The Bible Book by Book eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about The Bible Book by Book.

The Bible Book by Book eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about The Bible Book by Book.

5.  It Is a Gentile Gospel.  The book is everywhere filled with a world wide purpose not so fully expressed in the other evangelists.  Here we have the angels, announcement of great joy which shall be to all people (2:10) and the song about Jesus as “a light for revelation to the Gentiles” (2:32).  The genealogy traces Christ’s lineage back to Adam (2:38) and thus connects him not with Abraham as a representative of humanity.  The fuller account of the sending out of the seventy (10:1-24). the very number of whom signified the supposed number of the heathen nations, who were to go, not as the twelve to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, but to all those cities whither Jesus himself would come, is suggestive of this broader purpose of Luke.  The good Samaritan (10:25-37) is Christ’s illustration of a true neighbor and in some way also intends to show the nature of Christ’s work which was to be without nationality.  Of the ten lepers healed (17:11-19) only one, a Samaritan, returned to render him praise, thus showing how others than the Jews would not only be blessed by him but would do worthy service for him.  The Perean ministry, across the Jordan (9:51- 18:4, probably 9:51-19:28). is a ministry to the Gentiles and shows how large a place Luke would give the Gentiles in the work and blessings of Jesus.

6.  It Is a Gospel for the Greeks.  If Matthew wrote for Jews and Mark for Romans, it is but natural that some one should write in such a way as to appeal, specially, to the Greeks as the other representative race.  And, such the Christian writers of the first centuries thought to be Luke’s purpose.  The Greek was the representative of reason and humanity and felt that his mission was to perfect humanity.  “The full grown Greek would be a perfect world man”, able to meet all men on the common plane of the race.  All the Greek gods were, therefore, images of some form of perfect humanity.  The Hindu might worship an emblem of physical force, the Roman deify the Emperor and the Egyptian any and all forms of life, but the Greek adored man with his thought and beauty and speech, and, in this, had most nearly approached the true conception of God.  The Jew would value men as the descendants of Abraham; the Roman according as they wielded empires, but the Greek on the basis of man as such.

The gospel for the Greek must, therefore, present the perfect man, and so Luke wrote about the Divine Man as the Savior of all men.  Christ touched man at every point and is interested in him as man whether low and vile or high and noble.  By his life he shows the folly of sin and the beauty of holiness.  He brings God near enough to meet the longings of the Greek soul and thereby furnish him a pattern and brother suited for all ages and all people.  The deeds of Jesus are kept to the background while much is made of the songs of others and the discourses of Jesus as they were calculated to appeal to the cultured Greek.  If the Greek thinks he has a mission to humanity, Luke opens a mission ground enough for the present and offers him an immortality which will satisfy in the future.

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The Bible Book by Book from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.