Gospel of Luke
Essay title: Gospel of Luke
Gospel of Luke
The Gospel of Luke is written by Luke to the Gentile Christians who dispersed throughout the Roman Empire. Luke was written around 85 to 90 C.E. after the destruction of Jerusalem and the church’s transformation into a primarily Gentile movement. Luke’s Gospel talks about Jesus’ career not only as history’s most crucial event but also as the opening state of an indefinitely extended historical process that continues in the life of the church. Luke makes it clear that Jesus and his disciples, working under the Holy Spirit, are innocent of any crime against Rome and that their religion is a universal faith intended for all people.
Luke lays out, in two chapters, the parallel miraculous births of Jesus of Nazareth and the man who becomes his prophet, John the Baptist. The angel Gabriel appears to Zechariah, telling him that his wife Elizabeth is pregnant. Soon afterward, Gabriel appears to Elizabeth’s relative, the Virgin Mary, who is betrothed to Joseph, telling her that she too is going to give birth to a child by the grace of the Holy Spirit.
Jesus goes to Capernaum, where he cures the servant of a Roman centurion and restores the son of a widow to life. When John the Baptist sends messengers to ask Jesus who he is, Jesus responds only by pointing out the many miracles he has worked. Jesus commends John the Baptist’s ministry and laments the fact that his contemporaries have refused to listen to John and to Jesus himself. Jesus’ travels continue as he preaches and works miracles. Jesus shows that he forgives even