The Bible Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

188


See also: The Exodus 74–77 ■ The Annunciation 178–79 ■
The Birth of Jesus 180–85 ■ The Magi 186 ■ The Coming of Salvation 189

E


very year, Jesus and His
parents travel to Jerusalem
for the feast of Passover.
One year, when Jesus is 12 years
old, He stays in Jerusalem after
His parents have set out for home.
Thinking their son is among their
fellow travelers, Mary and Joseph
do not realize He is missing until
a whole day has passed, at which
point they return to Jerusalem to
look for Him. After three days of
searching, they find Him debating
with the rabbis in the Temple.
Everyone who listens to Jesus is
amazed by Him, but Mary rebukes
her son. In an instant, Jesus turns
from His debate with the rabbis to
address His mother: “Why were you
searching for me? Didn’t you know
I had to be in my Father’s house?”
(Luke 2:49). Jesus’s reply confuses
His parents, who do not understand
that He is revealing His knowledge
of His divine lineage.
The author’s use of dramatic
irony was probably intended to
amuse early Christian readers of
Luke. Other literary devices include
foreshadowing and allusion: Jesus’s

three-day absence from His family
anticipates His three days in the
grave after His death, and the
combination of the Passover setting
and Jesus’s claim to be the Son
of God allude to the Exodus, in
which Israel is also called God’s
son (Exodus 4:22). Such devices,
and the fact that this is the only
depiction of Jesus’s adolescence
in the Gospels, lead some scholars
to view the episode as theological
fiction rather than historical fact,
the main purpose of which is to
highlight Jesus’s divinity. ■

DIDN’T YOU KNOW


I HAD TO BE IN MY


FATHER’S HOUSE?


LUKE 2:49, A CHILD IN THE TEMPLE


IN BRIEF


PA S SAGE
Luke 2:41–51

THEME
Jesus reveals His
divine lineage

SETTING
c. 6–7 ce Jerusalem.

KEY FIGURES
Jesus The 12-year-old son
of Mary and adopted son of
Joseph, who is also the
Messiah and Son of God.

Mary and Joseph Devout
Jews from Nazareth, identified
as the earthly mother and
adoptive father of Jesus.

The rabbis The teachers of
the scriptures, who gathered
in the Jerusalem Temple to
debate points of Mosaic Law. In William Holman Hunt’s highly
symbolic The Finding of the Savior in
the Temple (1860), a blind rabbi (bottom
left) clutches the Torah as though he
and his religion are under threat.

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189


See also: The Suffering Servant 190–93 ■ The Divinity of Jesus 190–93 ■
The Baptism of Jesus 194–97 ■ The Empty Tomb 268–71

J


ohn the Baptist was a Jewish
prophet who heralded Jesus
in the Gospel of Luke. In Luke
3, John goes out into the country
and calls the people to repent and
be forgiven. He baptizes those
who accept his message in the
River Jordan.
The author of Luke presents
John’s actions as the fulfillment of
a prophecy in the Book of Isaiah.
John quotes Isaiah 40:3, in which
a voice in the wilderness exhorts
listeners to prepare the way for
the Lord. They are to make the
path straight, level, and smooth,
and then all will see the coming of
God’s salvation. Although Isaiah’s
prophecy spoke first about God’s
rescue of the Israelites from exile in
Babylon, the Gospel of Luke reports
that John the Baptist interpreted it
to have a further fulfillment in his
own ministry.

Baptism by fire
In the next scene, the followers of
John begin to wonder if he is the
Christ. John affirms his role as
messianic precursor, declaring that

he is not worthy to untie the sandal
of the one who is to come. He says
that while he baptizes with water,
the one more powerful than him
will baptize with the Holy Spirit
and fire. John concludes his
message with an image of Christ
as a winnower, separating the
wheat from chaff and burning the
chaff with unquenchable fire (3:17),
symbolizing the Final Judgment.
John hopes that all will hear the
news of the coming Christ, repent,
and be saved. ■

THE GOSPELS


IN BRIEF


PA S SAGE
Luke 3:1–18

THEME
The prophecy fulfilled

SETTING
c. 26 ce The country around
the River Jordan.

KEY FIGURES
John the Baptist Son of
Elizabeth and Zechariah.
A prophet who baptizes Jesus
and is later beheaded by
King Herod.

Isaiah An ancient Israelite
prophet, to whom the Book
of Isaiah is ascribed.

Jesus The Messiah and Son
of God in the period before
He begins His ministry.

PREPARE THE WAY


FOR THE LORD


LUKE 3:4, THE COMING OF SALVATION


The ax is ... at the root
of the trees, and every tree
that does not produce good
fruit will be cut down.
Luke 3:9

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