The Revelation of the Messiah
In the first two chapters of Luke, characters acknowledge Jesus as Messiah, Son of God, and Lord. Lukan characters also speak of John going before the Lord God, suggesting that Jesus might be the Lord in view, and connect Jesus with Old Testament YHWH passages. These features have made Luke 1-2 a key locus for discussions of Lukan Christology, generating speculation as to whether Luke presents Jesus as divine. However, they also create an apparent incongruity with the body of the Gospel. In Luke 3 and elsewhere, human characters are initially ignorant that Jesus is Messiah, Son of God, and Lord. Moreover, Jesus' divinity – if Luke affirms it – does not seem to be recognized until after the resurrection. In this study, Caleb Friedeman advances a new model for understanding the Christological relationship between Luke 1-2 and the rest of Luke-Acts, in which Luke presents these opening chapters as a Christological mystery.
- Provides a Lukan logic for the apparent disconnect between the Christology of Luke 1–2 and that of the rest of Luke-Acts
- Offers a divine Christology reading of Luke-Acts that attends both to what Luke is saying (i.e., his ultimate christological judgments) and to what he is saying his characters are saying
- Provides the most extensive study to date of the preservation sayings in Luke 2:19, 51 against their parallels in Daniel and nonbiblical revelatory literature
Product details
January 2023Adobe eBook Reader
9781009194242
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The revelatory character of Luke 1–2
- 3. The mystery of Luke 1–2
- 4. The use of Daniel in Luke 1–2
- 5. Preserving the mystery
- 6. Unveiling the mystery
- 7. Conclusion.