FOURTH NARRATIVE: THE TEMPTATION, LUKE 4:1-13.
Every free creature, endowed with various faculties, must pass through
a conflict, in which it decides either to use them for its own
gratification, or to glorify God by devoting them to His service. The
angels have passed through this trial; the first... [ Continue Reading ]
1 _st. Luke 4:1-2_.
By these words, _full of the Holy Ghost_, this narrative is brought
into close connection with that of the baptism. The genealogy is
therefore intercalated.
While the other baptized persons, after the ceremony, went away to
their own homes, Jesus betook Himself into solitude. Th... [ Continue Reading ]
2 _d. Luke 4:3-4_.
First Temptation.
The text of Luke is very sober: _The devil said to Him._ The encounter
exhibited under this form may be explained as a contact of _mind_ with
_mind;_ but in Matthew, the expression _came to Him_ seems to imply a
bodily appearance. This, however, is not necessar... [ Continue Reading ]
3 _d. Luke 4:5-8_.
Second Temptation.
The occasion of this fresh trial is not a physical sensation; it is an
aspiration of the soul. Man, created in the image of God, aspires to
reign. This instinct, the direction of which is perverted by
selfishness, is none the less legitimate in its origin. It r... [ Continue Reading ]
4 _th. Luke 4:9-12_.
Third Temptation.
This trial belongs to a higher sphere than that of physical or
political life. It is of a purely religious character, and touches the
deepest and most sacred relations of Jesus with His Father. The
dignity of a son of God, with a view to which man was created,... [ Continue Reading ]
5 _th. Luke 4:13_. Historical Conclusion.
The expression πάντα πειρασμόν does not signify _all
the_ temptation (this would require ὅλον), but _every kind_ of
temptation. We have seen that the temptations mentioned refer, one to
the person of Jesus, another to the nature of His work, the third to
His... [ Continue Reading ]
1 _st. Luke 4:14-15_.
The 14th verse is, as we have shown, the complement of Luke 4:1 (see
Luke 4:1).
The verb, _he returned_, comprehends, according to what precedes, the
two returns mentioned John 1:44; John 4:1, and even a third,
understood between John 5:6. The words, _in the power of the Spiri... [ Continue Reading ]
1. _Visit to Nazareth: Luke 4:14-30_.
This portion opens with a general glance at the commencement of the
active labours of Jesus in Galilee: Luke 14:14-15. Then, resting on
this foundation, but separable from it, as a particular example, we
have the narrative of His preaching at Nazareth: Luke 4:1... [ Continue Reading ]
FIRST CYCLE: VISITS TO NAZARETH AND TO CAPERNAUM, LUKE 4:14-44.
The following narratives are grouped around two names
_ Nazareth_ (Luke 4:14-30) and _Capernaum_ (Luke 4:31-44).... [ Continue Reading ]
THIRD PART: THE MINISTRY OF JESUS IN GALILEE, LUKE 4:14 TO LUKE 9:50.
The three Synoptics all connect the narrative of the Galilaean
ministry with the account of the temptation. But the narrations of
Matthew and Mark have this peculiarity, that, according to them, the
motive for the return of Jesus... [ Continue Reading ]
_The Reading._ Luke 4:16. Καί. “And in these itinerancies He came
_also._ ” John (John 2:12) and Matthew (Matthew 4:13) refer to this
time the transfer of the residence of Jesus (and also, according to
John, of that of His mother and brethren) from Nazareth to Capernaum,
which naturally implies a vi... [ Continue Reading ]
2 _d. Luke 4:16-30_.
Jesus did not begin by preaching at Nazareth. In His view, no doubt,
the inhabitants of this city stood in much the same relation to the
people of the rest of Galilee as the inhabitants of Galilee to the
rest of the Jewish people; He knew that in a certain sense His
greatest di... [ Continue Reading ]
_The Preaching._
The description of the assembly, Luke 4:20, is so dramatic, that it
appears to have come from an eye-witness.
The sense of ἤρξατο, He began (Luke 4:21), is not that these
were the _first words_ of His discourse; this expression describes the
solemnity of the moment when, in the mi... [ Continue Reading ]
_The Colloquy. “And He said to them, Ye will surely say unto me this
proverb, Physician, heal thyself; whatsoever we have heard done in
Capernaum, do also here in thy country._ 24 _And He said, Verily I say
unto you, No prophet is accepted in his own country._ 25 _But I tell
you of a truth, many wid... [ Continue Reading ]
_Conclusion._
The threat contained in these examples exasperates them: “Thou
rejectest us: we reject thee,” was their virtual reply. The term
ἐκβάλλειν, _to cast out_, denotes that they set upon Him
with violence.
About forty minutes distant from Nazareth, to the south-east, they
show a wall of ro... [ Continue Reading ]
1 _st. Luke 4:31-32_.
The term, _He went down_, refers to the situation of Capernaum on the
sea-shore, in opposition to that of Nazareth on the high land.
We have to do here with a permanent abode; comp. John 2:12 and Matthew
4:13 (ἐλθὼν κατῴκησεν εἰς Κ.), as well as the
term, _His own city_ (Matth... [ Continue Reading ]
2. _Residence at Capernaum: Luke 4:31-44_. Five sections: 1 _st._ A
general survey (Luke 4:31-32); 2 _d._ The healing of a demoniac (Luke
4:33-37); 3 _d._ That of Peter's mother-in-law (Luke 4:38-39); 4 _th._
Various cures (Luke 4:40-42); 5 _th._ Transition to the evangelization
of Galilee generally... [ Continue Reading ]
2 _d. Luke 4:33-37_. Should the possessed mentioned by the evangelists
be regarded simply as persons afflicted after the same manner as our
lunatics, whose derangement was attributed by Jewish and heathen
superstition to supernatural influence? Or did God really permit, at
this extraordinary epoch i... [ Continue Reading ]
3 _d. Luke 4:38-39_.
Peter, according to our narrative, seems to have lived at Capernaum.
According to John 1:45, he was originally of Bethsaida. The two places
were very near, and might have had a common synagogue; or, while
originally belonging to the one, Peter might have taken up his abode
at t... [ Continue Reading ]
4 _th. Luke 4:40-41_.
Here we have one of those periods when the miraculous power of Jesus
was most abundantly displayed. We shall meet again with some of these
culminating points in the course of His ministry. A similar rhythm is
found in the career of the apostles. Peter at Jerusalem (Acts
5:15-1... [ Continue Reading ]
5 _th. Luke 4:42-44_.
The more a servant of God exerts himself in outward activity, the more
need there is that he should renew his inward strength by meditation.
Jesus also was subject to this law. Every morning He had to obtain
afresh whatever was needed for the day; for _He lived by the Father_
... [ Continue Reading ]