Luke 1
Luke is
often described as the Gospel for the Gentiles, and there is sense in which
that is true. The book is addressed to Theophilos, a Gentile name if there
ever was one. (It’s a Greek word which mean lover of God.)
On the
other hand, Luke throws us right into the deep end of the Old Testament. We are
instantly supposed to understand about priests and the temple and sacrifices.
Zechariah and Elizabeth are described in a way that calls Abraham and Elizabeth
to mind. Maybe more specifically, it calls to mind Manoah and his wife, Samson’s
parents, because John will also share characteristics of being a lifelong
Nazirite.
There is
also the assumption that we will understand Israel’s national hopes, hopes
which took shape in the era between the Testaments. For example, in 1:13 the
angel announces that Zechariah’s prayers have been heard. Now, it is apparent
that Zechariah has not been praying for a child; he has given that up as
no longer a possibility—hence his doubt at the angel saying Elizabeth would
conceive. No, what Zechariah and the people outside are praying for is ‘the
redemption of Israel’ (2:25). Israelites in this period understood such redemption
in terms of, say, Isaiah 60:3 and the nations streaming to Israel. They were
looking for the throwing off of the yoke of foreign powers and becoming the chief
power of the earth themselves. Note this is not some merely human kingdom; they
legitimately believed that the Lord would reign in their midst, so there was a spiritual
component, too. I’ll have to explain more about that in Bible class on
Wednesday.
The
announcement of Jesus’ birth likewise drips with Old Testament language—of David
and his kingdom (Ps. 2; 1 Sam. 7). But with Jesus things are different. The
Lord regularly blessed barren woman with children (Sarah, Samson’s mom,
Hannah), but that a virgin would conceive without the help of a man—now that’s
new ground! The structure of chapters 1 and 2 make this point again and again:
John is extraordinary, a miraculous child with a distinct purpose; but Jesus is
even more extraordinary, more miraculous, and with a greater purpose. John is
forerunner; Jesus is gift. Jesus puts it this way, “I tell you, among those
born of women there is no one greater than John; yet the one who is least in
the kingdom of God is greater than he” (Luke 7:28). John is the end of the Old
Testament prophets, but Jesus is their fulfillment.
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