts the attention of all of Israel.

Baptizing thousands primarily in the Jordan he even extends his ministry to
the Samaritans and is later captured ministering in the Northern country. His extraordinarily radical message condemns
the government for its injustice towards the poor and indicts the corruption within the priestly leadership. Underscoring the presence of grace and divine design in John’s life, Jesus
chooses not to begin his ministry full-throttle until after John’s death.

John’s ministry is relevant even today, for we must continue to prepare the way of the
Lord and do whatever possible to prepare ourselves and our people for salvation
by repenting and entering into the treasures of our Baptism.

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The Gospel According to Luke – Introduction continued

December 1, 2007

Part 2 of the introduction to Luke.  See last week’s (updated) show notes for a full description.

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The Gospel According to Luke – Introduction

November 24, 2007

Laying a firm foundation for the Gospel of Luke will allow for a much greater appreciation of this incredible book, which is written in the unique literary form of the gospels: not a biography of Jesus but more of a "snapshot" narration of specific events in his life. We refer to Luke as a synoptic gospel, a term that means "of the same viewpoint," because Luke’s account shares nearly three-quarters of the same material with those of Matthew and Mark. All three are seemingly derived from the same Apostolic outline of Jesus’ life. Right from the outset he speaks of his desire to clarify the truth amidst various gospel accounts describing the story of
Jesus. The only Gentile writer in all of the Bible, Luke writes in
an elegant, well-educated Greek that is reminiscent of the best Greek of the Septuagint. He is also undoubtedly the author of the Acts of the Apostles. A humble man, one whom Paul referred to as the "beloved physician," Luke hailed from the great cultural and economic center of Antioch, a major early Christian city known as the great mother of churches (Col 4:14).

A masterful mid-first century historian, Luke’s gospel is the product of his painstaking
research during the many years in which he accompanied Paul in his
travels. Relying on eyewitness and historical accounts from
individuals who saw Christ and others who were then residing in Palestine, Syria and Asia Minor,
he writes to Theophilus, "lover of God," which could refer to either a generic Christian reader
or to a specific individual. Although some scholars date Luke’s gospel later,
the date of composition may have been earlier than 64 A.D. In either
case, he writes to a Christian who has already received
basic catechesis, attempting to instruct with greater surety the
truth of the Christian message.

A convert himself, Luke
expresses the depths of God’s universal mercy, who "come[s] to
seek and to save the lost" throughout the entire world and
excludes no one (19:10). He stresses Christ’s unique compassion for
the poor, the broken-hearted, and the outcast and also focuses on Jesus’ interaction with women, a rarity among Jewish literature of any time. Luke’s unique infancy narrative, which contains several Canticles and
the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary, reflects a deep perspective on the Holy Family
and the heart of Mary. And his many parables (Luke has more parables
than any other gospel) project a picture of Jesus Christ which we can savor through prayerful reading.

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